tv Shepard Smith Reporting FOX News April 17, 2015 12:00pm-1:01pm PDT
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gil posted this with toddlers cool. and this honorable mention from viviana, now that is a great selfie with some wind power. it's been a great week on "the real story." have a fantastic weekend everybody. here's shep. >> targeting americans. isis claiming credit now for trying to blow up a unite united states consulate. and right now isis is on the march and closing in on yet another major city. a man from ohio accused of training with terrorists in syria then coming home to launch an attack on his own. today he faced the judge. marriage might help stop pilots from committing mass murder. at least according to one airline ceo. or how about kicking pilots out of the cockpit all together and using remote controlled passenger jets. would you want to fly on one? let's get to it.
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at long last it's friday and we begin today with a fox urgent. every gain on the market especially on the dow, has been wiped out. every gain of the year. it's been in the red all day long. and dove even deeper in the last hour. all the major indies sees -- indexes are down more than 100. the nasdaq down as much as 85 pounds. the reason? apparently fears over new regulations in china and the money mess in greece. we'll watch this closely throughout the hour. now to the bombing outside a u.s. consulate in iraq. isis has now taken credit for it. and a source tells fox news it may be part of a complex attack. more on that in a moment. [sirens] >> it happened erbil.
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kurdistan and irbil, usually a refuge but not today. a car bomb explode near the consulate but the driver had to blow it up before he reached the building, never got past the three rings of security. u.s. officials say no consulate workers were hurt. a reporter at the scene says the blast was so powerful it set nearby cars on fire. meantime, iraqi fors and isis fighters are battling for control of the city of ramadi. it's about 70 miles west of baghdad and not far from the al asad air base where u.s. troops are stationed and training. today a police officer there said islamic statewere surrounding a government compound. officials are calling the situation critical. they say the islamic state will take the city unless help arrives and soon. iraqi military officials claim they're still in control of ramadi but do admit the militants are in charge of at least three villages nearby. it's fox's top story and peter
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doocy is live at the pentagon. what are officials saying about how things are going ramadi? >> reporter: officials told us at a briefing this morning all the civilians fleeing ram daddy as fast as they can it a positive sign because that shows not everybody in iraq wants to be part of isis. you take a look at this map. this is what the pentagon handed us this morning. there are four big green shades that cover a lot of ground on the map and this where is isis and iraqi forces are fighting for territory. the part on the left is in syria, and officials insist, the efforts there are preventing the other green part from growing even larger. overall, though the focus right now is on beji where there's a back and forth battle between iraqi forces and isis militants for the control of the country's largest oil refineie, centcom sayings they'd behind in 17 airstrikes in two days, 200 since the campaign began there,
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with limited success. that has given our side momentum but there's a long way to go in a very revealing admission centcom said right now we are where they thought we reside be at this point in the fight against isis. >> seriously? they thought we'd be -- >> look at the mac. >> let's go back to irbil. this is -- i can't stress enough how different this is from the rest of the country in kurd stan, very safe area and then this explosion today. what do we know about the people behind that? >> the details are changing by the minute. we know for sure there was a large car bomb that exploded in the area just outside the consulate. we're told the attackers were confronted by kurdish forces who were guard the consulate. some attackers were killed but the state department says no american casualties i've sis says they're responsible for this, and other details about the attack are being kept pretty
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close to the vest by the big government agencies near d.c. >> let's bring in chris wallace now, host of fox news sunday. i don't feel like we're getting everything. the joint chairman of -- talked about how this city is not essential to the future of iraq and today they say we're about where we thought we would be. are they being straight with us? >> it sure doesn't seem like it. remember, it was a couple of weeks ago when iraq and to a certain degree iran and the u.s. air strikes were able to finally take back tikrit, and that seemed to be the first victory and there were a lot of people here in washington who were saying, this is the beginning of rolling back isis in iraq, and in fact, according to vice-president biden we have taken back 25% of the territory but there seemed to be a momentum on the side of the u.s. and the people were supporting
