tv Shepard Smith Reporting FOX News June 1, 2015 12:00pm-1:01pm PDT
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beaches babes and weather, james going to mackinac island. i know where it is. mitchell likes south dakota for mountain rushmore. did that as a kid. thank you for being part of "the real story" today. here's shep. >> think airport security is a joke? turns out you're right. and it's not funny. at all. this hour, the new report that confirms just about everything you probably already suspected just how bad is it? we'll lay out the specifics and the response from the tsa. two more men in the race for the white house. how could either of them stan out with all this competition? you can call her caitlin america's newest cover girl on haven't fair like we have never before seen her. today the remarkable photo that sets bruce free. >> good monday afternoon from the news deck. we can now make phone calls
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without the feds watching, that theory. provisions of the patriot act died overnight, clung the one that let the feds sweep up our telephone records. it's without a question a win for privacy. supporters call it's win for the constitution. critics say it puts the nation at greater risk of a terror attack. the senate met this afternoon to work on a way to restore parts of the post-9/11 law that expired early this morning. that happened after senator and republican presidential candidate rand paul blocked a bill that would have kept parts of the surveillance program in place. as of this moment several programs off the table. the government cannot collect and store americans' northern records under the law practice we would likely never have known about absent the leaks of one edward snowden. the nib can no longer wire tap suspects who keep changing cell phones and no more tracking of lone wolf suspects who are not
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linked to terror groups. the cia director says the programs are critical to stop are terrorists. the white house says, on a matter as critical as our national security, individual senators mu put aside partisan motivations and act swiftly. it's clear what that is about a reference to senator paul. he says today the government can protect our privacy and still safe from terrorism. >> i want more collection of record on terrorists but less on americans. we get distracted we're not spending enough time actually following the potential jihaddists in our country. >> other critics who work in intelligence kell -- tell our catherine herridge the programs that expired are small dent in the tools used, and the program has not stopped a single specific attack. mike emanuel live on capitol
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hill. what's the latest in the senate? >> reporter: senator rand paul is using his privilege as a senator to run the clock a bit to eat some time. senate majority leader mitch m-connell is calling for an amendment to a very bipartisan house bill to make sure a new modified phone program actually works. >> these fixers common sense and whatever one thinks of the proposed new system there needs to be basic assurance that it will function as its proponents say it will. the senate should adopt these basic safeguards. >> others are warning that amendments could upset the delicate bipartisan balance would require to the bill to go back to the house and could eat a lot more time. >> any word from the white house and senator paul specifically? >> there is some irritation, saying that this puts an unnecessary risk to the american people and to the united states itself and spokesman josh
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ernest said essentially that some are trying to use this issue for political advantage. >> it's ironic to say the least that senator paul, blocked a piece of legislation that would have actually solved the problem that he was talking about. so, that may have been an effective campaign tactic, but it certainly wasn't in the best interests of the country. >> a preliminary vote last night in the senate was 77-17. that suggests there are plenty of votes to eventually pass this house compromise type bill. bottom line is not clear how long there will be a stoppage of of these programs. >> let's turn to michael singh now, former senior director of middle east affairs and national security council, now the manager director of the washington institute for near east policy which calls itself a nonpartisan, nonprofit think tank. they can still do this stuff under a weird lieu from the president bush days.
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>> people shouldn't panic. this is likely to be brief. there are work, arounds that officials can use but there's no doubt this does put us at greater risk. >> really? >> what we are doing now is we're trying to fight terrorism in 2015 using pre9/11 authorities and that's just not reasonable. so the way forward here has to be not just scrapping the thing which is where we are now. not just extending the thing which is one proposal out there. but i think it has to be reforming the authority. >> judge napolitano makes the argument as many others do -- he is a libertarian and tries to stick close to the constitution but saves if you takeway the lischs we enjoy there's nothing to protect. so if you want to snatch our phone records let's change the constitution. let's not abuse it. >> you'll always have tension between security and civil liberties and american officials are going to go right up to whatever legal limit you set for them. and that's why it's very important that congress set the
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right bounds, that it exercise oversight and there be transparency. what people are reacting to they feel that transparency and oversight has not been there and they're suspicious. that's why this is a debate we need to have and a debate we should have been having a while ago and lot nuss letting the thing lapse. >> that's the root of this. if you talk it through maybe you get solutions. we just pretend it's not happening. the are no polls out today. the most something one is from ccnn and this one is about weather americans believe this will increase the likelihood of a terror attack. increase the risk? 44% think yes decrease the risk 3% think yes. stay the same, 52%. that's a very high personal. they may be right and watch this next page. this is the difference between the young and the old. old people, people over the age of 65, think oh, my god the world is coming to an end by 60%. this is terrible. under the apple of 35, only 25%.
