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

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as we speak. it will open just in time for spring and your road trip there. we will do the show live as the roller coaster drops. >> that will be must-see tv. >> have a great weekend. bye, guys. and from the fox extreme weather center mother nature is not finished after a brutal week and especially brutal winter across much of the country. hi everybody, i am jenna lee. >> it is march and it feel like january. i am jon scott. another wave of super cold air sweeping across the nation and breaking records for march. many cities and states digging themselves out after yesterday's snowstorm pounded states. and in boston more than a hundred inches and winter is not over yet. in kentucky the storm dropped up
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to two feet of snow. that is the most ever for many kentucky communities. and hundreds of motorist on interstate-65 stuck in place for almost 24 hours. that traffic jam stretched more than 25 miles. now the worry is flooding as the temperature rises and all of the snow begins to melt. >> we love viewers in arizona and california but we are ignoring them now because we are focused on the bad weather. tell us what is happening and what to expect. >> reporter: out west they have been setting records for how warm they have been. it is incredible how the west and east coast have been this winter. from the last storm system we had 23 inches of snow fall in kentucky and many other states hit hard -- west virginia maryland delaware -- significant snowfall totals. and connecticut as well. take a look at the radar across
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most of the lower 48. it is quite out there. the storm pushed eastward leaving behind quite weather. temperatures could be changing. they are still on the cold side and well below average. wind chill temperatures below 0 in new england buffalo new york and the upper great lakes and 15 in lewisville kentucky and raleigh, north carolina feels like 19. temperatures today still below average across places like new york city cleveland and up into chicago. and look at the west. 80s for la and the city of phoenix. by next week, much of the lower 48 is going to be looking at mild temperatures. 40s in new york city and chicagos could be in the 50s on
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monday and stay that warm as far north as fargo. tuesday we will be in the 60s across the plains and in chicago they could make it into the low 50 and the big concern is the areas with heavy snow on the ground like parts of new england flooding could be a concern. it will be a localized concern but we will track that over the next several days >> when do they get into the country wide thing of 70s and 80s? >> reporter: and push for mid-april. -- i -- we could see another blast of cold air across the country still. don't put the coats away just yet. >> just the facts. i know you have to report it. i was thinking maybe another two weeks not mid-april. but okay. gives us an idea. we will have a plan. more on that. >> you are talking to a miami girl here. >> she knows it.
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300 passengers on an amtrak train to boston trapped into the cold and dark for more than three hours. the train lost power around 6:30 last night in connecticut. amtrak says it was likely snow and ice on the overhead power system. it was headed to boston from washington, d.c. when it stalled near mystic connecticut. they sent another train to help out and that lost power as well >> the big take away is it might be better to stay home since you can't travel on the train or the plane now. following up on the story that broke yesterday, the delta jet that acidskidded off the runway at new york's laguardia airport. the flight touchdowned down 175
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passengers and five crew members and skidded into a fence just short of flushing bay. >> i knew we were going too fast to be landing. i am grateful. there was a higher power holding the plane from doing whatever it could have done. i am grateful. >> laura ingle is live from laguardia airport. hi. >> reporter: we just learned the runway involved in yesterday's incident just reopened about 30 minutes ago. meanwhile, cranes were in action with the md-80 aircraft lifted off the snow berm. it has been removed and it is in an american airlines hanger now. and that is where investigators
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where the national transportation safety board will document the damage. the black boxes were removed and will be examined for information. many passengers on board are still shooken up and who can blame them. many taking to social media and describing the landing like skidding down a slope on skis and sliding around and looking out at the water feeling like they might be going in. >> boom. >> that is what it sounded like? >> and everything from the ceiling fell down? >> what do you mean? >> the oxygen tanks all came down. >> reporter: one of the big questions people have is about the rules or guidelines for closing runways when there is so much snow and ice. all airports are required to