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in that part of the world. now when you hear we're the danger of losing beji, a huge oil refinery, in danger of losing ramadi, and ten years ago we expended such blood and treasure to take ramadi from the sunni arabs, and now in the safest haven in iraq in kurdistan that they strike us in irbil and look take out the u.s. consulate there. doesn't seem like we have the wind at our back. and there or two fights going on here, shep. one is the actual military fight on the ground and also a perception fight, momentum fight and to the degree that -- isis is able to say we struck back after our defeat in tikrit and struck about that ramadi. only helps in their recruiting more foreign fighters. >> the broken record of all of this has been, if the people who are not of the same religious
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sect can't trust the government or don't feel like they can trust the government to have their back and make some degree of equality for them there this is never going to work and that's exactly what we're seeing. as they flee ramadi. it's the two different religious sects, one running from the other. >> well, yes, and there's another aspect to that and that is it was back last august and september which is -- we're up past six months now -- when president obama said we were entering the fight against isis and there was all this talk about how we were going to train up the iraqi military, which had fled, had disappeared, on the isis advance into mosul and here we are that many months later, and the iraqi military still can't hold ground it takes whether in baiji or ramadi or to protect in kurdistan from advances there. so it really does raise questions about how much of an effect the u.s. has been able to have on the shia, muslims in
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baghdad, the central government, and their able to unify the country against isis. >> you know when we got the new administration over there it was the hope of our administration that -- the stated hope there would be unity very quickly all would seem to have place because that's the only way it will work. and, chris, frankly, we haven't seen that. not in -- not widespread areas across the country, and you feel like these generals know at some point this country is going to have to be broken up. you wonder why they don't just redraw the lines right now to try to tamp 0 some of this down. >> reporter: i'm not sure i'm going to go that far but i certainly agree with you that we haven't seen that. the key to the iraq surge in 2007 and 2008 was when the sunni arabs turned on iraq. thesauri kawhi forces and that was the sunni awakening and that's what everybody was hoping would happen again the sunnis would rebel against isis would be more iraqis than sunnis, and
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we haven't seen that in anbar province. >> no, we haven't. you're so well-behaved today. nice to have you. thank you for coming. >> well, i'm house broken. >> you took a long time. we'll watch for chris this weekend fox news sunday. we'll talk with two presidential candidates, lindsey graham, and the independent senator, bernie sanders. that's a team right there. wow. have those two square off. good tv. chris will also talk to the guy who landed a gyrocopter at the capitol -- not with it but about that guy, who could -- the house oversight committee chairman, this sunday on fox news sunday with a very well-behaved chris wallace. it was nice for a change to see you. there's word today saddam saddam hussein's former right-hand man may have died at the hand of iraqi fors.
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he was the jack of spadeses in the to deck of cards. u.s. officials cannot confirm the death but we're led to believe this man is gone. the former deputy was known for that bright red mustache. and also believed to play a major role in the rice of the islamic state. u.s. officials have been going after this man for years -- no, king of spadeses. they have been tracking this king of clubs whatever it is, things on cards. my eyes are bad. but he is a very big deal because they tried to catch him for years on end, special forces groups were after him forever and they couldn't catch him. that's it for him we're told. the king of clubs, helped the u.s. troops identified members of the iraqi regime after the invasion in 2003. his body turned up near tikrit, saddam hussein's home town. they had the battle there. a local iraqi official says they're conducting dna tests right now but pretty sure he has met his final. the man from ohio accused of plotting a terror attack in court today.
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reactions from his attorney who says the guy faces very serious charges. we're hearing from the volunteer sheriff's deputy, if that's what you want to call him who shot and killed man, oops. sorry. he was trying to go for his taser and went for the gun. why she says the media is not treating him fairly. that's coming up. sal khan: khan academy is a not-for-profit, with a mission of providing a free world-class education for anyone anywhere. if you look at a khan academy video,
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they can cover everything from basic arithmetic to calculus, trigonometry, finance. you can really just get what you need at your own pace. and so, bank of america came and reached out to us and said 'we are really interested in making sure that everyone really understands personal finance.' and we're like 'well, we're already doing that.' and so it was kind of a perfect match.
