tv The Kelly File FOX News October 20, 2014 9:00pm-10:01pm PDT
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billoreilly.com. word of the day, do not be a jackanapes. again, thanks for watching us tonight. i'm bill o'reilly. please always remember that the spin stops right here. we're definitely looking out for you. out for you. breaking tonight, the centers for disease control orders a dramatic change when it comes t breaking news tonight, the centers for disease control orders a dramatic change when it comes to handling ebola, ditching the rules it was defending on this broadcast less than a week ago and raising new questions about how they are dealing with this virus. good evening, everybody. i'm martha mccallum in tonight for megyn kelly. the cdc made an announcement, that they've outlined tough new standards for anyone coming in contact with ebola. it was just last week that thomas frieden was on "the kelly files" defending the workers
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when a nurse became infected. >> it said you don't have to cover your head gewith head gea and you don't have to cover your feet. wouldn't you admit that is insufficient? >> no. we know how ebola spreads. it spreads by direct contact, and sometimes more isn't better. you put on more layers, you put on more things, they're harder to get on, they're harder to take off. >> really? you would go into an ebola-infected patient's room, you would go in without covering your head and not being fully covered. you would do that? >> absolutely. >> we later showed pictures of thomas frieden visiting an ebola patient covered in head to toe. the new cdc guidelines, all people should be wearing double gloves, waterproof boot covers,
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fluid resistant gown, respirators, full face shield and surgical hoods. we had nurses complaining their neck was fully exposed while dealing with these patients. some of the nurses on the front line say that is not what they have been getting. joining us now is deborah burger, co-president of the national nurses united. deborah, good to have you with us here tonight. >> good evening. >> we have a picture of the baggy that contained the outfit for the ebola kit prior to these changes. do you think that what was in that little bag would keep anyone safe? >> that would not keep anybody safe. and the bag that you have a picture of was just given to employees today. >> today. >> today. >> what's in there? >> well, the problem is, all the cdc guidelines, as good as they are being strengthened, are still voluntary. and so we're still asking for president obama to use his
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executive authority to mandate that these new guidelines be implemented. what's in that baggy is a pair of gloves, a mask, a head covering, and i assume that the employee is supposed to go grab a gown from somewhere. >> i mean, there have been stories across this nation of instances where people were concerned in emergency rooms that they might have a potential patient -- they did not -- but when someone walks in with a fever and vomiting and what you've got in that little baggy, and that was handed out, as you pointed out, today, it doesn't give doctors and nurses across this nation a whole lot of confidence that their health is being looked out for, does it? >> that's the whole reason nurses for the last two months have been asking for better protection, better education, more training and hands-on use of all of the equipment, because we really care about making sure
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our patients are safe and that we're safe. and so we were concerned. we're glad that the cdc is revising their guidelines, but we still need the president to mandate that the cdc requirements are mandatory. >> that's a great point. to say everybody needs to have all these things and these layers of competence and training, but you don't seem to have any confidence level that you're actually going to get it. >> not yet. we still have hope that the employers in all these hospitals will actually take their responsibility for keeping our employees and our patients safe, and that they'll step up to the plate. but so far that hasn't happened. >> thank you very much, deborah. good to have you with us tonight. best of luck to you and all our colleagues as we work our way through this story. after more than a week of tough headlines for the administration, the "new york times" came out with a report on ebola this weekend, and the
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headline, amid assurances on ebola, obama is said to seethe. not long after new york governor bobby jindal took to twitter sayi saying, i'm so mad, stage, for the president. and general campaign manager and fox contributor lester. let me start first with governor jindal. you outline what you call the president's four stages of anger on twitter. do you want to share that with our viewers at home? >> sure, martha, thank you for having me. first off, he tells us he's got this. his second step, he pretends madness. that third step, he and a surrogate say they simply need more of our money. the fourth step, he finds a way to blame the republicans. we've seen this before. we saw it with the oil spill time and time again. this president has shown his
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incompetence. he told us the virus wasn't going to come here and then it did. he told us it wasn't going to spread and then it did. what's coming, it's going to be the republicans' fault. i guarantee it's going to happen. >> he said people will be held accountable and that he will get to the bottom of whatever the situation is, because we have seen that a lot and the president's critics say often that doesn't lead to any action. i thought it was very interesting today, in this article in the "new york times." this is a quote from david axelrod who is one of the president's greatest advisers. he said, it's not enough to doggedly and persistently push for answers in meetings. you have to be seen doggedly and persistently pushing for answers. it still feels like optics in that quote, in that suggestion, governor. >> you're absolutely right, martha.
