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tv   Americas News Headquarters  FOX News  April 19, 2015 1:00pm-2:01pm PDT

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e-cigarettes. >> nonsmoker, don't start on e-cigarettes. >> you're my favorite. how about that? made up for it. don't believe that. thank you very much. nice to have you here. >> take care. hello, everyone. welcome to "america's news headquarters." >> hello everyone. isis, once again, massacreing christians. a new video purportedly shows a gruesome slaughter in libya. what they're demanding for lives to be spared. today marks 20 years since the oklahoma city bombing. how the 168 victims of the deadliest deadly domestic terror attack in america is remembered. also this. >> hands on you? >> all of you --
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>> [ bleep ]. >> a u.s. military veteran detained for protecting old glory. why an american flag led to this heated confrontation. but first this afternoon, republican presidential hopefuls taking aim directly at hillary clinton. first in the nation leadership summit is wrapping up this weekend in new hampshire, much of the criticism today focused on the democratic front-runner and herself will head to the granite state starting tomorrow and facing some heat from a potential challenger. >> clinton presidency was basically another four years of barack obama. up to this point, i have not seen her distinguish herself. >> an extreme poverty if there's not more than one person willing to compete for the presidential nomination of the democratic party. >> you can see there getting it from both sides. live in the washington bureau with the latest on this.
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>> with seven days done in the hillary clinton campaign and 569 to go, there are wildly different interpretations of how well it went and how well it will go. >> she had a good first week. no error of inevitability. made it about the voters and not herself. focused squarely on economic issues and most interestingly and for the general election she flirted a couple of ideas of lower regulations on small business and making insurance companies compete for people's health care business which most republicans would agree with. >> this was a disaster. they would like to press reset on this whole first week. i love hearing this. she did things of substance because none of us got to get to that. the team tripping up on the small things. >> republican candidates announced enunannounced. 20 of them in new hampshire over the weekend for the first in the nation summit and linked by the
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criticism of clinton's record and ohio governor kasich all are touting their own record. >> as governor of the state i inherited a total mess and at the end of the day we're running surpluses, largest tax cuts in the country. >> but all are struggling to differentiate themselves from the pack. chris christie's tough guy style working well in new hampshire. jeb bush issuing the party to free up the nominee of attorney general for confirmation and conservative ted cruz sent a tweet sure to win the approval of 2nd amendment. this is a weapon of choice of gangsters and american g.i.s in world war ii. weighing a run is democratic governor and south carolina
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republican graham. saying they'll decide by the end of may. crowded crowded field. >> crowded and starting lively. thank you, doug, as always. so eric and doug hillary clinton may be the only democratic candidate in the presidential race so far but independent vermont senator sanders said he'll decide soon whether to challenge clinton and depends on fund raising. >> when you got the super pacs and billionaires able to spend hundreds of millions of dollars on the candidates of their voice making sure you have the money to run a credible campaign is very very important. >> joining me now, lars larson a syndicated radio host with alpha media networks and alan coombs. good to see see both of you. >> nice to be here. >> alan is senator sanders serious? >> yes. at least he's been on my radio
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show just like he was on fox news sunday saying he would be in it to win it. no one's going to say, i'm a kand date and see if i change the conversation. but although the conventional wisdom is he is not going to be a serious candidate he would drive the conversation in a way like ron paul as an interesting candidate did last couple of rounds i think that bernie sanders probably be the most interesting candidate in a 2016 democratic field. >> how would me drive the conversation? >> to talk about things in a way others are not. talking against wall street. he would be focusing on the middle class. he's got the credentials to do it. be talking about the big money to get out of politics. without citizens united it would be a better field and not needing the money to run and win. he would have the credibility for that conversation. >> bernie sanders running god's
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gift to talk radio. terrible for america. alan knows this. i'd love to see him running. running the left of hillary and then suggesting to drive the money out of politics as hillary aims for $2.5 billion from her multi-millionaire friends and for him to criticize the ultra rich in america with secretary clinton and then for bernie to talk about how driving america towards european socialism because it's worked out so well there will make america a better place or having medicare for all has he's suggested ask anybody who's a senior citizen in america whether they can find a doctor willing to take medicare and then medicare for all. it's a hoot if he gets in. >> the american public is far ahead of where the polls are, where the politicians are. love to see medicare, a single payer system. many people against obamacare and want a more progressive plan. >> hang on. senator sanders talked about the
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big money and i would ask you that person to go to another question. does he have a point senator sanders that the red, white and blue process of democracy is all about the drain? alan, you are up first. talk about the gop candidates and hopefuls. 21 in new hampshire. who has the kourns sy, not just cash but political currency to take on hillary clinton. alan? >> i think certainly jeb bush has the currency in terms of people know who he is. name recognition. the big money people and the real fight between rubio and bush because they're fighting for the same personnel, some of the same donors, fighting within the same state and walker also has a lot of currency of conservatives with a very strong message of what he's done in wisconsin so that's where the currency is at the moment on the right at least. >> lars? >> we're not going to pick another rhino. i don't think bush is the choice. listen. to the money question which you aimed at, the fact is to be able