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who has this right? >> i'm not sure what polls tell you on this. you won't know -- >> tellsout what people think,. >> but you won't know what we milled or if we messed anything in something goes wrong. intelligence is collecting little bits of information. and you don't know what you don't know. and so we won't know for some time. i think what we can say is that a lot has changed in the 14 years since the patriot act was passed. technology has -- the terrorists are using more technology now and so the authorities have to keep up. americans are using more technology and so the civil liberties side needs to keep up. and so hopefully we learned some lessons in the past 14 years to know which authorities we need, which we don't, hopefully howal see bill that reflects that. >> i hope. it is our strategy in the world these days. >> there you go. >> great to see you. privacy is largely dishappened in the america. that's obvious. but google reports it's just
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made its privacy controls easier to find and understand. careful listening is important. more than a billion people use google services, including youtube, the chrome browser gmail, google maps, android phones and so much more. the changes include a new "my account" hundred hub with all the privacy controls and get an account checkup. that will break down which services gather information about you. google is trying to restore our privacy? >> well, analysts say really the search giant is trying to make users feel more comfort able with hough it collects all of our personal information. make no mistakes, google does record just about everything we do online, from youtube to google maps. garyi will his is here. >> the more of your stuff you
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use, the more information they're collecting about you. first day e-mail, maybe the details of where you live. but it's more than that. it's also the web site yo go to the videos you watch the ad you click on, everything you do, your location, device information, if you're using an android phone they know that. they're all over you and they have all this information. i went to the web site they set up to tell you what they're doing. sounds so friendly, shep. we love you. we want to see more of you. we want all of your information. >> what do they do with our information? >> they sell things to you. they give you ads that are direct to what you're shopping for. if you buy a pair of orange boots they might send you an ad for a pair of green boots. on and on and on it goes. but it's really about selling goods. >> why are they trying to make us feel better about what they're doing. >> there was a pew poll that showed that 93% of people out there say they want to be in control of their personal data
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but only 50% feel they really are. so people out there are concerned. they have seen what has happened with all the stealing of people's information, whether it's the irs target or whoever. >> well, we'll watch this but they have all our information. that's not changing. >> they know us. >> they do. nice to see you. >> good to see you. >> drivers in one state are now on edge after police say they've linked two seemingly random shootings that happened nearly a month apart. pay not be random. cops say somebody tried to pick off a woman as she was behind the wheel. very serious developments. a live report coming next. this is "shepard smith reporting" on fox news channel. you know our new rope has actually passed all the tests. we're ready to start with production. ok, are you doing test markets like last time? uh, no we're going to roll out globally. ok. we'll start working on some financing options right away. thanks, joe. oh, yeah. it's a game-changer for the rock-climbing industry. this is one strong rope! huh joe? oh, yeah it's incredible! how you doing team? jeff you good? [jeff] i think i dropped my keys.
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light. liberty mutual insurance. police in colorado say there is indeed a connection between two shootings that happened weeks apart there. one of the shottings was deadly. but investigators will not say what the connection is or even why they think there is one. this is happening near the small town of winsor, 60 miles north of denver. on april 22nd police say somebody shot a driver who was traveling along an interstate highway. the bullet went through her number and she survived. two weeks ago cops say the body of a cyclist showed up. somebody shot him twice. officials in winsor, colorado, say there -- had not been a homicide for nearly a decade.