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have a snow and ice control committee to determine braking action on the black top. reps said the runway was just plowed and other pilots who landed reported what they called good-braking conditions. hopefully we will learn more about that as we move forward. back here at the airport, there have been a lot of cancelations. as of this morning there were 96. now the runway is open as of 30 minutes ago we might see that slide off. >> we showed photos from passenger robert isherwood and he is going to be our guest during the one o'clock hour. it will be interesting to see what he says about how it went down. >> can't wait to hear that interview. the accidents yards away from disaster. look at the view from flushing
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bay showing the noise of the plane holding over a berm that separates it from very cold gat water. we have a formal officials with the national transportation safety board and a former mechanic. the ntsb will take a year or so to figure out what caused this thing. but bad weather has to be at the top of the list? >> the weather is going to have a role but there is a reason why the airplane went off to the left. he landed properly and went down the runway and then had a problem and went off to the left. so wherever he started to go off to the left is going to be the focus today i am sure. >> does that suggest to you a problem with the brakes? >> it could be a problem with
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the brakes or there could have been wind moving him and the soil was soft enough to pull him around. but something pulled him around and that is what the focus is going to be on the airport today. >> we know that the ultimate decision on whether to land or go around or go to another airport is left up to the pilot. but who decides how and when to close an airport? >> the airport authority controls the airport. and as somebody previously just mentioned there is a committee of the airlines that work over the data of how much snow accum accumulated and the conditions and they will have a voice on if the airport stays open. or an individual airline can chose not to serve the airport even if it is open. so there is a multiple layer approach of if the airport stays
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operational. it has a distinct process to it. >> and laura said two pilots that landed previously said there was good braking on the airport runway. it doesn't sound like there was huge concern over the conditions. >> i took that from what she said as well. we don't want to lose sight of the fact that the new york port authority has some of the finest equipment for snow removal in the country. so the snow removal process at all of the new york airports are probably second to none in the world. i think there is something else that played here besides snow on the runway. >> let's talk about another aviation accident. it is still a tragic mystery and hard to believe. but this sunday marks one year since malaysia airlines flight
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370 vanished without a trace. many experts say the strongest theory is that of a rogue pilot and the captain or co-pilot might be responsible. it had 239 people on board and veered off course and just disappeared. the search is still underway. $100 million or so spent already. are they any closer to finding it john? >> the areas they searched and have detailed information for and they can say it is not there. so that makes it closer by definition. but are they really closer to finding it today? i think they are a bit closer but they could be a long way off. that is deep water. it is a very very remote area. so it is going to take time.
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and the weather down there is very narrow windows from which you have freedom to work. it is going to be a challenge and go on for a little while i suspect. >> when the airasia plane broke up there was a lot of debris and people found stuff. they have not found a seat cushion from flight 370. does that surprise you? >> it is a little surprising. but let's not forget we were not looking in this area of the ocean until a couple weeks after the accident. we lost a lot of time by focusing on the wrong area and that might have been the design of people who made it research. but we were not timely in the search. debris doesn't bloat forever. and we have the trash piles out
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in the ocean, most people don't recognize it and if any pieces of floating debris ended up in the piles of trash that are huge floating in the ocean, we would never find or discern them from the real crash. >> john joining us from miami today. it looks mighty nice down there. >> it is. it looks better than my driveway. >> and a lot better than the laguardia airport as well. century old artifacts destroyed. a video shown smashing statues and skullculptures. isis' destruction of the area constitute a war crime. many are comparing this to king
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tut's tomb during the iraq war. on the face it appears the destruction of the city has little if any military value, and is about isis' view of islam if anything. they go back to 700 bc and the royal tombs were discovered in the 1980s and studied since then. the destruction of the city follows the history of blowing up any sight in their mind that is not islamic enough regardless of the significance to the rest of the world. this is a video of them hitting up a museum with sludge hammers. this comes as the fight for hussein's home town. isis still controls the airport at last report and they are setting oil wells on fire to create a smoke screen already.