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this is about managing the 24-hour news cycle. it's all about politics and perception. we have a commander in chief, we have a president who has never run anything before. we see his competence on display here. this is malpractice but it's not the first time. we've seen the failures domestically. we saw it up close here in louisiana with the oil spill. we saw it overseas with the failed red line. you heard this nurse, and unfortunately, we saw this during the oil spill, they don't want to listen to the people on the front lines, the so-called experts. they don't want to display common sense. why not implement this travel ban. i called for it several days ago, a couple weeks ago. now you're beginning to see elected officials, both democrat and republicans join in for this call. they're not making common sense decisions. sometimes the so-called smartest guys in government, sometimes the dumbest guys. why not use common sense? >> here joe trippy after the
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president was so angry and seething. we certainly see that nurses are seething about the situation they're facing in their own hospitals. our producers went digging through the archives and here's a little bit of what they found. >> people have a right to be angry. i'm angry. >> every day i see this continue. i'm angry and frustrated as well. it's inexcusable and i'm angry about it. >> nobody but me is angry about the website, so it's going to get fixed. >> fair or not? >> the montage is fair. he said all those things. but i think in this one, calling for a travel ban, i don't think that's a right way to go. all the health professionals don't think that's the way to go. i fault the administration for several things in this regard. one, the cd krrc swat team shou
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have gone to dallas as soon as that appeared, so they've gotten things wrong. another one is the nurses in oth -- and other health professionals out there have to have the proper equipment. i think part of that cdc swat team will be -- if someone comes into a hospital in california or elsewhere, that swat team will be there with the right equipment. whether the hospital there intends to use it or not, they will be using it. >> i thought it was interesting, the president basically laid the blame of the sources in the story at the cdc. yet there's been no change for the cdc. we do see that pattern of the president pointing the blame at somebody, saying they're going to be accountable. thomas frieden still has his job, despite the doctors and nurses say they feel woefully unequipped to handle the , then.
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why not fire thomas frieden and put someone in that position to be in charge of that so the american taxpayer only has to pay taxes once for this situation? >> it was the public who called for a czar, and i don't think they would take thomas frieden as a czar. i would have appointed someone different. larry brilliant comes to mind. he was a guy that led 140,000 health professionals to eradicate smallpox around the globe. he would have been somebody -- there is a rash of fear about ebola in the united states and there is a lot of irrational fear. ron would have been well equipped, but i don't think he would have been able to calm the ir rational fears out there
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about this disease. >> you can say it's irrational, but the american people were told it wouldn't happen here. then they found it did happen here and thep they found a procedure wasn't in place. >> this outbreak started in 2013, almost a year ago. all the planes flew from liberia in that time. >> and continue to. >> and continue to. in nigeria where 20 people from one person got off a plane in legos, they eradicated ebola. the government declared them ebola-free after 32 days, and they did not ban travel, they did not close the borders. >> that may be the right thing to do. we'll see, and we hope we don't get any more cases here and that nobody has already walked off a
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plane that has it, and we certainly hope that doesn't happen. joe, thank you so much. we'll see you next time. >> so what would happen if terrorists were to get control of this ebola virus? you may think that sounds like a sensational statement, but the fact is that a group of u.s. counter-terrorist experts researched that exact question many years ago because they were concerned about it. we're going to show you the results of what happened when they did, next. plus, wait until you see what happened when the president, at one of the few campaign events he attended this year, what happened when he was there and was talking. is the metropolitan opera tonight celebrating the murder of a jewish man at the hands of a terror group? that's the accusation. our investigation straight ahead. at first the world is led to believe that no one is harmed. so the palestinians are promised safe passage out of egypt. but the next day the truth is learned and the u.s. ambassador
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to egypt makes the announcement. big day? ah, the usual. moved some new cars. hauled a bunch of steel. kept the supermarket shelves stocked. made sure everyone got their latest gadgets. what's up for the next shift? ah, nothing much. just keeping the lights on. (laugh) nice. doing the big things that move an economy. see you tomorrow, mac. see you tomorrow, sam. just another day at norfolk southern. starts at 6:30 a.m. - on the (vo) rush hounose.und here but for me, it starts with the opening bell. and the rush i get, lasts way more than an hour. (announcer) at scottrade, we share your passion for trading. that's why we've built powerful technology to alert you to your next opportunity.
