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tv   Happening Now  FOX News  January 6, 2015 8:00am-9:01am PST

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bill: so if that drone followedded us home today would that be interesting or another day at work? martha: too much time on your hands, right? "happening now" starts now. bye, everybody. we'll see you storm tomorrow. jenna: a power shift in washington as a brand new congress is about to convene with republicans in charge and conservatives mount a challenge to house speaker john boehner. hello, everybody i hope you're off to a great day so far. i'm jenna lee. jon: i'm jon scott. we're live on capitol hill where less than one hour from now the house and senate meet. first time in nearly a decade republicans will control both chambers. the gop promises an aggressive again today one that could set up showdowns with the president on items like energy and health care but that is not the only drama ahead with a rebellion of sorts brewing among some conservative lawmakers as two congressman plan to challenge
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the speaker of the house for his leadership post in an election set to take place less than two hours from now. a.b. stoddard is associate editor and columnist at "the hill." charlie hirt, columnist at "the washington times." is john boehner is any danger ab? >> he is in danger of being embarrassed. 18 members on the record are against him. they would need to push to second ballot in neighborhood of 29 of the doesn't look like they will get there. if they were to surprise him with other names that have not come forward and pusush this to a second ballot, they would need the high 30s. that would be a situation where the speaker could probably hold on the second ballot. again unlikely it goes to that, but going to a second ballot even this number of defections is biggest embarassment since 1923 to a speaker, incumbent speaker being reelected to his position.
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jon: charlie big embarassment for healthy debate? >> obviously as ab points out something like that, which i think is unlikely by the way this is first time in 90 years we've seen anything like that and it would be embarrassing, but, if you step back it is embarrassing inside the beltway. only people around here would much notice it or talk about it. the bottom line i would argue if you took the sort of longer approach is, that it is part of a healthy, large majority that boehner now controls. there is a reason nancy pelosi doesn't have this problem right now. that is because she has very tiny minority right now and they're all very liberal the most liberal members of her caucus. boehner has a much bigger tent. he has people on all sides. obviously conservatives will want to make him feel as much pain as they can possibly make him feel but at the end of the day, i suspect we will have probably on the first ballot a
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boehner win. and if you just down the number of people publicly said they were not going to vote for him boehner would win by a larger margin this time than he did last time. jon: okay. if we get through the intra-party drama ab, later today, if the speaker does get reelected, then you have got all the drama of taking on president obama and you say there are a number of interesting potential pardon me, potential catch points ahead starting in february? >> yes. when the cr omnibus passed in december which conservatives against boehner see total capitulation to the president with it they withheld funding for immigration within the department of homeland security. that is going to be revisited. they gave him short-term funding until february 27th. that will be revisited at that time. that is another considered must-pass bill which conservatives can fight against leadership. in march you have raising of the
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debt ceiling another must-pass bill, which they feel has the best leverage to against the president to fight what leadership wants to do. in april you have the medicare doc fix and may you have highway funds. these are must-pass bills cliffs if you will. with conservatives who think leadership is just rolling over for president obama can pick big fights and these divisions can rise again. jon: then there are the president's actions. he is talking about the possibility of more executive actions. that is not going to sit well with this newly-republican-controlled congress charlie? >> no, and it's not and you also have an emboldened president he made a couple of executive actions so far. i think it waked up his sort of eagerness to be president again which we haven't seen in a long time. i think what we'll get is a lot more of those things that are is going to be highly offensive especially to conservatives and ab is right about all those
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cliffs that republicans are going to have to get beyond somehow. and i think what their strategy is going to be. they're going to concentrate and work very hard and work very early on to pass as many as sort of low-hanging fruit bills widely popular around the country or already been passed through the republican congress and were stalled for the past four years in, by harry reid in the senate and get some of those through. president obama will have to sign some of them i wouldine. at some point he will have to lay down the gauntlet and throw down the gauntlet and start vetoing. when that happens you will have civil war between not just conservatives but republicans and the president and we're going to get the old washington blame game and you know at that point it sort of depends on who plays it better. president obama has always been play good at playing that but the uptick he has seen in his numbers in the last couple of weeks will take a hit once that