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sunday dinners at my house... it's a full day for me, and i love it. but when i started having back pain my sister had to come help. i don't like asking for help. i took tylenol but i had to take six pills to get through the day. so my daughter brought over some aleve. it's just two pills, all day! and now, i'm back! aleve. two pills. all day strong, all day long. and for a good night's rest, try aleve pm for a better am. the man from ohio accused of
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planning a terror attack here in the united states went to court today, pleaded not guilty to charges of supporting terrorism. the feds say he talked about doing something quote big here in the united states. like going to a military base in texas and shooting american soldiers execution style and that's a quote. this suspicion is different from other americans accused of trying to help terroris in syria because the feds say this man trained with militants, then came back to the united states to do harm. investigators say the suspect took a flight from ohio, turkey and then made into it syria and bill a trained terrorist. the suspect claimed al qaeda linked militants in syria taught him how to break into homes use explosions and shoot weapons. an attorney for the suspect says the charges are up about talk and very little about actions. the attorney also called the client a normal 23-year-old kid.
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catherine herridge is in washington. >> reporter: it was a standard appearance where that 23-year-old entered an expected plea of not guilty with his lawyer telling reporters that they're developing a strategy and he played down these media reports that he claimed the evidence is -- >> i never said it's a weak case. never come out of my mouth. a very serious case. we take these charges seriously. so wherever anybody got the notion i said the case was weak, that is unmitt gated b.s. >> what stands our in the indictment is the allegation mohammad a show mali american planned to target a texas army base and kill at least three soldiers execution style even today in court, the lawyer did not dispute these core allegations that he traveled to syria, and got training from terrorists. the prosecution is also hinting more charges are coming. >> the rest of the facts will be
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deduced at trial, and we appreciate your help today. >> reporter: when the case broke yesterday, we said this is the kind of hope-grown recall caddizize that the fbi director and others have been warning about now for a couple of years. >> what are you hear from lawmakers on this? >> chairman of the house homeland security committee mickelson call issued a statement saying that this case fits a pattern of americans getting radicalized at home and then traveling overseas for training and then returning to the u.s. it reads in part, quote, the director of national intelligence recently said around 40 u.s. residents have joined extremists in syria and are already back in our country. an alarming admission that suggests there are gaps in our defenses. a lingering question, of the boston marathon bombing issue is whether the elder brother got explosives training when he was overseas in 2009 making the boston case the seminal case when you look at americans going
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over seas and successfully returning to attack and this case now in ohio also seems to feet into that pattern. >> thank you. >> you're welcome. >> the volunteer sheriff's deputy, as they call him, who says he shot and killed an unarmed suspect by accident, spoke out publicly for the first time since the incident. in an interview with "the today show" he said it's unbelievably unfair, as he put it, for the media to portray him as a wealthy donor who paid to join the force. he says he is certified to be a reserve deputy he has it in writing. this comes after the tulsa world newspaper reported the volunteer deputy had fake training records. according to the report somebody ordered supervisors at the tulsa county sheriff's office to give the deputy credit for field training and weapons certificationses he should never have received. we actually contacted the sheriffs department yesterday, and they said blame the messenger but didn't deny that any of it was true.
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we have video of the shooting. investigators say it happened earlier this month during a sting separation. >> on your stomach. >> now. [ gunshots ] >> i shot him. i'm sorry. >> man. grab it. he's got it. stop fighting. >> the deputy here, the volunteer whatever he is, says he accidently grand his gun instead of his taser and faces a manslaughters charge. out of bail at the moment. as we reported the deputy is -- not a deputy -- like a volunteer and is a 73-year-old millionaire insurance executive and donates the sheriff are campaign, took the sheriff on cruises to the bahamass and mexico. today he called the shooting number one on the list of things in my life i regret.