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>> so that was part of the simulation. as part of it, they had pretend newscast showing what people would be told if something like this were to happen. mark tiesen is a writer. good to have you with us. >> good to be here. >> a terrorist, instead of being a suicide bomber is dropping a bomb to himself, allows himself to become sick with this disease and then moves in the population intentionally trying to cough on things and sneeze on people and spread it in ways that he can, perhaps on several of these people entering the country with the intention of surreptitiously
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spreading it, correct? >> that's exactly right. this took place in 2001, a few months before the 9/11 attacks. there was a group of former clinton officials who ran this at the air force base. they found it was a bioweapons attack where they released smallpox at three shopping malls around the country. health care system was completely overwhelmed. there were riots at vaccination centers. the national guard had to be called in to put down the virus. no country would receive planes that had either originated from or trans ited through the united states. it was absolutely massive, and in the end, up to a million people died in the simulation from smallpox. so the question is, could this happen with ebola? >> it is a good question, and you think about -- we had a couple school systems shut down because of this, and that's just a microcosm. we had a couple infected. we hope that is the end of it.
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we don't know, of course. in world war ii we had bomb shelters, you had families constantly practicing what they would do if something were to happen. i think there is a mentality in this country that, oh, it's never going to happen. that's why you end up with hospitals saying, here's your little ebola kit, because we have people who are never willing for some reason to actually be prepared for it. >> if it's never going to happen, if thomas duncan could get on a plane knowing that he was exposed to it and come into the united states and fly to dallas, why couldn't ebola-infected terrorists come in? one of the things that's interesting is ebola, according to dr. scott, a colleague, a terrorist simply has to go to an ebola-infected area and infect himself. it has a 21-day incubation period, which is more than enough time for a terrorist to infect himself and come into the united states. then the nightmare would be if
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an ebola-infected terrorist blew himself up in a crowded area like a shopping mall or a train station, turning it into infected tissue and a hot cell. these are things that can actually happen and we have to be careful and worried about it. >> prepared for different scenari scenarios. mark, it's called "dark winter" that original experiment, and we hope it wouldn't happen. but we have to be prepared for everything. mark, good to talk to you. >> good vóñ talking to you. president obama this weekend went to give a speech in a spot where he got 90% of the vote in 2012. so when he was talking the other day, starting his speech, why did hundreds of people get up and walk out while the president was talking? i'm going to show you what happened. up next, the metropolitan opera is tonight, staging the opening of a show about the murder of a jewish man at the hands of a terror group. see who is furious over this production and what they are doing next.
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. >> in port saed, egypt, a devastated mirror lynn hopper finally left. she and her wheelchair-bound husband had boarded the general oe a for their first vacation in two years. she left the ship a widow, her husband murdered two days ago by palestinian terrorists. ameriprise asked people a simple question: in retirement, will you have enough money to live life on your terms?