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blame game starts because a lot of people, voters they don't care whose fault it is. they just can't stand any of them. jon: good point. about two hours from now we should know the outcome of that speaker vote. that will be in our second hour of "happening now." we'll also be talking about some of these executive actions the president might be taking. charlie hirt, a.b. stoddard thanks for setting it all up for us. >> thanks, jon. jenna: continue with politics. it is the big news of the day and this just in the 2016 race, jeb bush taking another big step toward a white house bid as he announces he is launching a political action committee. chief political correspondent carl cameron is live in washington with more on this. carl? >> reporter: hi, jenna. for jeb bush is not only raises money and the bar for himself and potential rivals as he considers a white house run. the leadership pac called right to rise pac was filed with the federal election commission, allowing bush to raise money
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discuss issues and travel and puts him on par with potential rivals who have such pacs. marco rubio, rand paul. they have been on the 2016 campaign with those pacs last couple months. bush's aides said we will protect liberty cherish free enterprise embrace the energy revolution, fix our broken and obsolete immigration system and give all children a better education system through choice, high standards and accountability. those last two refer to bush's support for common core education standards and legal status for some immigrants which some conservatives and potential rifles oppose. the new, right to rise pac web page was launched. it as different look than other gop websites t focus on diversity and. he promised to be the best digital campaign in the business. already he post ad facebook and twitter video in spanish and
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english promoting the pac. listen. >> [speaking spanish ♪. h. >> reporter: also in english for those out there who need that. another big move not by bush but allies is creation of a pro-busch super pac. this is separate from the campaign and bush won't raise money for it but will be dedicated to the bush campaign if he runs. they can take huge donations. if the money flows in from billionaires it could choke off money from potential rivals. super pacs can attack and counterattack potential rivals presumably in ways bush wants to avoid. the first fund-raiser will allow him to raise money not the exploratory is in affluent greenwich, connecticut. if millions rolls in for these
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organizations and bush submit as huge quarterly report to the fec in march that could end potential rival as campaigns before he gets standard it issues for his rivals. jenna: carl, thank you. jon: dangerously cold weather here to say in much of the country. someplaces seeing temperatures below zero with windchills at negative 20 and even below. that snow hitting parts of the midwest and northeast as well. mike tobin joins us live from frozen chicago. what's going on there mike? >> reporter: well, jon first major winter weather incident seems to be coming off and only major hitch is a number of car wrecks. like iowa, looks like iowa and south dakota got it the worse with the snow starting early in the evening last night. a lot of roadways were blocked. some of them blocked due to snow. some of them blocked due to car wrecks. here in illinois and the illinois department of transportation and city of chicago maxed out their fleet of
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snowplows, and salt spreaders. 300 from the city were out on the road, 1700 from the state were out on the road. they have all the major roadways clear. they're working on side streets and getting it done with no major incident. looks like all the weather moved from here and gone east. pennsylvania is getting it today. order cord to accuweather the snow is wrapping up in pennsylvania. it was bitterly cold out here and some snow but it wasn't cold or snowy enough to shut things down. business as usual here in chicago. only immediate hazard out on the highway that drivers don't know is there until they get a car on top of it. jon? jon: mike tobin in chicago. thank you. jenna: we move over to boss ton. perspective jurors getting their first look in person at the defendant in the boston marathon bombing trial. dzhokhar tsarnaev returning to the federal courthouse today as a new group of perspective jurors show up for duty. molly line in boston with the
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latest. molly if. >> reporter: jenna, this is day two of jury selection in the trial of accused boston marathon bomber dzhokhar tsarnaev. another packed courtroom. about 200 potential jurors are lear filling into the courthouse for this initial morning session. tsarnaev was present yet again. he was wearing a dark sweater today. he fidgeted in his seat throughout the hearing. tend to do that in these hearings touching his face, touching his clothes and flanked on both sides by members of his legal team, facing potential jurors. judge george owe teal -- o'toole gave identical to those yesterday. some arriving very early as a cold morning in boston. he recounted conversations he had with jurors in the past after their experiences saying they told him that it was interesting and worthwhile. he once again made very clear one of the key duties that this jury could be faced with is tsarnaev is convicted, his penalty, life in prison or death will be decided by the jury in this case.