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to communicate a message, you have to pay for media, social media, radio and fell vision. you can't do it without that. money is free speech and there's one state supreme court said money is free speech. i don't think it's necessarily -- >> that's the problem. >> not necessarily poisonous. how else do you communicate a message to 300 million people but by buying media and a campaign staff on the ground? you can have all the wonderful volunteers in the world but without some kind of way to coordinate them which takes money, you can't run a campaign. >> do you think that that leaves people out of the process? people who don't have money? >> citizens united made it much easier for big money secret money. sources not identified always. >> like -- >> hillary clinton said if she were president she would support an amendment to get rid of citizens united. without the big money, you can't be as competitive.
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money should not equal free speech in this country. >> let me tell you something. the biggest do northerlies are not the koch brothers. the biggest donations are the labor union and love to see a democrat, bernie sander who is acts as a democrat or hillary clinton saying we'll tell you all the unions they can no longer fund political campaigns because if they want to cut the money out the biggest single donors in america are the labor unions. who do they claim to speak for? average blue collar working people. >> lars i started with alan. i end with you. >> thank you. >> lars, alan, good to see both of you. thank you. >> thank you. >> thanks. >> sure. it is a day of honor and remembrance in oklahoma city. it's marking 20 years as that deadly bombing attack that devastated the community and shocked our country. hundreds of survivors family members and others honored the victims at a memorialer is main.
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168 people were killed when that bomb went off in front of the federal building in 1995. the site home to the oklahoma city national memorial and museum. bill carr is in the west coast newsroom with more on the deeply mean lful commemoration. hi, will. >> hi, eric. it's been two decades but the emotional scars are still fresh. on april 19th, 1995 just after 9:00 a.m. in the morning, a ryder truck filled with more than 2 tons of explosives blew up gutting the federal building in oklahoma city. the carnage was unforgettable. 168 people died. 19 of whom were children. took rescuers six weeks to recover all the bodies and less than two hours after the explosion, authorities caught up and arrested tim mcveigh, a gulf war veteran who hated the government and planned the bombing on the anniversary of the waco siege in 1993. he was later convicted and
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executed by lethal injection. his accomplice is serving consecutive life sentences. this morning, at the exact time the bomb went off 20 years ago the ceremony to remember the victims had family me believes choking up as they read the names of those who died that day. >> our dad, mickey b. maroni. >> our mother, francis brand ann williams. >> quite an emotional day, they also had 168 seconds of silence. we heard from survivors and heard from president bill clinton who was in his first term at the white house when the bomb went off. >> when you strip away all the little things that divide us, it's important to remember how tied we are and how much we all
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americans owe oklahoma city. >> the oklahoma city national memorial and museum opened five years after the explosion. it's very impressive. last year they just went through an enhancement project. some things that you'll remember going there, there's 168 empty chairs outside. one for each victim. when you go inside they also have a gallery of honor. going into the gallery, you see pictures of each and every victim. they really give you goose bumps in there. it gives you a great understanding of the loss that they had that day and its impact on the country moving forward. eric? >> thank you, will. it is really a beautiful memorial and always should all remember. still ahead in this hour of "america's news headquarters," the governor of oklahoma at the time, he will join us to tell us why the community's actions since the bombing shows what they call the oklahoma standard. what that means and what we can all mean from those that went
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through the terrible terrorist attack. a horrifying disaster and hundreds of people are still missing this hour after a boat carrying an estimated 700 migrants capsized north of libya. a portuguese ship managed to pull nearly 30 people to safety but this could become the immediate trainian's deadliest known migrant disaster. the tragedy prompting leaders to call for a solution to the rising number of african refugees braving dangerous waters to reach europe. meanwhile, isis, remember, they beheaded the egyptian christians two months ago. how the group targeted christians yet again. they have released another execution video about that. this one claims to show the slaughter of two different groups of ethiopian christians this time. christians who were captured in libya. elizabeth pran has more. >> reporter: the video reportedly showing the killing of two different groups of
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christians in libya. fox cannot confirm the authenticity of the video but it is consistent of videos in the past. it doesn't make clear how many were killed but separate mass executions. one group shot dead and another beheaded. the video's almost 30 minutes long showing a mass fire report reportedly saying christians must change to islam. migrants were murdered among a group of people fleeing across the sea. italian police arrested 15 african muslims accusing hem of homicide. news reports claim thousanding to flee and on thursday at least a dozen were pushed overboard, left to drown. the president says anti-terror efforts are already in place and libya is a great concern. >> we are consistently looking where terrorist threats might