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than a year. on saturday he was arrested in hammond, indiana. police say he confessed to them to killing 19-year-old africa hardy. she was found strangled to death in a motel room. detectives then say vann confessed to killing six morovick timz, amore victims. their bodies were found in may. police are warning there may be more victims. i am proud to be commander in chief of the soldiers, sailors, airmen and marines who deported these terrorists to italian authorities. these young americans sent a message to terrorists everywhere, a message, you can run but you can't hide. >> what a story that was. president ronald reagan in 1985 with a harsh warning to terrorists after a plo group hijacked an entire cruise ship
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and then shot and killed 69-year-old disabled jewish american leon klinghoffer. his body and wheelchair tossed overboard to the horror of americans. that story is the subject of a metropolitan opera performance that opens tonight and it is causing severe controversy to the treatment of this story. trace gallagher is here with this story. >> there are eight performances at the metropolitan opera house, have significant protest. critics say it is anti-semitic and appears to offer terrorists something for the crime. the killing of leon klinghoffer was and he was trying to support symbolism saying, what in their brac ground, what in their
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mythology that they grew up with forced them or dard them to take this action, this terrible, brutal decision to kill this man? it reads in part in the playbill, the terrorists, portrayed by four distinguished opera singers, will be given a back story, an explanation for their brutal act of terror and violence. terrorism cannot be rationale eised, it cannot be understood and it cannot be tolerated. >> i believe this opera justifies the murder of leon klinghoffer, and it sends a message to anyone who watches the opera. why not join these terrorist groups, and in the end you're going to be ex totolled as a he on the stage of the met opera. >> george kutachi was among those protesting, just voicing
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his concern over content. new york mayor difficult dide b sirks o said, we don't have to ago with what's in the exhibit. >> interesting controversy, trace. thank you very much. so america's teachers union are spending more on political races this fall than any time in their history. just ahead, the prize that they are after in these elections and how it may affect millions of american families. we'll tell you about that. and for the first time, we are getting the most extensive blow by blow from the ferguson police officer who shot and killed 18-year-old michael brown as evidence of this has become known. could the new information clear
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darren wilson, the police officer? former lapd detective mark furman here on that. plus president obama's speech starts on a high note but it quickly went next, the emba walkout that is now getting national attention today. [ booing ] on my journey across america, i've learned that when you ask someone in texas if they want "big" savings on car insurance,
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and what the white house thought was going to be a friendly crowd for him, when the president started speaking -- see these pictures? people started getting up and walking out. a steady stream of people, according to the reporter who witnessed it, people just began leaving and shortly after he began speaking. chief white house correspondent ed henry has this from washington. hey, ed. what happened? >> the bottom line is it's extremely rare for a president to be pinned down two weeks before elections and not really going to contested places, but instead going to maryland where he did great in early voting. it was teed upper effectually for him. he got 90% of the vote in that county in 2012. he spoke in a jgymnasium that ws not far from barack obama's
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school. as he started speaking, people began leaving. there were 80,000 people there. there was a huge crowd. he had an overflow room because there was so many people. but people didn't wait around for him to finish his speech. dana has a column on line calling the president president pa eriah. tonight he did an interview with al sharpton and sort of said he was hand in hand with these people. listen. >> it's difficult for them to have me in the state because the republicans will use that to try to fan republic turnout. the bottom line is,ospp these all folks who vote with me, they have supported my agenda in congress. >> now, these are folks that all voted with me even though they
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won't appear with me. remember a couple weeks ago, the president got in hot water when he suggested, i'm not on the ballot but my policies are. the republicans jumped on that and said, look, this is tied to all the democratic candidates whether they appear together or not. >> different tale being told these days, ed. thank you very much. so the president's sagging poll numbers may be hurting some democrats like we were just talking about, but they are getting a lot of support from one group in particular. a published report said they could save $80,000, and it's not going to washington but instead these state-level races. so what are they after? to answer that, dana loesch, who wrote a book called "hands off my gun." dana, good to have you here tonight. welcome. >> thank you for having me. >> let's talk about the teachers
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union, because they're putting a lot of money in the state level races. their going after maripay, they're going afterr0 school choice, many issues that are very popular in a lot of states they're targeting. >> martha, this highlights a complete disconnect between union leadership and union members. i have been hearing from members of the nea, members of different teachers unions which say we like to have that control and that sovereignty in our classroom in things like common core and merit pay. we want to be rewarded for our good results and also have local representation and school boards and have parents more involved. yet they're spending money, the bosses of these teachers unions are spending money on policies that take all of that away from these teachers. >> they're going after wisconsin, michigan. those are places where the gop has done lots of education reform. now connecticut, colorado, florida. those are places where gop reformers want to have impact to
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help the students, help the classroom. >> in new york in the charter schools, it was versus the mayor which did a good job of de blasio?a=÷ highlighting these schools. >> the naacp is siding with the union on this, the naacp, many of them from inner cities who are struggling to go to school, and they're spending a lot of money to fight against it, is that right? >> they're advocating their own self-interest when it comes to education. and the product is the children and their education. they do better with charter schools. there's been a study in chicago about merit pay as well. they do better. >> thank you for the book. "hands off my gun," something i know you feel very strongly about. >> yeah. >> you tell your personal story
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about what made you so passionate about this issue. >> my family is from rural missouri. they're from the ozarks. so growing up, if you called the law down in southern missouri, you were lucky the law showed up in 25 to 30 minutes, because some of these counties are huge and they may only have a couple deputies, and on average, response time is 20 minutes. that's 20 minutes too long to gamble. i have a story where my aunt was assaulted and her ex-husband now tried to kill her. she ran through the woods with nothing but her nightclothes, showed up at my grandparents' house, and it was just me with my cousin, her daughter. my grandfather called the law, but he had to go sit on the porch with his shotgun because they knew the estranged husband, he had threatened to kill her, he was on his way. as a kid i was terrified. because you don't ever want children to feel unsafe. they should feel safe with adults. that was my first experience with the second amendment and with firearms aside from
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hunting, was that sense of safety, knowing my grandfather, if the law didn't show up in time, my grandpa would be there to help defend the family if this estranged uncle showed up. >> it was a sign of safety and so much it's a sign of danger. >> statistically, 60 times moreover firearms are used in defensive cases more so than criminal acts. >> dana, good luck with your book. up next, a bombshell new report on what happened that night in ferguson, missouri when officer darren wilson came face to face with michael brown. is this enough to clear wilson's name, former lapd policeman mark furman with more on this, next. we'll show you how riots at a pumpkin festival led to fights that nearly squashed -- get it -- a reporter. we'll be right back. when it comes to good nutrition...i'm no expert.