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o'toole noted there is a great deal of pub 'tis regarding the case, there has been but potential jurors would not necessarily automatically disqualified because they have seen some of that coverage. jurors are filling out long questionnaires as they did yesterday, filling them out today. another two groups will be back tomorrow filling out those questionnaires and then the judge and the lawyers in this case will go over them and begin to be whittled down and in the coming weeks some of those that are selected will be brought in for questioning as they continue to whittle it down to 12 jurors and six alternates they alternately need to proceed with the trial. the process is expected to last another 2 1/2 weeks. despite the defense team's efforts to both move and delay the try, the trial is slated, opening statements and proceedings are slated to get started on or about january 26, so by the end of this month. jenna, back to you. jenna: big story for the year ahead. molly, thank you. jon: investigators present new evidence in a very cold murder case. the clues they say could lead them to a killer 34 years after
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a woman was found stabbed to death on her birthday. and al qaeda offering advice on making bombs in their online magazine. why these new instructions have homeland security officials much more worried. we want to hear from you. do you expect president obama will issue more executive orders in the first weeks of the new gop-controlled congress? to join the conversation go to foxnews.com/happeningnow, click on, america's asking.
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jon: right now some new information on crime stories we're following today. investigators are hoping three letters scribbled on a cable repair ticket will help solve a 30-year-old murder. tracey neilson was stabbed to death in her oklahoma apartment in 1981. the letters show she had cable work done the day she was murdered. the wife of the ex-mayor of a mexican city where 43 students
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disappeared is charged with organized crime and money laundering. prosecutors say maria pineta's brothers were in a drug gang and students were turned over to the gang by police and killed. police locate ad missing california 16-year-old. belinda carson disappeared on new year's day. police say she has been found in san francisco. >> terrorist warning they can develop bombs that pass through airport security undetected. an article in al qaeda's online magazine inspire, the group learned from several failed bombing attempts and offers denailed new instructions making these explosives. catherine herridge joins us live from washington with more. >> reporter: thank you jenna and good morning. the latest edition of "inspire" magazine al qaeda's and yemen's propaganda journal says they can make bombs from items commonly found in the home or a hardware store. in a 20-page section called, the
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hidden bomb, the terror group said it learned from past mistakes fashioning improvised explosive devices from clothing and rags. fox news has chosen as you can see to blur the images. al qaeda in yemen's master bomb maker is ibrahim al-asiri and most lethal group by counterterrorism officials attempt to explain a way why there is not been another attempt to use non-metallic explosives in four years saying the technology wasn't ready. the brothers in the external operating committee did not give us a green light until recently. i think they have developed other bombs that are more effective. that could be the reason for their go-ahead. most concerning to u.s. officials that the claims in the magazine dove stale with the recent assessment of tsa administrator who confirmed to fox news that the group's tactics are evolving even at one point, experimenting with surgically implanted devices before abandoning the concept as inefficient and pursuing other options.
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>> that is one of the things that concerns us, how well do the design, construct and then conceal and that's one of the things that we look for. we work closely with our international partners. >> reporter: counter terrorism officials caution it is much harder to make these ieds than it is made out in the magazine but they do add this is the first time the group pulled together all the open source reporting on how to do this, put it in one place kind of like a one-stop shop for would-be terrorists jenna. jenna: scary to think about. catherine, thank you. >> reporter: you're welcome. jon: the funeral services are getting underway for a three-term governor new york. mario cuomo who passed away on new year's day. you're looking at interiors of st. ignatius loyola church in new york city. that funeral with many, many political dignitaries expected to attend, taking place right now. also some new details on when astronauts at the international space station will get their next shipment of
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supplies after this importanting -- morning's rocket launch is scrubbed because of a technical problem. plus new information on a shocking crime in new york city as the son of a wealthy hedge fund founder is arrested in the murder of his father. [container door opening] ♪ what makes it an suv is what you can get into it. ♪
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have you heard of the new dialing procedure for for the 415 and 628 area codes? no what is it? starting february 21, 2015 if you have a 415 or 628 number you'll need to dial... 1 plus the area code plus the phone number for all calls. okay, but what if i have a 415 number, and i'm calling a 415 number? you'll still need to dial... 1 plus the area code plus the phone number. so when in doubt, dial it out!
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jon: new information on a mission to resupply the international space station. spacex now rescheduling a launch for this friday, this after nasa was forced to abort this morning's rocket launch at the last minute because of a problem with a motor. spacex will send the unmanned dragon capsule to astronauts on board the international space station including 5000 pounds of supplies experiments and food.