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emanate and libya, obviously is an area of great concern. >> reporter: critics, however say more needs to be done. thornberry says the u.s. should be more involved. >> isis is growing and growing ideologically. they're growing in libya, growing in afghanistan. so terrorism is on the move and we're not -- we do not have an effective strategy to stop it right now. >> reporter: the state department says it's reviewing the video. eric, back the you. >> thanks very much. could the fbi be on the blink of solving the biggest art heist in our country? now the fbi arresting a person of interest they think holds the key to the unsolved case. his attorney joins us next. and that gyro continuer in the protected air space and landing on the lawn of the u.s. capitol. what does that say about the state of security in the very
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heart of our nation's government? that aura of inevitability of lawmaker will prevail. that shine has gone away. and so, unfortunately i think we are going to have more and more of this. what will they do about it? mayo? corn dogs? you are so outta here! aah! [ female announcer ] the complete balanced nutrition of great-tasting ensure. 24 vitamins and minerals antioxidants and 9 grams of protein. [ bottle ] ensure®. nutrition in charge™. i've got a to-do list and five acres of fresh air. ♪ ♪ happiness is a drive-over mower deck. [ male announcer ] that's how we run, and nothing runs like a deere. ♪ ♪
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the thieves spent 81 minutes seizing works of art valued at more than $500 million. >> that case goes unsolved now for 25 years but a federal prosecutor claims that there's person of interest. actually they say discussed the sale of the paintings with an undercover fbi agent. well, the fbi arrested him on gun charges on friday but according to our next guest it's an attempt to try to track down the stolen art work.
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joining us now is the attorney for the person arrested. first of all, astounding. half a billion dollars worth of painting in the case still gone unsolved. how come they haven't been able to solve this? after all this time. >> probably because the people that they believe had something to -- well because it's 25 years old. and, most of the people are dead and gone. who they believe originally had something to do with the actual theft of the paintings themselves. and they've never surfaced. and nobody's ever spoken about them. and nobody could be cajoled or convinced or bought or rewards have never worked to get people to come forward and say that they either have the paintings or know where the paintings are. >> there's an empty on the right a frame to see. that's because under the
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stipulations they have had the empty frames. >> that's the rembrandt? >> that was the rembrandt. >> from the sea of galilee. >> think they that your guy robert gentile who you represent, 79 years old, had something to do with that. why do they suspect that and what did he say about the case? >> they don't suspect he had something to do with the actual theft of the paintings. >> or that he knows. >> they spoent suspect that he -- well, i can't speak for them really but there isn't anyone who says he had anything to with the theft of the paintings. what i believe their theory is that he may have been a part -- this is their theory. he may have been a part of the transfer of the paintings from boston to philadelphia via connecticut. and that's the theory of -- that they're going on. >> he lives in connecticut. >> he does. >> happened in boston. say he was recorded on tape by an undercover talking about the paintings? when they dug up part of his house they say they found a list
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and an old boston herald article about that and failed a lie deck tech for test. >> i can't tell you what he says about that. he denies ever having the paintings. that he categorically denies having to do with the theft of the paintings. it appears that an associate of his may have been involved in scamming people out of money by making them believe that he actually -- not my client, but this associate of his who is mentioned in a book that just came out by steve kirchen and he's believed to be an individual who was scamming people into thinking that he had the paintings in order to get proof of life money. >> okay. he is dead? >> he is passed away. >> $5 million reward and they have offered that to your
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client? >> they have offered it to my client. >> spill the beans and get that money. >> not only offered it to my client, they have also offered him that immunity for any of the crimes that he may have committed before these particular crimes the crimes that he was convicted of three years ago. and in that offer i believe still stands if he comes forward with any actual information that would lead them to the paintings and yet he does not do any of that because he does not have any of that conversation. >> your position is he didn't do it, doesn't know anything about it? >> correct. >> and the feds are on a wild goose chase? >> all i can say is this. if $5 million and keeping you in jail as his daughter was dying and his died as he was in prison and the last time he was caught, if that wouldn't get you and
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encourage you to enough to give the information that you have, i don't know what would. if missing your daughter's funeral and not seeing your daughter on her deathbed wouldn't you get to give the information it's because you don't have any. >> defense lawyer for robert gentile, thank you for coming in. >> thank you for having me. >> we have to see if the paintings are ever recovered. thank you. >> thank you. >> okay. a u.s. military veteran taking action when she sees protesters stomping on the american flag. >> he's -- >> do you see your hands on him? >> [ bleep ]. >> let him go! >> police officers arrested military veteran and it's all on tape. as we told you, americans pausing to remember what happened 20 years ago. how could you forget? 168 victims of the oklahoma city bombing. next the governor of oklahoma at the time frank keating will join us. he spoke at the event today along with former president clinton.