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now the fbi is involved in all of this. cops are looking into a string of broken windows right? >> reporter: that's. winsor police say there have been several reports of car windows breaking while folks are driving along interstate 25 in the same area, north of denver. the chief says right now he is not ready to link these incidents but also not going to discount a connection either the two cases you just mentioned the murder of 47-year-old john jacoby who was on his bike when he was shot twice and cory romare low who was driving ton interstate 25 when her car window shattered. she was shot in the number but was able to call 9-1-1 and is still recovering. now, formal task force has been established with the police. sheriffs and fbi but a they do not have a named suspect but they do have advice for drivers. i. >> public needs to be vigilant, they're now aware of what is going on out there.
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they need to be observant, and if they see any suspicious activities report it to your local law enforcement so we can investigate. >> $12,000 in reward money is being offered. >> the think there's a link but won't say what it is. do we know why? >> police right now are just saying they have to protect their investigation. they have told us that they have evidence but that is it. the fbi joined the task force and say because they want to bring to all of their vast resources and need tips from public. folks say they're nervous. >> we're all very upset here. very. because we're worried. we have kids running around all over the place. >> find out we're now getting shot at is -- it's disconcerting at best. >> police say the victims did not appear to know each other so right now this is random. >> cops say be vigilant. how does being vigilant keep you
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from getting shot in your car on the freeway? >> honestly i don't know. when i heard that i thought the same thing. because there's only so much you can do once your window shatters and you realize you have been shot. >> lots of looking around in your car and enup in somebody else's car. all right. stay vigilant. >> thanks. >> sure. june marks the start of hurricane season so today marks the start of june, that means today is the start of hurricane season hooray. scientist are working to stay prepared. one of the new tools is a hurricane simulator. if there were a hurricane simulator, to whom would you send? i would send phil keating and he did.
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a solar-powered plane flying around the globe without a drop of fuel? had to make a stop today after bad weather threatened its trip across the pacific ocean. swiss pilot was trying to fly from eastern china all the way to hawai'i. that's a long flight. 60-miles-an-hour? supposed to be the longest leg of the journaly, but across the 5,000 miles and after just a day had gone by they had to land the thing right about here. i think this is in japan. so they're downing with problems. -- they're down with problems. you'll be able to see the plane flying over abu dhabi. this is a beautiful shot. right at the beginning of the journey. started back in march. is seen flying east ever since, making stops in countries including ohman and india. that's a shot at night. only goes 60-miles-an-hour. two pilots taking turns. one pilot says it has a sort of auto pilot that lets him sleep for 20 minutes at a time.
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the wingspan 250 feet and weighs as much as a car and flies between 30 and 60-miles-an-hour, which means it could take nearly a week for the pilot to cross the pacific ocean. hurricane season starts today and it's been nearly a decade since major hurricane. a cat 3 or stronger has slammed into the united states. still, federal forecasters predicting it will be another quite year. el niño and all. in august of '05 hurricane katrina mained landfall as a strong cat 3 storm and devastated the gulf coast. came ashore at the mouth of the mississippi, demolished the coast of the state of mist and flooded new orleans and other parishes and 2,000 people died. we're all working to understand hurricanes better and scientists at the university of miami are using a new tank that simulates
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a hurricane. what does that do? phil keating is there is. what does that do? >> reporter: it's like taking a 75-foot long slice of open ocean in the middle of a hurricane and pulls this in this acrylic glass, see-through 5-foot long laboratory. this is category 5 hurricane winds and waves that you're seeing there right now. it's all powered by this massive wind turbine putting out 7500-horsepower of power and this is really allowing researchers here at the school of marine and atmospheric research the able tostada the interface between the wind and air and sea. they say they will be able to better or more accurately predict things like why one tropical storm turns into a category 1 hurricane and another tropical storm will turn into a deadly and devastating cat 5.