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jenna: the son of a wealthy hedge fund founder is charged with murdering his own father. police say 30-year-old thomas gilbert, jr. shot his father at his luxury man hat apartment on sunday and staged the crime scene to make it look like a suicide. lis wiehl, and doug burns former prosecutor. they say they have everything from the murder weapon to the motive. is it open and shut? >> well, they have a very very strong case. what happened they went to the son's apartment and found shell casings that match the weapon and most importantly a box. i was in a case where they found fire arms box in the attic which is dramatic because the box almost alwayses have serial number which matches gun. the defense would sound unusual you see a plea the guilty with -- jenna: enter a plea. >> two real quick so we talk about some viable defense they may try to raise some kind after mental defect. jenna: lis we talked about
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these before. the texas teen who claimed "affluenza." >> right. jenna: wealth of his family. >> driving drunk. jenna: for his behavior. >> right. jenna: could you see some sort of defense? >> we saw that in texas. i think they will have to mount the "affluenza," i was so rich i couldn't connect right from wrong. here is different from the texas case he got off 10 years probation which i thought was a horrible result. here is what is different. this kid he is 30 years old this guy tried to stage it as a suicide, right? sew knew right from wrong. jenna: allegedly. >> allegedly. trying to, allegedly make this look like a suicide. >> hard for lis to use that word. >> allegedly. jenna: so much is out there already. >> exactly but allegedly put the left hand on his father's chest to make it look like he had shot himself and the police, looking right at that, you know, this is a cover-up. jenna: so apparently, again allegedly, right, in this story
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that the police are now telling the press the son was upset because the father had said to him, i'm giving you less weekly allowance than i've been giving you, because the father essentially has been footing the bill for his son's life. the motive, police say, had to do with money. could the money get him off? could he hire a good enough attorney he doesn't see full impact of this case if he is indeed guilty? can money basically buy him a break? >> no, money can not buy you a break. >> it will buy awe good lawyer. >> it can buy you very good counsel which often can make a difference. >> which the mother will pay for. >> get best counsel will sort of guaranty a victory no. the other point i want to make real quick remember the box the mother is in. this is her own son if they turn to her as representative of the victim, they may say you can offer him a more lenient plea. jenna: the son came to the apartment, mom, i really need to
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talk to dad. can you go get me some food. >> go get me a sandwich. jenna: she left. she had a bad feeling she said. she comes back and finds her husband dead and calls police. >> 15 minutes later. the timeline and the kid left apparently, did not say good-bye to anybody and odd, not in his character. jenna: is he facing exactly right now? what potentially could be his punishment? >> premeditated murder. >> 25 years to life. meaning in simple english the minimum you can serve 25 as much as life. eligible for parole after 25 years. if convicted of first-degree murder. >> second is only way to go rather than take a plea. >> first degree is only like police and corrections officers. people in new york, why is he only charged with second degree. that is the way it works. second degree in new york is equivalent to first degree. >> premeditation means you've been thinking about it for months and months. could be in those moments came to the apartment. got mad about his father paying not as much money to him asked
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the mother to go. that is premeditation. jenna: very sad case. his father was very well-loved in the community. >> exactly. jenna: now look at this family. >> terrible. >> see you next hour at 1:00 p.m. to talk about the boston bombing case. >> okay great. jenna: jon? jon: a manhunt for the suspect after two police officers are shot and wounded on the streets of new york city. what happened leading up to that shooting. and the latest how those officers are doing still ahead. the u.s. helps kurdish fighters make progress in the fight against isis but that battle is far from over.
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andrew tahmooress
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a quick look at what is still to come on this hour of "happening now." a teenager with cancer is taking the battle to the supreme court saying her rights have been taken away as she fights for her life. the story behind this fire and why it was so hard to put out. and you might know him from saved by the bell but legal drama is unfolding for dustin diamond. the reason he is headed to trial. the manhunt underway for two suspect whose shot and wounded two new york city police officers responding to an officer. officers were coming off their shifts and heightened tensions between the new york mayor and
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the police force. david lee is live. >> reporter: just a month after two officers were shot and killed execution style, two other officers have been shot. both are expect today make a full recovery. official say andrew dossi and aliro pellerano had just finished their shift at the 46th prestinct in the bronx when a call at a bakery came in. according to the clerk one robber had a knife and the other a gun. they fled with cash. members in plane clothing arrives and they spotted one of the suspects on the street and things turned violent. >> one suspect went into a chinese restaurant and the other stayed on the street. two officers approached the man
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on the street and the man in the store came out and fired on upon the officers. >> reporter: the security video shows the suspect opening fire. officers fired back and witnesses say they heard at least four shots. the robbers fled the scene in a high jacked car that was later found abandoned. some police and union members are accusing the mayor of anti police mentality but the mayor said the officers went beyond the call to protect new yorkers. >> this is another indicator of the dangers our officers face into the line of duty. we depend on them to keep the city safe and they do with it skill and professionalism and there is profound dangersism thank god the officers will recover. >> reporter: the mayor went on
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to say the city supports the two officers and their family as well. what remains to be seen is if the remarks will help sooth relations between the mayor and the police force. kurdish forces have captured 80% of the key border town after fighting with militants. the area includes a police head quarters and other government buildings. a man with vast military experience and a deep knowledge of the middle east is joining us now. he has made seven trips to iraq and is a founding member of the pentagon's most classified special mission unit and is also a fox news military analystsisanalysis. does this recapture suggest that isis is perhaps on its heels?