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a manhunt in detroit after a u.s. district judge is shot outside his home. his family is speaking out and what they are saying about the incident. and harrison ford pilot and movie star makes a quick decision that might have saved his life. terencerence berg berg
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♪ is it the insightful strategies and analytical capabilities that make edward jones one of the biggest financial services firms in the country? or is it 13,000 financial advisors who take the time to say thank you? 'night jim. gonna be a while?
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i am liz got a little writing to do. ♪ it's why edward jones is the big company that doesn't act that way. right now crime stories we are following. a search in detroit for two suspects in the shooting of a district judge. they approached the judge outside of his home and he was shot in the leg. he is going to be okay but questions e questions remain. and investigations into the deaths of argintina's prosecutor who was found dead after going to brief about the president of the country covered up a role of
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iran. some say he committed suicide but the family disagrees. and hollywood star harrison ford is remaining hospitalized after crashing his vintage world war ii plane on a california golf course shortly after take off. that is ford taking off there. the crash came a minute or two later. the actinger who played the role of a pilot may have saved several lives putting the plane down on the golf course and avoiding many populated areas. how is he doing? >> reporter: cuts, broken bones are being treated here but the
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72-year-old father of five is doing fine and will make a full recovery. he is a pilot flying helicopters and airplanes including this military trainer from world war ii ii ii. this video is obtained by tmz. ford radioed the tower he was loosing speed and ability to guide the aircraft. and found the only patch of green n sea of houses landing on the eighth hole. >> we were hoping it would not hit the houses. >> reporter: the causes of the crash are under investigation and w they will focus on the plane built in the 1940's and production models are fuelled by the gasoline going to the engine
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and the flats controlled manually and no black box aboard. >> was the pilot lucky? absolutely. any time a human being is involved in an accident is a lucky individual. but there are over 2,000 accidents a year that involve varying levels of injuries. >> for ford, he was rescued by people that stabilized him until the paramedics arrived. >> william joining us outside of ucla medical center. thank you. a train carrying crude oil crashes in illinois. and the supreme court would unravel the affordable care act but what happens then?
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the new republican effort to replace obamacare.
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the ntsb investigating this. another derailment of a train carrying crude oil. happened in a rural area of illinois near the mississippi river. six cars jumped the track and two bursted into the flames. no injuries have been reported. officials suggested everyone within one mile evacuate due to a propane tank being in the proximity. republican leaders are planning a replacement for obamacare as many fear the gop will take the blame for problems that would ensue if the president's health care law unravels. the supreme court could strike down subsidies for millions of
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americans who bought policies n on the health care website. the administration is saying they have no plans to replace obama. the health and human services secretary testified as such. is it congress' job to have a backup plan ready? >> absolutely. it will be a political disaster for the party if the subsidies go away and millions are left without insurance and the gop don't do anything. the republicans have been behind the effort to dismantle the law and talk about repealing and replacing the law. but up until recently there hasn't been a push to have cohesive plans in the house or senate. now with this decision looming in the supreme court everybody turns into congress if the subsidies go away and they have
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to be ready. and administration saying they don't have a plan essentially puts the ball in the court of the gop to deal with this or suffer political consequences. >> one of the arguments made in front of the supreme court was you cannot undo this now because everybody has it and everybody is going to be affected and it is going to be a disaster if you do dismantle obamacare. >> that is right. you start an entitlement and undo it. that is almost impossible. and there are plans being discussed that would give people a lifeline to keep them from having nothing after the supreme court rules. there is tax credits for low income earners and other off ramps for people who want to transition away from the program. both the house and senate are working on ways to extend money
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for people to pay for health insurance. if this goes away and you have poor people without health insurance this is the last thing they want. one part of the polling from mitt romney loosing they felt they need to work was the public feels democrats care and do more to help them. the last thing they want to have voters thinking is they don't care about them. it creates talking points for democrats as well. i think there is going to be after effort that will keep poor people and low income folks in sured and able to pay for health insurance and create off ramp for the program and get rid of the burdensome parts of the law like the mandate. this is going to be one of the biggest testing moment for the party if they can agree on what