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a somber and reflective date. oklahoma city, hundreds of survivors, family members and others gathering for the 20th remembrancer is noin at the oklahoma city national memorial and museum. the bombing killed 168 people. today's ceremony honored the lives lost and the resilience of the human spirit. ♪ ♪ ♪ >> for 20 years you have honored the memories of your loved ones, you have inspired us through the power of your renewal.
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you have reminded us that we should all live by the oklahoma standard. service, honor, kindness. >> that is very hard time but it's a very wonderful moment of celebration of life, survival, goodness, sharing and caring. >> and that last speaker, frank keating. he was ob ok's governor at the time of the bombing and joins us now. good to have you here. >> pleasure. thanks for having me. >> indeed. i would like you to tell me about the feeling at the remembrance ceremony and also what is the meaning of this day for the local community and then what do oklahomans wants this day to mean to all personals? >> well, it was just an unspeakable horror. it was a tragedy. there was absolutely no reason for what happened.
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but to kill 168 of our friends including 19 babies, it was just unfathomable. so to be stuck with that tragedy and to recover from it, to have the 302 buildings damaged or destroyed, to have people who came from all over the united states to work and to sacrifice oklahoma city, with these urban search and rescue teams and have them not charged anything. free food. free laundry. free equipment. everything was stunning to them. i mean people from new york, for example, said in 1993 the first world trade center bombing we had to pay $5 for a sack of its. here dinner anywhere in oklahoma city and the check never comes. that was the oklahoma standard that over the years people are very proud of that, that we acted like brothers and sisters even though the person who did this to us intended to destroy the family and he didn't. so it's a veryt but also with all of these kids who
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are orphaned, 30 lost both parents, 170 lost one parent. to put them through college which we d. it's a commitment of a community going forward for those suffering and who have psych lodge cll as well as physical wounds. but it was a tough day and proud day today. >> were some of the children who were grown now and some of those orphaned on that day, were they at the ceremony today? >> yeah they were as a matter of fact. and a number of them came forward and read the names of all those who were killed. every one of the federal agencies, social security people who were applying for social security. youngsters who were victims, youngsters who were orphaned by this event. came forward. it was just really very warm and president clinton the fbi director, homeland security secretary, all of them really gave spiritual and morally uplifting talks. it was quite remarkable. >> very remarkable. and you mentioned homeland
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security secretary johnson. do you work closely with his department as efforts intensified to protect american soil from terrorism? >> well, one of the things that was done here in oklahoma city was to open what's called the oklahoma city university murrah center and for the study of homeland security law. in other words, if something bad happens natural or man-made dys dysasteter, how do we ander the jurisdictional disputes? in oklahoma city the fema director said the fire department and police service were so competent and professional and skilled he made the fema workers work for those individuals. that was not the case in many cities of the united states. remember new orleans had a real hard time locally handling the problem with the hurricane katrina. so it's all a discussion with homeland security in the future when a man-made or natural
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disaster occurs who's in charge, how do we handle it legally take care of the blizzard of regulations statutes and jurisdictional disputes and we handled that in oklahoma city but it will be a problem going forward if we don't have with homeland security's leadership as well as the department of justice some guidance and advice going forward. >> i thank you for working closely with them. i'm from new orleans and our family lived through hurricane katrina and not about that today. it is about americans taking on the oklahoma standard and loving and caring for each other. governor keating, i thank you so much. >> thank you. you're very welcome. thank you very much. >> okay. take care. by the way, the oklahoma city bombing still felt in the nation's capital. it prompted officials to close part of pennsylvania avenue near the white house a month later and keep it closed. the secret service says a similar truck bomb could destroy
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the white house. the area is open to pedestrians but a reminder of the 160 people who lost their lives two decades ago in oklahoma city. >> we remember and honor fellow americans today. meanwhile, charges have been dropped against a u.s. military veteran after a fight with a group of protesters who were walking on an american flag. >> you see your hands on them? >> all of you -- >> [ bleep ]. >> let it go! >> calm down. >> why are you not touching her? why are you not touching her? >> calm down. >> no! >> the vet the woman in the middle, clutching that flag after she picked it up off the ground. a group of students in georgia walking over our flag in protest when she snatched it from them and tried to walk away and then she was charged. new york newsroom with the latest. hi brian. >> that woman is michelle manhart, 28 years old, a 14-year