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meteorologists have become quite good in the past decades at more accurately preticketing the actual forecast of the storm where it's going to hit. they do need to improve the ability to go ahead and ramp it up so that people would know. how strong it's going to be. >> you can't know what the storm itself doesn't know. the hurricane just sort of acts and reacts to conditions around it until the very end. are they thinking they'll get better at projecting exactly where and how strong? >> yes. it's really going to perhaps save lives because it's all about when a community leader, mayor or governor, decides to order that mandatory evacuation, if we know three days out whether a hurricane is going to definitely be a cat 3 or greater they can get eevacuation order issued ural easterliy, 2005 hurricane riot tacoma houston residents basically in a parking
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lot on the highway trying to get out of town because everyone left at once. also the see-through ceiling here eliminates the massive cloud system that blocks the satellites from seeing the interface between the air and the ocean. so researchers here hope to better understand how the winds the sea spray and the power and devastating impact are actually happening so they can more accurately predict whether it's going to be a tropical storm cat 1 cat 5. obviously lot of it has to dye do with warm temperatures in the ocean. >> phil, thank you. a disturbing story now. a lyon killed an american in injured the man driving her as the two made their way through a private wildlife park in south africa. that's what an official at the park is now telling fox news. happened in johannesburg in the middle of the afternoon. a lie lioness approached the
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passenger side of a car and then lunged at her. the driver tried to punch the animal. officials say the car's windows were down, even though they posted a sign that reads keep windows closed at all times. one official said the park would review safety measures but also said the believes they're more thanked a quilt if the woman had done what she was supposed to do. word today that some of our nation's veterans may have injuries they don't know about. the latest from a new government study is coming up. the republican presidential field got a little more crowded if that's probable and another democrat is now challenging hillary clinton. team fox coverage coming in the bottom of the hour and the top of the news from fox news channel. [ male announcer ] ours was the first modern airliner, revolutionary by every standard. and that
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inside. happened in tokyo. local media report it was a bright yellow suitcase and you figure somebody would have noticed something earlier because it had been there more than a month. police are trying to identify the woman. >> drone in the stadium. cops in philly say they stopped a guy who flew his drone inside the paul bark during a phillies game. had a camera attached. i staffers spottedded the drone but did not hold up the game. lil' kim on the farm looking at things. put on his hat and looked at crops. state media reports north korea has been growing new crops as united nation official warns the country could be on the edge of a food shortage. the number one favorite pastime. looking at things.
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threats on facebook about killing his estranged wife, harming law officials and shooting up a school. he made threats. the man says he is an aspiring rapper and claims the posts were actually lyrics. the supreme court threw out the conviction but did not specify whether his threats were protected by the first amendment. also today justices ruled against abercrombie & fitch after store managers in tulsa oklahoma, would not hire a muslim woman because she wore a head scarf. the equal employment opportunity commission clays abercrombie discriminated against her. the store managers said they did not accommodate for her religion because she never asked them to do. so today the supreme court ruled that the company still violated her civil rights. >> another republican is now officially running for president. this time it's senator lindsey graham announce his bid in his home town of central, south carolina. senator graham faced a lot of competition. a whole board full. here are the run republics who have announces they're run
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organize say they're thinking hard about it. today, senator gray ham of south carolina warned of threats from terrorism, iran and other countries and also took shots at the sitting president and the hillary clinton. >> every day the headlines attest to the failures of the obama clinton policies. it is sad for me to report to you but barack obama has made us less safe. >> secretary clinton is facing more competition. the form easterly maryland governor martin o'malley kicked off his campaign over the weekend. john roberts is covering senator graham's announcement, live in central, south carolina. >> reporter: so halfway between charlotte and north carolina and atlanta, georgia along the rail loan, not because it's in central south carolina. it was here that lindsey graham you lined two primary themes.