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we're getting an in-depth look at the hidden history of an american comedy institution. the new documently ron the rise of "saturday night live." we'll talk with the film's producer owen who worked on fox report and produced a segment that is near and dear to your hearts here inside your g-block. >> the g-block. shield thine eyes.
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about. it was the dialogue of the year when it came on. >> they call it pie live from new york." opened at the tribeca film festival this week here and the documentary's producer is with news a minute. an alum of a different program of great historical importance, fox report. he was the premiere wordsmith behind the g-block. according to -- it was the show's signature pop culture segment. >> the g-block the greatest middleweight fighter in the game today. >> travelers from an antique land who said too vast and trunkless legs of stone stand in the desert. >> star jones and her fiancee have a marriage license but the two people on the left-hand side of the screen do not have new marriage licenses. >> the one closest to starr is our now vice-president of -- senior vice-president of news editorial. go back to that.
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jay wallace. go back to that picture, you have to. that's jay in the middle and on the left the far left that's owen mooingen who is all grown up now and is the producer of "live from new york." how did you do this? >> the executive producer, dale pomeroy and tom broker a costume designer, they did this and our director. jl is a woman, the word no gives her hives. she said to me a year ago we'll be at tribeca. not opening it. >> but you did. and you interviewed every big name in comedy of our lifetime, sounds like. >> a ton of them. >> you did. you researched them and interviewed them. >> i did the majority of the -- conducted a majority of them and j.l. did some and our director did some. it was amazing to -- i'm talking to paul simon for 90 minutes and it's like, he's answering my
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questions, not saying, go away who are you? it was tremendous to have this level of access. loren michaels give us his blessing and we were able to in a quick period of time dig deeply into what 40 years of snl means to try to do that in 82 minutes is something else. >> the people behind you probably see snl in a way different than we do because when we were coming up, snl was the highlight of the week. and to go back and chronicle that must have been, for you, a bit of a comedy genius yourself -- to do that yourself. >> it was so in my wheelhouse, obviously, and being in 30 rock across the street, which is this tower of broadcast history, and the strength -- >> look how far they've come. >> to be there to show up to work every day and say, i'm going studio 8h to work. we had office space in the
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building but i'd eat my lunch in 8h. >> trying to get a vibe. >> get a vibe and know that -- in fact we do live production. we come from a live background and there's so much similar. working hard and having -- there's line that loren michael says we don't go own when we're ready. we go on at 11:30. to feed off that vibe and feel it in that studio was something that was really tangible. >> are you doing this interview? >> who is it? >> andy sandberg talking about the very beginning of "saturday night live." >> there's no ever saying the best cast ever wasn't the first cast because the first is always the best. >> you get the props no water what because you created what it. you broke the mold in television. it was important. that's why you're still here. everyone at my parents' dinner parties talking about the first cast. >> is he cool. >> very cool. >> and you don't see it because a lot of the goofball stuff he trades in, but a really smart
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dude and a real sense of his place in that cultural machine. >> does everybody in that snl world -- it is its own world -- do they all see the first cast as the best. >> yes. you can then start talking about other people after them after the charter group chevy and garrett morris and -- everyone genuinely genuflects in their direction because it was unusual. >> what have you learned most as a sort of student of this genre? >> i learned that i had re-affirmed to me that collaboration is the key to something like snl. something like this movie itself. we got it together in ten months with j.l. reside leadership, and collaborate, collaborate, collaborate. made working here so good. people wanted to help each other out. >> we were young, very young did you see those clips. >> i did. i had none of this.
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>> i have all kinds of things now. we're all so proud of you. so great to have you back. >> i want to say this movie is opening in theaters june 12th. >> in 14 cities. >> yes and people can check out "live from new york movie.com. >> all right. opens in theaters on the 12th 12th of june and you can check your listings in your city for "livefrom -- new york -- >> still can't read the teleprompter. the first thing on youtube to hit a million views or something like that. >> and we lost a lot of weight that night. >> we did lose a lot of weight that night. we have secrets we'll never tell. >> owen, moogan. we'll be right back.