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to do if the supreme court -- and they don't have very much time. this decision is right around the corner >> republicans have voted, i think, 50 times, to undo obamacare and dismantle. tax credits would likely be the vehicle? >> i think so. and that is a good one because they talk about allowing people to get tax credits for purchasing individual policies. it is the employer who gets the tax credit now. some version of that would exist in the plan i think, and it would help those earning well above the poverty level but not into the high income area. so it as a generous policy the house and senate are talking about. that is all they can do other than continuing the subsidies and there is a desire from the gop to end those and turn it
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into something else like a tax credit plan. >> it will be interesting to see what happens. thank you for joining us. four more patients infected with deadly bacteria at a medical center and where the superbug outbreak is spreading. and as the united states continues to negotiate a nuclear deal are iran is the press downplaying the danger for us and israel? our media panel joins us next. book now and save during the spring break sale at hotels.com. many people clean their dentures with toothpaste or plain water. and even though their dentures look clean,
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>> a superbug outbreak is growing. cedars-sinai medical center says some patients were infected with the deadly bacteria after a procedure using a particular type of medical scope and the fda has linked this scope to other outbreaks at familiar facilities. jonathan is live in la. >> reporter: first the outbreak at ucla medical center, seven infected and two of who died. and now this outbreak at cedars-sinai medical center with four patients infected there. take a look at the suspect in both outbreaks. this endoscope made by a company called olympus corp and we learned they didn't get fda clearance for the new version of the device they began selling in 2010. dr. mark segal says everyone is at fault.
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>> i would tend to blame everyone. the company not being involved the hospital not doing their due diligence to potecting patients and the fda should be involved in this. patient safety is number one. >> reporter: the endoscope in question is difficult to clean and bacteria can get trapped in it. some hospitals don't use the best cleaning agent according the dr. segal and patients should check the record before the procedure. but he said don't panic. >> this is a very rare occurrence. the problems of having this kind of problem nationwide is extremly low. it would tell me to be cautious but not to be worried. >> reporter: but with two dead and in -- the numbers infected growing it is a concern.
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especially since they have been at two of the preimminent medical institutions not just in california but in the entire country. >> something to think about. thank. a deadline looming as talks are set to resume later this months the u.s. and other world powers trying to reach a deal with iran over their nuclear capabilities. big questions remain over the meaddia downplaying the deal. it was said the events could be catastroph catastrophic by the prime minister of israel this week. julie myer and lin sweet are here to discuss this. -- judy -- judy, what did you think of the media coverage of the prime minister's speech?
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>> aside being wall to wall, there were things left out. the words israel has a nuclear bomb were never printed or heard on the air. the iranian position, which they have stated repeatedly, they don't want a nuclear bomb wasn't mentioned and finally the fact that iran is covered by the nuclear non-proliferation treaty and they have agreed to an interim deal the prime minister opposed but now says isn't so bad. if i fault the coverage it is what is not there. there was ample coverage but was it balanced? not so much. >> your overall take on the coverage lynn? >> for an issue where a lot of people may not have been paying attention, jon and judy and there is a lot of complexity
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involved at least the visit of the prime minister generated a lot of stories. whether you are not interested in technical matters of centrifuges and the role they play or the politics of getting around the table. i think the media did a good job of generating as judy said a lot of coverage. >> a lot of people who observe says iran doesn't need nuclear energy for a civilian program. there has to be a nuclear weapon component to what they are building inside some of the hidden mountains. >> i think it is iran's behavior that is raising the question. they have accepted a great deal of inspection but i think the bigger problem is the refusal to be honest about the work they had done earlier toward michigan
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miniaturizing war heads and put nuclear material on a missile. they refuse to talk about things like this and that raises questions. nevermind the fact they were developing two facilities secretly before the world caught them. so iran's on behavior raises questions. but the idea this is a debate over israel and the united states over a deal that hasn't happened is jumping over the gun. this was so important to the prime minister from the domestic standpoint. this speech was aimed at an israeli audience more than anything else. >> one of the point of the negotiations is the united states wants to make sure iran is kept from one year of a breakout period and the timeline
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that would allow them enough uranium to build a bomb. should we be trusting the iranians? >> the studies i show is there is massive detrust but there is not a unified thought of how you deal with iran when you don't trust them. and the timeline is very important. the one-year breakout program but the length of the agreement itself. ten years might seem like a lot. i am waiting for something or you are to a kid who is waiting to grow up ten years is a lot. but when you talk with a regime that looks at the mega picture ten years may not be enough for the life of this agreement. and again, those are some of the issues out there i think a lot of the stories have have been writing about in the past week.