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first his qualifieses to be as he put it commander in chief on day one of his presidency to take on big problems like isis, highlighting his time in the senate armed services committee more than 30 trips to iraq and afghanistan and 33 years as active duty and reservist with the u.s. air force and has been highly critical of president obama's foreign policy though he did vote to authorize the iraq war in 2002. i asked him about that. >> had you known then what you know now would you have voted the same way? >> if i had known then what i know now i would have sported something other than a lan invasion to get redrove saddam. he was shooting at our airplanes and denying access to sights and he was gassing the kurds. he needed to go. >> the second big theme is he is a pragmatic conservative who is willing to work with democrats to solve big problems. he has run afoul of many conservatives over his stance on issues like immigration reform, and it's likely, shep, he will
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draw more fire because at today's announce. he said he would be open to raising taxes if it would save social security. >> john roberts in said. let's get more on the newest democratic candidate former maryland gov martin o'maleey, peter doocy is live in washington. >> reporter: he says it's not.attacking hillary clinton who is way ahead of him in every poll. o'malley said focusing on his record as the mayor of baltimore and the governor of maryland. >> a lot of progressive leaders talk about what we need to do as a country. i've actually done this things as an executive. i brought people together negotiatingen things down. i melt any stayed birth passed marriage equality, passed the dream act. >> reporter: domestic issues their centerpiece of the campaign especially fixing wall street and the elephant in the room in his baltimore announcement were the riots that just happen. the city is fresh off its worth
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month for murders in 40 years but since when he what's mayor of charm city, things were better and he made things safer. how is it playing? voters we heard from in new hampshire seemed most excited that now democratic candidates are competing for their votes. people there want politics to earn they're support. and for a while it seemed like the attention was going to the front runner north them, not the case anymore. >> pete on politics. live in washington. thank you. islamic state suicide bombers drove humvees packed with explosives toward a police base and killed more than 40 people. dozens more are hurt. all of this according to iraqi officials today. happened in anbar province nor of ramadi. isis took over the city after launching similar suicide attacks. the islamic state is launching a beard patrol in iraq, second largest cities of mosul. a beard patrol. according to the reporting of french news agency, isis has
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banned shaving and made full beards mandatory for all men starting today. if you shave you have broken the law. one of the american hostages in yemen is now free from iranian backed rebels. that's new today according to the state department which is working to secure the release of others. >> we have been telling americans not to go to yemen for a very long time, and that's for a very good reason the situation there is dangerous and it increasingly has we have drown down our em -- drawn down our embassy we don't hey the resources to help them. >> a senior difference official confirmed houthi rebels have been holding four americans prisoner. one of them is free. iran backed rebels forced yemen's president out of the country earlier this year. more updates when they come in. some of the nation's veterans could have brain damage and may not know about it at all.
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that's according to a brand new government study. researchers say some veterans of wars in iraq and afghanistan are showing signs of early aging. after being near road zoos bomb blasts. signs 'tises say it includes vets who did not feel anything from the explosions. the defense department says doctors have diagnosed hundreds of thousands of troops with traumatic brain injury over the last half decade or so. or decade and a half, really. nearly 25,000 just last year. in the year 2000 the number was closer to 11,000. lea gabrielle is in the new york city newsroom. you spoke with two of awe theirs of the study. >> the study look told wiring of the brain the white matter. and they said that wiring normally gets leaky with age. this new study found that so-called leakiness is happening at an earlier age in people who are exposed to blasts in afghanistan and iraq, even if they weren't close to the explosion. in other words it's as if they're brians are aging at a
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faster -- their brains are aging at a faster raid. >> even without symptoms, without what clinicians used to decide whether something has handa mild traumatic brain injury the nevertheless have long-standing enduring effects of the exposure to the explosion. >> this kind of points to the idea that they may actually be experiencing cognitive related decline at an earlier age than what we typically see in someone who is not exposed to blasts. >> and they added that many of the people exposed to blasts also have most traumatic stress disorder and depression and chronic pain so it is a complicated picture. >> what are we going to do? you got to do something for these veterans. is there a solution or a thought of one? >> that's a great question. according to the study moderate to severe traumatic brain injury is associated withreased risks of things like dementia, including the type associatinged with alzheimer's. i spoke with our medical analyst who tells me traumatic brain injury may be versute toll begin