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a fox. all quite's most dangerous splinter group seized a major weapons depot filled with guns, rocket launchers and dozen of tanks. that's the reporting of security officials in eastern yemen. the militant reportedly captured an airport and oil terminal and a military base yesterday. analysts warn that al qaeda is taking advantage of the chaos in yemen to expand its influence the u.s. is supporting saudi arabia and iran backs rebel fighters on the ground. dash cam video shows a chain reaction of crashes in oklahoma. hydraulic fuel spill sent car spinning out of control. they say that nobody was hurt but the police car was totaled. a traffic cop caught a stabbing suspect with his belt in shanghai. the traffic cop wants to distract the subject before the cops got there.
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family members and survivors will gather in oklahoma city sunday to mark two decades since the worst home-grown terror attack in u.s. history. 20 years have bassed sin the bombing of the federal building and for those who watched it all unfold there's no way to forget the event and the aftermath of april 19, 1995. >> at 9:04:00 a.m. this morning, the federal building located 200 west fifth street was almost completely destroyed by what we believe was a car bomb. >> a bomb so powerful people said they felt it 55 miles away. as it exploded a tape recorder was rolling at a meeting across the street. >> i have to receive information regarding -- [explosion] >> a building shook and the ceiling fell in and the walls fell in and there was nothing left. >> nothing more than a shell of a nine-story building that
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housed federal offices, along with a daycare center. 19 children were among the 168 people who died. the wounded filled the streets with blood on their clothes and dazed looks on their faces. >> right over here. >> tell me where to take her? >> it was more than the ambulances could handle. adding to the chaos -- >> a hot spot. >> investigators warned more bombs could be hidden nearby. rescue crews braved the dangers in an attempt to reach those still stuck inside. >> we have areas to look through and see people trapped but can't get to them. some or them are crying and screaming and weeping, and done our best to reassure them. >> officials still believe that dozens if not 150 or more people may still be trapped in the building and may not have survived. >> they did, however, pull dozens of people alive from the rubble that day. >> my entire staff of seven
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people is gone. gone. >> somebody did this, what could by their motive? that many innocent people. >> what happened was a bad thing an evil thing. but we will find the people who did it. and we will bring them to justice. >> investigators found pieces of a ryder truck at the center of the blast site, and the search was on for two men who rented it. >> these are the faces of the men suspected in the terrorist attack. >> but one of them was already in jail. >> one of the individuals believed to be responsible for's' terrible attack on the murrow federal building in oklahoma city has been arrested. >> a highway patrol every pulled over timothy timothy mcveigh then busted if for illegally driving with a lead weapon. mcvague was an army veteran who developed a distrust of the
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u.s. government and planned the attack with the help of a friend, terry nichols, who quickly turned himself in. but mcveigh parked the truck and lit the fuse and the jury agreed. >> counsels one through 11, all of which carry a potential death penalty, guilty as charged. and the applause is beginning to be heard around the courthouse now. >> our only hope is that the verdict will go some way to preventing such a terrible drastic crime, from ever occurring again. >> a separate jury found nichols guilty of conspiracy and manslaughter. ordering him to spend the rest of his life in prison. but mcveigh got the death sentence, and in 2001 i was there. >> a minute before the drugs would flow he stared into the ceiling and a camera beaming him to a town he tried to devow. >> the victims of the oklahoma
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city bomb egg have been given not vengeance but justice. ♪ let there be peace on earth ♪ >> a memorial had opened on the spot where the building once stood. 168 empty chairs representing each of those who lost their lives there. 20 years ago. >> first responders raced to the bombing scene, bank clerk and an amateur photographer took a picture that captured the heartbreak of the day. an iconic photograph. it went on to win a pulitzer prize. it shows fire captain chris fields checking a little girl for signs of life. the little girl was bailey. she died that day. the day after her first birthday. tomorrow, would be bailey's 21st birthday. her mother is with is erin. live from oklahoma city. it's so good to see you again.