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it is controversial, the visit, and as important it was to him for domestic reasons, it forced the spotlight on people who read a lot about what is happening >> let us all hope we don't wake up and find iran tested a nuclear program. judy and lynn thank you both. heart wrenching testimony in the boston bombing trial as victims shared tragic stories from that day. we will talk about what is at stake for dzhokhar tsarnaev. and a mother accused of kidnapping and raising a child for 17 years and justerous -- just released on bail. what authorities are saying about her now. whether you need a warm up before the big race...
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we are about 15 minutes away from "outnumbered." what do you have for us? >> the crowded gop field for 2016 is starting to narrow.
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which contepped -- contenders are becoming leaders? >> and president obama is being seep as a weak leader. what does that mean? >> and strong words from the fashion industry. she said everybody should be fired at least once. is she right? i hope i don't find out today. >> i hope you are both here forever >> aren't you a sweetie? right back at you. heart breaking testimony in the boston bombing trial from victims to lost limbs and parents who lost children describing the moments their lives changed forever. three people were killed and one of them was an 8-year-old boy. that boy's father william
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richard, testified in court yesterday mentioning how his family got ice cream before randomally stopping an opening to cheer on the runners. he went on to talk about how he realized his daughter was dead and injuries of his other daughter. i remember walking toward jane she tried to get up and fell, it was then i noticed her leg that wasn't there. she didn't have it. it was blown off at the scene. we have a fox news legal analyst and lawyer here. it is difficult to read this testimony to say the least. we approach the topics fair and balanced but i have to tell you the first thing that went through my mind as a new mom is how do we make sure this guy is executed? i want to know how this happens for dzhokhar tsarnaev.
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i know people say it doesn't happen in a federal case. it is very rare. but when you read the testimony from the father that is the natural reaction. >> i think this guy has to be executed and swiftly. the evidence is overwhelming. there is no question we will put a not guilty man to death. what he did -- the death penalty is the manifestation of society's southoutrage. this guy needs to be tried convicted all rights of due process need to be protected and he needs to be executed to manifest society's out rage. >> do eye -- you -- agree with that? >> i don't want to make this about the death penalty. i cannot look at the boy. he looks like my son. it is too upsetting.