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his cause of death has not been named yet. more on that as we get more information. [ inaudible ] [ bleep ]. >> tempers flaring outside a st. louis rams game this weekend after fans got upset tempers flaring outside a st. louis rams game this weekend after fans got upset with people protesting a police shooting in ferguson, missouri. this comes after we hear for the first time the extensive blow-by-blow account by police officer darren wilson of exactly what happened that day he shot and killed 18-year-old michael brown. federal officials, unnamed, telling the "new york times" that wilson feared for his life as he struggled for his gun with michael brown. mark furman is a former l.a.
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police detective and he joins me now. mark, good to have you with us here tonight. >> thank you. >> there has been so much tension that surrounded this case and a huge story broke on the front page of the "new york times" over the weekend. you say when you look at the details here, it talks about a struggle that happens inside the car. it claims in this piece that there were two shots that were fired inside the car, and that that substantiates the claim by darren wilson that there was some kind of struggle within that car during which he feared for his life. what do you make of all this? >> well, martha, when you look at this, and you have to tactically set the stage. darren wilson is working a one-man police vehicle in uniform. he is about to exit to confront two suspects, brown and johnson, that he wanted to contact and talk to, whether he knows about the strong-arm robbery or not. he is thrown back into the vehicle, and once brown enters
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that vehicle through the window, he is pinning the officer down, and this evidence, forensic evidence, shows that they were grappling for the gun and the gun went off twice, one round hitting brown, and that blood is not only on the inside of the door, it's on the officer's uniform and the gun. that puts them together, that puts them fighting over the gun and it supports officer wilson's statement for exactly what happened right at that moment when he contacted brown. >> yeah. doreen johnson is the other person you mentioned, he is the other suspect. it sounds like it is going to come down to his word against darren wilson, because he claims that the door was open and that he then reached over and grabbed michael brown and pulled him down witowards the car through e window, is his contention.
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>> well -- >> we froze here for a second so we'll see if we can get him back. so much is revealed in this timepiece that sheds light on this case, and it talks about darren wilson's side of the story and what he claimed happened. he claimed that michael brown reached into the car, that a struggle ensued, that the gun during that off or either was fired and that those are the first two shots that hit michael brown. so dorian johnson's story is quite different, mark, from what we learned in this piece. >> it is different. and somebody has to imagine this. if somebody reaches into a vehicle and the person in the vehicle outstretches their left arm to keep that person away, who is actually pulling and who is pushing? that is where that is going to be an issue that comes down to the evidence that the officer
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has actually supporting his story. now, that whole situation there actually shows one thing to me, that brown is the aggressor, the officer is the victim. after this initial contact in those first two rounds, brown could have walked away, and there is little doubt in my mind that if he just walked away or ran away that he would probably still be alive today. >> so the contention is, by the witness who was with him, that he turned around and put up his hands. and i guess what this really comes down to at that point is what happened outside the car and how those next four shots were fired and what happened between these two people that made that happen and left him dead in the street. >> i agree with you, and you look at this. darren wilson already established his fear for his life and great bodily injury. he is already being overpowered by a man that is greatly superior in size and strength than him.