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how are you? >> i'm doing good. this year has been tougher than i thought with bailey's 21st 21st birthday coming but to just kind of deal with it the best you can and hope for good results. >> well, we're certainly hoping for you. the hope had always been -- i remember survivors in the early going talking about how time will heal. that has not been your experience has it? >> no. maybe some people do heal over time, but i think you just kind of learn how to live with it and your whole world changes, and you kind of get to a point where you can live a different way. you know what i mean? >> i do. >> it is really tough. i have two other kids now, and bella is 17 and brooks is 14 and watching them grow up and the milestones that bailey had to miss. and then this year she would
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have turned 21, so every nyes it's a right of passage to have a drink, and she won't be able to do that. and that heartbreaking for me. >> i've covered a lot of really awful things over the past 25 years. but i don't have as strong a memory of anything as i do of that oklahoma city bombing. the smell in the air. that just changed to something so acrid and indescribable, and i remember i wonder if the emotions of that time still bubble up every year? if that smell comes back to you? if that sky comes back to you sniff that beep, beep, beep, we all heard for weeks comes back. >> right. it doesn't come back once a year. it's a lot more than that. and it's difficult because i miss bailey every day. my kids have a sister they never
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got to meet. so, i won't -- it comes when you're not expecting it. i can just be sitting around doing nothing and then it will hit me, and it's difficult. but i have a great support system. my husband is great. my kids are great. and they always have my best interests at heart. >> you -- >> can always count on them. >> you have said you live your life with the thought of bailey watching you. cue tell our viewers about that? >> at the time of the bombing i was young. i was only 22, about to turn 23 so i was very young myself. and i've always -- until this day i always try to do things that would make bailey proud of me so i always kind of look at it like she is looking down from heaven and i want her to see that i do good things, or that i
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make her proud because -- everybody wants to make their children proud. and since my other two kids i can ask them, and i can tell them, if you're embarrassed tell me but bailey can't. so always all four of us always tried to make sure that we do things that would make her proud. >> you had a birthday party for her the day before some and she was in the daycare center and they tried to keep the newspapers away from you because this picture of your child -- well, you described her as everybody's baby now. >> right. that picture whenever i look at that picture i don't see bailey. per se. granted, know it's her. but if every time i looked at
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that picture i thought about my daughter being dead issue wouldn't have method it this long. that's a tough pill to swallow. i really think i wouldn't look at it and my whole family looks at it this way -- it's a symbol of the bombing. everybody was somebody's child that died there that day. so that is a way that we use the picture to be able to see it to be able for it not to kick us every time. we just kind of look at it as a symbol. and then a lot of people look at that picture, and she has become a part of a lot of families and i think a lot of people may have at the time or even now seen that picture and realize the loss. i think if it helps one child not to be abused or give somebody strength, then it's worth it to have the picture out
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there. >> i think it means so many different things to into many different people who were there but as one who was there and who covered the whole trial and watched tim tim mcveigh tie, it says this i oklahoma city taking care of itself. i've covered things all over the world and never had handexperience like that from the heartland oklahoma city, wrapping its arms around its people and making sure everybody was okay and that is what that picture says to me. it's just a beautiful thing in that way. >> right. it is. it is. one thing that does bother me the worst about the picture is the fact that when they talk about other people that died in the bombing they'll talk about, like ted garrett, for instance, he loved to play ball, loved to ride his bike. but a with baylee they say she was the baby in the fireman's arms. that wasn't even a second of her
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life, that picture. she was already gone. so i mean in that instance, i wish that those kind of things would change because i -- she was a real person. and i think that gets left out a lot of times. >> we're not forgetting that can guarantee you. all the best to you and your two teenagers and your husband and i wish you all of life's joys. it's so nice to see you again. thank you so much for coming. >> thank you. have a good day. >> we'll be right back.