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what was somewhat i guess re refreshing was the defense attorney -- who has a very hard job. they are not paid by the individual. they get a phone call from the judge's law secretary or someone in the court system that says you have been picked to try this case. and then as a lawyer who has taken an oath to zealously represent a client and uphold the law and do what fred said which is make sure a citizen's due process rights are protected. you go in and the defense tax reform off the bat said he did it. this isn't a trial like we know it. it is death penalty or not death penalty. and the jurors will hear and my guess is whatever decision they reach it will be justified and everyone will respect their decision. >> what does justice actually look like here fred? that is the big question. with respect to the process and the attorneys and to everything
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the country stands for got that. what does justice look like in this particular case? >> well look i agree arthur i don't want to debate the death penalty. i go back and forth on it but this is one case i don't go back in any shape. we don't grab people like in the old days find a rope and hang them. there are due process rights. the government has to prove him guilty beyond a reasonable doubt and convince 12 jurors where the death penalty is illegal in mass and they have to convince him to execute him and then he gets a full range of appeal and at some point he is taken somewhere i believe in indiana and he is executed. it has to happen. >> arthur final thoughts in this. the part of the testimony that came up with the father over the last day or so is that dzhokhar tsarnaev also likehe family
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chose to randomly stand by this part of the defense he chose where to put the backpack which was hypedbehind this family. what is the impact of that? >> it is going to be very hard to garner any sympathy for this defendant. the few clients i have had who go to jail the worst part is solitary confinement meaning you don't speak to anyone else. so the point where you lose your mind and start having conversations with yourself and you are in a depression that is not image nable. you are in a misry you cannot imagine. if that is what happens to this guy who is a teenager basically and lives out his life -- that is a pretty rough torture way as
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opposed to lying on a gurney. >> even that would be years ago. we have to end it here. great to have you. we will be right back on "happening now." ameriprise asked people a simple question: can you keep your lifestyle in retirement? i don't want to think about the alternative. i don't even know how to answer that. i mean, no one knows how long their money is going to last. i try not to worry, but you worry. what happens when your paychecks stop? because everyone has retirement questions. ameriprise created the exclusive confident retirement approach. to get the real
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enjoy over wifi or on verizon wireless 4g lte. plus enjoy special savings when you purchase any new verizon wireless smartphone or tablet from comcast. visit comcast.com/wireless to learn more. big news job report out this morning. the labor department says the u.s. economy added 295,000 jobs and unemployment dipped to 5.5% that doesn't include people who have dropped out. but the market is down. rich is live in washington. >> reporter: looking at the down numbers and this is an example of good news being bad news and this is because investors think this job report is good news and
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the fed is going to hike interest interest interest rates in june. the unemployment rate is 5.5% but economist say pay is growing to slowly and the labor force precipitation rate. the percentage of those looking for work is the rate that is slighted to 62.8%. the economy created more than 200,000 jobs despite a port slowing growth and severe winter weather. the white house said the extreme cold could have temporary affects on growth. >> it could show up in the 1st quarter gdp. if it does i think it will bounce back in the 2nd quarter. it is also a factor in the economy from quarter to quarter.
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>> reporter: credit much of last month's job growth to leisure and hospitality adding 66,000 and education added about 50,000. >> rick thank you. what happens when the massive powers of the federal government are unleashed against a private u.s. citizen? you will see first hand when you join me for a special fox news reporting enemies of the state. >> federal agencies are now looking at the irs, the atf, fbi, and osha. isn't it possible this was a coincidence? >> wouldn't that be great? but now stack it up and if it walks like a duck and talks like a duck it is probably a duck. >> did you every ask agents or agencies why the sudden interest in you and your lifes? >> no. they were just following orders.
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>> where did the orders come from? >> that is the question. >> it airs at 10 p.m. eastern on sunday at 8 p.m. eastern. back with more in a moment. at ally bank no branches equals great rates. it's a fact. kind of like mute buttons equal danger. ...that sound good? not being on this phone call sounds good. it's not muted. was that you jason? it was geoffrey! it was jason. it could've been brenda.
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jon: we'll be back in one hour. jenna: "outnumbered" starts right now. ♪ >> this is "outnumbered." i'm andrea tantaros. here today, harris faulkner host of "money" with melissa francis on our sister network, fox business's melissa francis fox news contributor democratic strategist julie row begin ski is back. #oneluckyguy host of the fox news weekend, tucker carlson. >> like my dinner table. four girls. will not say a single word next hour. that is not true that. >> met close. >> big politi

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