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>> but he has the gun. and that's what the other side will say, mark. he has the gun. >> it doesn't matter if he has the gun. neither johnson or brown had been searched and this officer does not know if they are armed or 8@znot. now, until that point that you know that they're unarmed or they surrender or follow your command, they are a suspect that has already attempted to kill the officer, and now he keeps advancing whether his hands are up, and he keeps advancing trying to close that distance. this officer knows he will never be able to withstand a fight with this man outside of the vehicle, and he will probably lose his gun and his life. >> i mean, you know, the problem with this is that it becomes about the racial issue, and then wanting to sort of have this stand for larger racial issues and larger racial tensions that have happened in this town. it has to come down to what happened that night.
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hopefully the forensics will tell the tale of is this story. we have to go. >> thank you. >> mark, thank you very much. sorry for that shot freezing earlier. still tonight, a viral video that involves a riot, a pumpkin festival and a reporter who was trying to cover his story was turned into something quite different than what he set out to cover. so what happened when the organizer of the event got ahold of him? that's next. yeah, dinner sounds good.
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new hampshire involving a pumpkin festival near keene state college and a group of rioting students on a campus when a young reporter covering the festival decided to mention hey, look what's going on over here. this are some riots and people climbing on top of a car. things got a little bit ugly in the pumpkin patch. trace gallagher joins us now with more from the west coast bureau. hey, trace. >> so, martha, families picking out pumpkins and lighting jack-o'-lanterns, and a few yards away you have what appear thousands of drunk keene college students rioting, lighting fires, tossing bottle cap at cops, busting road signs and even tipping over a car. an independent reporter spent the day covering the festival. but when the riots broke out, he broke in. and the festival coordinator wasn't happy. watch. >> she would not like me to tell you what's going on at keane state college. now i'm being called a free stater. >> if you think that inciting these people is a good idea, i am going to pull the plug here. >> you heard it here first,
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everybody. >> not when you arm our guests. thank you. >> when you report the news, when you report the reality, the people in charge want to shut you down. >> you have no right to self-promote here. >> i'm not self-promoting anything. >> yes, you are. do we agree he's self-promoting. i agree. >> well, a short time ago we spoke with jared who told us he would not suppress the news. listen to him. >> i gave ms. sterling an opportunity to, you know, to not embarrass herself in the way that she did. but, you know, she felt she needed to say some things. and so, you know, i let her. >> well, festival organizer ruth sterling defended her actions to the boston globe saying "i needed to keep 80,000 people safe and one self-promoting punk could help me do that or try to impede me from doing that. i was not surrendering to fear, intimidation or threats." by the way, 49 people were arrested and much of the riot was caught on social media.
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many more students are now being identified and could be suspended or expelled. but, jared gets a star for the day. >> sounds like a story that needed to be reported that was going on right behind him and he did the right thing. trace, thank you very much. all right. we're going to be right back. first coming up on "hannity" at the top of the hour, this. >> most on the front line and should be concerned about one or two cases getting in. i think the american people are worried because we are not taking steps to block this disease from coming into the country. i think that if we did that effectively, a lot of the worry factor would go down considerably. effffffffffff
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go to facebook.com/thekellyfile. tell us what you think tonight. i'm martha maccallum in for megyn kelly. megyn is back tomorrow night. and so is michelle malcolm. something's got her so fired up. she'll be here to appear on television for the first time in months to talk about that. tomorrow night on "the legal -- kelly file." i will see you tomorrow morning 9:00 a.m. eastern on "america's newsroom." see you tomorrow morning everybody. this is "the kelly file." live from america's news headquarters, i'm kelly wright. federal health officials have released new guidelines for health workers who treat ebola patients here in the u.s. the new standards were issued
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because two dallas nurses were infected while treating a patient who traveled to texas from liberia. the guidelines call for garb that leaves no part of the body exposed. in addition to increased training, a trained monitor will now supervise the donning and removal of all protective gear. police in gary, indiana fear they may have a serial killer on their hands. they found the bodies of seven women over the weekend. a suspect is in custody, and he has reportedly told investigators there are nor victims out there. and oscar de la renta, whose name came to symbolize designer fashion has died. his chic fashions were created and worn by socialites. oscar de la renta was 82. i'm kelly wright. welcome to "hannity." tonight for the entire hour we're going to be joined by a panel of medical experts to discuss ebola in america and what it means for you and your family. but first -- welcome to
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