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veteran of the air force and ended up happening was a friend posted a photo of students walking on the flag on the facebook wall on thursday. racially charged protesters and felt it was her duty to do something about it. she said she repeatedly asked valdosta to stop them from disgracing the flag. on friday, she took action. >> that's not -- >> actually, it is. actually, it is. any time it's been torn or ripped it needs to be properly disposed of. we'll take care of that. it belongs to the united states. >> no, no. it is not yours. >> the flag was taken from manhart and given back to the protest earls causing this scuffle. listen to what a police officer told manhart's daughter as to why they arrested her. >> because when we told her to release she did not. >> you arrested her because she would n't release the flag to the people who had it on the ground? >> no. to me. >> she wouldn't release it to
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me. >> exactly. the officer that told her to return it. >> manhart released because the protesters and the officers declined to press charges for theft and resisting arrest. now, the university, though, has issued a criminal trespass warning which bans manhart from stepping foot on campus. still, she says she'd do it again. >> when it comes to the flag it is our symbol. it stands for everything that we are. it stands for the freedoms to allow those individuals to do what they want and protest and how are you keeping it and justify ruining or walking upon something that's a right to do what you're doing. >> the university president released a statement reading in part while i firmly disagree with the actions of the protesters i understand their right to protest. the skl's expecting veterans groups to protect on campus on monday and says it will respect their right to do so. eric? >> and the charges have been dropped. >> dropped. >> there it is. >> thanks so much. >> thanks. well, the man who caused a
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huge security scare landing a gyro continuer on the u.s. capital lawn is speaking out. >> do you consider yourself a patriot? >> no. i'm a mailman. >> so why did he violate national air space on purpose? plus, coming up it was the party of the year. how one mother was able to throw a star-studded event for her daughter's birthday and then the kids from school were not coming from the celebration. >> baby -- see how many people really truly have a heart out here and it's just a great turnout and blessed to be here.
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lawn. he did it he said to protest the big money influencing politics and now he says he's frustrated that that message is not getting out. >> we have got bigger problems in this country than fussing about whether or not the security around d.c. is ironclad. okay? you need to be worried not about whether or not someone can fly into d.c. but the piles of money going into congress. >> that message resonates. chief congressional correspondent for "washington examiner." good to see you as always. the house administration committee will begin an investigation. what will the investigations do you think aheave? >> i think they're going to examine why exactly the capital police didn't know that this gyro-continuer was headed to the west lawn, why the capital police were caught flat footed. i think me believes of congress are stunned by the security breach and i think that this guy in some ways did them a favor
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because what if this was someone carrying a bomb or chemical weapons or doing something dangerous with a tourists all running around on the west side of the capitol? this is really quite shocking just about how easy it was for this guy to land that machine as close as he did to the capital and i think lawmakers on capitol hill are determined to find out not only why this happened but what they're going to do to make sure it doesn't happen again. >> apparently the capitol police say that if he got closer to the capitol building he would have been shot down and lindsay graham today is saying that he should have been shot down anyway. there was no loss of life but potentially could be really dangerous. >> yes. and i think that it was -- i believe them when they say if it got closer. look how away in the video. he was on the north front and snipers positioned there. what if he was carrying a larger
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weapon that could have detonated and caused damage? there's so many questions here and i heard what lindsay graham said and i think that, you know, the lawmakers are very worried about this. and i think you're gong to see changes. we had a drone land on the white house lawn recently. clearly there's an issue with these low flying vehicles, be it a drone or a gyro-continuer. they escape detection by radar. i think what people are surprise surprised is there wasn't a plan for this kind of attack either by a drone or gyro-continuer. >> what about the reason he come planled this? letters for members of congress campaign finance reform. does he have a point? they talk about hillary raising $2.5 million. he's frustrated and upset everyone is watching him zip
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along and not his protest of campaign finance reform? >> he's captured the spirit of voters who think congress is not doing enough of what they care about. the problem of what he is talking about is at the bottom of the list of things that voters care about, they care more about terrorism the economy, national security. you know, campaign finance is not something people are talking about, unfortunately although there are many who think they should be focusing on it. this issue is not super popular amongst voters for what they're concerned about. besides, i think landing on the west front is not going to get the focus on campaign finance. everyone now is just scrambling to figure out how to stop this from happening again. >> yeah yeah. that's for sure. good to see you. by the way, mr. hughes is back in washington may 8th for a court hearing on this. here's hoping he takes a real airplane or drives or a train. >> thank you. >> traditional transportation.