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investigators say the copilot of the plane purposely smashed it into the french alps. some aviation officials coming up with unusual ways to improve safety on planes, including getting rid of pilots. lea gabrielle is live. i understand there's some talk about pilotless jets. >> there is, and the head of germany's air traffic control agency says he is considering the idea of planed that can be taken over by controllers on the ground if. we took to times square to ask people. >> absolutely not. trust in pilots. i fly a lot. >> seems like there would be too much room for error. no i would not get on a plane without a pilot. >> no not in support of pilotless planes, no. >> i think if you can create a plane that could fly itself, yes, i'd be okay with that.
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>> so we did have one taker, at least, but duke university professor missy cummings is an expert and a former navy fighter pilot and says there is a strong argument for cargo planes without pilots but when it comes to commercial airlines it's a disstory. >> at the technology exists for planes not to be flown by humans but when it comes to commercial passenger planes i don't think we'll truly see a time where there's drones because you have passengers that need a leader onboard. so wherever you have humans you need humans. >> aviation experts say it may be useful in cases of emergencies to control planes from the ground. >> one industry leader says they should be looking more closely at marital status of pilots. >> according to the "associated press" that was the head of the turkish airlines and told a group of pilots he believes the germanwings pilot crashed the plane after being separated from
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dirtyman. it's gross and it's expensive. anallies say that's often because the dirt and bacteria break down the security features on cash, making it unusual forcing banks to destroy it and costing taxpayers billions of dollars. now workers at a company in rhode island say they have developed a machine that fixes all of that. laura ingle is in new york. how does this machine clean money? >> reporter: the cash is cleaned with a special carbon dioxide solution and a big old machine that keeps the bills from being destroyed. banks shred roughly 150,000 tons
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of dirty, torn and tattered cash each and every year, then spend about 10 bill to re- -- $10 billion to replace it. that's why this company envenned a cash-cleaning machine to help banks keep bills in circulation longer. now, it's called the aris, large metal money-washing machine which looks like a bank vault with the large round door, and spinning wheel bundles of cash are loaded into a bin and are cleaned in under just two hours. the ceo of the company says his team has found a way to launder bills with a substance that keeps the bills intact. >> has the density of a liquid so can desolve a lot of material. but it behaves like a gas, which means it permeates the smallest of pours and that combination is what allows you to distract the oily substances that lead to the soiling of bank notes,. >> reporter: the inspector plans
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to release these machines to banks worldwide which will give notes a whole new life. >> laundering money with a whole new definition. this day in history right after this how do i get hotel deals nobody else gets? trust me i'm a great negotiator. price-line ne-go-ti-a-tor! 60% off! 40! 60! 40! 60! 40! 40! 60! trust me, they can't say 'no' to me. i've been doing this for 20 years... can i get an upgrade? trust me, and you'll
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on this day in 1973, that guy, george lucas, started writing "star wars." lucas said his original screen play was too long to had to split into it three films. the first "star wars" featured an unknown cast. some guy named harrison ford, carrey fisher and mark ham ill. it was an immediate hit and earned 10 academy awards knock missions and sin then the franchise has made george lucas billions and now disney is making a series of sequels with the first movie set to premiere this year. this trailer came out yesterday. but george lucas started writing about a galaxy far, far away, 42 years ago today. when news breaks out, we'll
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break in. awful. terrible. what is it? after the -- after the bell, on fox business network, for in-depth analysis. >> is this the reason why air rage is mounding? airlines are putting the squeeze on passengers. welcome everybody. i want you to take a close look at something. this. this is your future. airbus is cramming an extra seat into each economy row. not the first class. the economy row where the seats are already as wide as like a dixie cup and it comes at a time that flight attendants say that passengers are already losing it. so first to trace gallagher. on the snore that triggered a roar. trace, what happened? >> reporter: they say the pen is mightier than the sword and now we know why. a southwest flight from chicago
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