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>> a long way from being on its heels. it still controls all of the land around kobani and from syria to the out skirts of baghdad. it is as a defeat for isis. it shows we are able to put power in there. air power played a roll and indicates we are doing better with respect to people on the ground primarily the kurds directing the airstrikes. but rywe are a long way from really hurting them. >> we have 2,000 troops on the ground and many are taking fire where they are tasked with training iraqis. none of the american troops have returned fire according to the president.
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is that by chose or under orders by the pentagon? >> probably a combination of both. i don't think the americans have determined where the targets are coming from and i don't know if we have offensive artility so the best the americans can do at the training bases is when fire like that comes in they seek shelter and try to get away. i think in the long run as long as isis can hurdle fire at bases where united states troops are at some point we will probably suffer from u.s. casualties of some sort. >> we have the best forces in the world who train and train to respond to this and when they are actual under attack apparently they cannot fire back. >> terribly frustrating. i feel for those guys having been under attack and been able to respond.
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but they have to sit there and take it until we get tougher in the pentagon. i think at some point as we progress perhaps the pentagon will decide they can take come kind of action. certainly if they can identify the targets and mortar positions quickly i have no doubt we would have american aircraft on them but they are not typically standing by waiting for something to happen. they have to be called into action and that takes time. >> authorities say isis coordinated a suicide bombing attacks on their army and police barracks. 23 iraqis were killed in ann bar province. the attack came soon after a protest. if kobani represents a slight defeat for isis they are still on something of a roll in ann bar. >> they absolutely are. no question about it.
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they continue to do well down there. the iraqi army isn't prepared to fight them. the kurds have both done well in holding the fort with isis in some areas but down to the south -- i don't think isis will get into baghdad but they will create a lot of problems. and until we have the sunni tribes and the iraqis along with this isis will continue to make gains. >> is the turkish government showing any more signs of wanting to put more muscle behind the battle against isis? >> what a great question. no because the turks were in part of funding isis and they are afraid of the syrian kurds because they have a relationship with the turkish kurds and the government has been at war with them from a long time.
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those curdkurds want independence. >> so the war in iraq is still over but this battle against isis goes on and seems to be growing. >> that is correct, jon. as long as we hold back on pounding isis and we have the ability to be running hundreds of airstrikes against isis but as long as we don't do that they continue to isolate ground they have and maybe up to 14 million people. they are becoming a real nation over there. no one putting pressure on them isn't helping. >> why are we not doing that? >> that is a great question. i think the lack of desire on the white house to get more engaged. but at some point, they have the
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capability now, but they will strike at the united states and have a terrorist incident happen in the united states and that is probably what it will take to get the white house and pentagon up and moving into more prominent post-ture. why investigators have to expand the search for the airas airasia crash. and a 17-year-old force today get chemo against her will. we will ask you what should happen here and why.
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♪ let's check out what is happening on "outnumbered." >> the new congress meets for the first time moments from now but the president is dialing up his executive power with that pen. will the two parties be able to work together?