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okay. south africa now becoming the world's latest hot spot. acts of violence mass rioting and death threats are quickly spreading across the nation. we'll she you why or what's igniting so much hostility.
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>> and many immigrants want to have a promising future but jobs are becoming scarce. there are a wave of those that have led to assault and looting and massive rioting. we have been caught up in some of that covering the crisis.
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paul had some things happens? >> i did. some of the most important singing was at africans from other country whose have been attacked and seven cases killed by south africans. the other main township of south africa, residents were in shock because of the brutal killing of a man just because he was from a different area. 10,000 africans have fled from homes and businesses particularly in johannesburg and they have gone to camps. today, buses were taking them home. more than 300 south africans have been arrested for part in violence. as far as what you were talking about happened to us we stopped
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outside a shop and we just got the camera out for fox news and we were approached by a mob that came to my side of the car and started beating the car window and the doors with big sticks. they were shouting they wanted to break the window to get in at me and my cameraman. fortunately, the cameraman had the sense to drive off through a red light. >> i am glad you both are okay. >> finally it is happening because they are going after people with passports foreigners who they think are taking their domestic jobs? >> that is right. the south africa government has to shoulder some of the blame for weak border control the go to destination the pot of gold for many in the rest of africa. some sources say we have five million immigrants from other african countries and up to four million of them are said to be
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here illegally. >> thank you, paul, for covering that. stave say. >> hundreds of strangers coming together to give a 4th grader the birthday of a lifetime. this is amazing something the community did to show their love for a very special little girl the ú:dt ttlwhun+]wúa"l4m3qj@(w?5bzppsng:1oxcl1i$%dp
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people ship all kinds of things. but what if that thing is a few hundred thousand doses of flu vaccine. that need to be kept at 41 degrees. while being shipped to a country where it's 90 degrees. in the shade. sound hard? yeah. does that mean people in laos shouldn't get their vaccine? we didn't think so. from figuring it out to getting it done, we're here to help.
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>> a minnesota community coming together to help a very special little girl celebrate her 10th birthday in style. hundreds of strangers attending a peter for the girl after her moment posted on facebook saying no one from her class said they would be coming and she was surprised -- when she was little she was diagnosed with a rare condition that affects her speech and development. during the birthday party she was all smiles. >> thanks to all of you i love you all. >> when all is said and done...i cannot thank you enough for being here. >> very, very nice. and among the guests snoopy and elsa and minnesota viking wide receiver charles johnson. happy birthday to little mackenzie. >> from facebook that goes to
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two groups who held critically ill children, simon says giving and icing smiles. >> media buzz is up next. >> have a good day. >> thank you. >> on the buzz peter this sunday, hillary clinton at chipolte. hillary clinton eat as burrito, the mystery tour leaves the media reporting on a lot of silly stuff. >> coming up behind our camera. >> watching the reporters tape her is like they were little kids going after the ice cream truck. >> she looks like she is having fund and doing for her do enough stuff. we have never seen her get a burrito. >> is she dissing the press corps and are journalists part of the circus as they decry it? a different media sense for the marco rubio jumping into the presidential race. >> as soon as you

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