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>> plus rising tension in new york city as two more cops are shot. this is hours after the mayor called the officers who turned their back on him disrespect full. and why a number of kids are banning sledding in city parks. and it is sledding today. we are going sledding because we love freedom. all that plus our one lucky guy coming up at the top of the hour. >> we do love freedom and sledding. new information on the airasia efforts with crews pulling another body bringing the total to 38. strong currants are pushing debris across the water. officials believe they may have located the tail and that would
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hold the black box. a 17-year-old girl is diagnosed with cancer in connecticut, fighting for her life and now she is facing another battle with the local government/state that is forcing her to undergo chemo against her will. her parents can't do much about it even though they agree with their daughter. we have a doctor here to talk about this. let's take one assumption -- that everybody has the best intentions for this child. who is right? the parents who say she can not undergo these treatments or the state and hospital that say she must to save her life? >> you know i know a little about this having been appointed to the oversight board for the child protective services by the mayor of philadelphia. i understand the issues
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surrounding what is called medical neglect and you want to make sure the parents doing right right. but i see the state pushing the limits. you have a child who is 17 years old and as a psychologist they should be able to make competent decisions about their health care. and secondally the parent has the legal right to make decisions about health care for the children and if there were differences between the two i could see the state stepping in saying the child needs this but they are in agreement so i don't see why the state would step in. health care is a personal decision >> the state is forcing her to undergo chemotherapy treatments which she doesn't want. if you were part of the case
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dr. chuck, how would you argue for her capability to make her own decisions about her health care as a 17 year old? >> you can do intelligence test and cognition and ability to reason, problem solve, ask a few questions, present a few scenario ask the 17-year-old girl if she understands what chemo is cancer is and prognosis is and the consequences of not having chemotherapy. if the child is aware and understanding the dynamics of that is still okay with not going forward with chemotherapy and the mother is in agreement how can you stop that? >> the case is in connecticut and on thursday we will hear more about the potential outcome of that. i want to switch to another
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story. the new york times had an article about the spa industry for a children. and a quarter of the spas in our country are offering spa services like massages and facials to children under the age of 13. and the spa association says this is great. it is like going to the dentist and you should teach your kids to take care of themselves this way. others disagree saying it is the worst idea. where do you stand? >> when i was growing up my parents gave me a rock and said good luck. the kids are spending hundreds of thousands on sweet six teens and spa treatment. kids have the right to be kids. when you have them engage in the luxuries like this -- you are teaching them they have access to these things without earning
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it. the reason why we can do this stuff as adults is because we have jobs. and six year olds don't. >> i have a job and i don't know the last time i got a massage. we are showing pictures of the spas and their areas for little kids, mostly little girls. what do you say the to mothers who their kids want a spa birthday? >> i would say birthdays involve a cake making a talking clown, but you are not getting a spa. just for asking i would put them in their room for a month. the kid are feeding off their parents. so if the kids are acting like this the parents are probably spoiled and bratty. some parents think spoiling is a good thing but it isn't. they can have problems in
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relationships as they expect their significant other to give them whatever they want. >> something to keep in mind for sure. we will have to leave it there. thank you so much. why's that? look what daddy's got... ahhhhhhhhhh!!!!! growth you can count on from the bank where no branches equals great rates. this is the equivalent of the sugar in one regular soda. and this is one soda a day over an average adult lifetime. but there's a better choice. drink more brita water. clean, refreshing, brita.
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what is happening on wall street. the dow closed down 300 points and we are seeing a sell off again. having to do with the price of oil dipping below $47 a barrel. that is taking the stocks down. we will keep you posted as the stocks eccelerate in the wrong direction. drama for the actress who
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play on saved by the bell. dustin midiamond is going to face trial a christmas eve incident. >> reporter: she is -- he is charged with several charges after he and his fiance got into a fight after saying they didn't want to be photographed. diamond's difiance shoved a woman who was making comment and two men grabbed her by the hair and diamond came to her aid. >> he turned around and saw she was bleeding and two men were holding her and he intervened. >> reporter: he told the police he wielded a pen but later said it was a scombiefknife.
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he faces up to five years in jail if convicted. camron diaz decided it was time to tie the knot after seven months of dating. they did it in their los angeles home in a setting surrounded by friends and family. the wedding was small, a hundred guest, invited to a private ceremony. reese witherspoon and gweneth paltrow were included. they had to keep the wedding hush-hush. maden, who is a 35 rocker proposed less than a month ago and they didn't waste any time. they told a magazine they could not be happy to include their new journey together surrounded by close friend and family which didn't include us. >> we could have found room.
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>> i think they have a mansion so they have plenty of room. >> thank you. we wish them well. a man accused of murdering two teenage sisters in 2008 is still at large and how investigators are trying to jump start the search for him.
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we are back in an hour. "outnumbered" starts now. right now, a brand new session of congress just kicking off with the republicans holding the majority in both chambers for the first time in eight years. the gop is anxious and ready to pass their agenda and get the bills straight to president obama's desk. this is "outnumbered." here with us is jedediah kennedy, and shannon and one lucky guy is former nypd detective beau beetle and

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