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with but over time it may impact your able to make decisions your able to remember things, even your ability to think. >> i think this study adds to an accumulation of evidence that be better look now to predict what is going to happen later. every veteran should have an imaging study of their brain sophisticated technology to figure out what damage has been done that may escape my ability as a doctor to tell you you got a problem you may have a problem and not know it. >> so that may be the answer. to get studies of veterans' brains. the number of people coming back from these wars who are known to have brain injuries is not small. according to our experts estimates range from one in five to one in six among returning veterans. >> lea gabrielle thank you very much. >> secretary of state john kerry is right now flying back to the united states after he broke his leg riding a bicycle. that's according to the state department weapon got word of this over the weekend and there were concerns about he was going
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to ride part of the race for tour de france, and it didn't go long or well? >> state department officials say secretary kerry struck a curb and broke his hip. he has been in geneva, participating in the iran nuclear talks. >> you're mic is not working. you're good now. i don't know how this thing works. >> okay. >> we can just stare at it. he is wearing his helmet. >> his own gear. he brings his own bike when he goes riding during the iran nuclear talks. he is very active. right now he is 71 years old also officials say he is flying back to the u.s. after -- he is being treated at a hospital in geneva. he tweeted this. back to boston, look forward to getting leg set and getting back to state department. meantime, work goes on, big thanks to well wishes, hash tag
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onwards. >> how long will he be out. >> state department officials say he'll participate in future iran nuclear talks for the time being remoltly. secretary kerry very active lifestyle in 2004 during his presidential campaign 'ogot a lo of attention for it could surfing. >> a great picture but not a great face there. >> not a great face. >> unfortunately. >> also not a great face here either and in 2012, he broke his nose and had two black eyes from a hockey accident. and right now state department officials say he actually broke his hip near the site of hip replacement surgery he had several years ago. >> well, hope he is better and back at it mighty quick. he is a healthy and at it guy. >> he is. >> the tsa is still busy taking our toothpaste and bottles of water but at the same time the thousands standing around apparently let undercover investigators walk right through security will all kinds of banned weapons and mock explosives and it happened at
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major airports across the country. one other way to stay this is, the tsa is a walking talking disaster. so what do we do? that's next. benny's the oldest dog in the shelter. he needed help all day so i adopted him. when my back pain flared up, i thought i'd have to give him away. i tried tylenol but it was 6 pills a day. with aleve it's just 2 pills, all day. now i'm back! aleve. all day strong.
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a death at an air show? two planes crashed into each other, killing one pilot. look at this. gosh. that happened yesterday off italy's east coast. both planes plummeting into the sea. families were watching at the time. i mentioned one of the pilots died. rescue crews brought the other to the hospital. no word yet on how he is doing. investigators say they're looking into what exactly caused that. tsa is horrible. we thought this because we have eyes and ears for a long time, but now it is confirmed by a government test that tsa failed wildly.
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letting people slip through security with illegal weapons and fake bombs that happened again and again and again at many of the nation's busiest airports. abc news first reported on this from a classified reported from a government watchdog. we don't have it all yet but the headlines tell much of the story. the report claims undercover teams from the department of homeland security posed as passengers and set out to beat the system, and beat the system they did. those investigators were able to smuggle mock explosives or banned weapons through checkpoints, 95% of the time. 19 times out of 20. good to go with your fake bombs. the department of homeland security spokesman tells fox news it in part, and i quote the numbers in these reports never look good out of context but they are a critical element in the continual evaluation of our aviation security. we might add lack thereof. kennedy is here with us. on a a new time, 8:00 eastern,
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7:00 at oxford. >> the launch today baby. >> so proud of the fox business network, they're killing it. this though, is awful. >> they're killing freedom and liberty and they make traveling so incredibly difficult, and you stand there and you wait in line to go through airport security, and you see clumps of tsa agents just standing around doing nothing but waiting to are harass you. they suck apples. it's no good. these homeland security red teams have gone through posing at normal travelers and have got explosives got weapons and they never get caught. 67 out of 70 times. that's 95% as you said in the intro. they just sailed right through. a man one of these red team agents set off the mag any tom at the. that's the explosive 'technology you're supposed to go through. sees your bits and also sucks in your noxious gases and it said
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to the agents, this guy has a bomb. we know it. the and they patted him town and missed the bomb taped to his back. >> you fly -- you commute to work in new york from los angeles. >> i too. >> commute to work in new york from los angeles. so you know these people. >> every week. and i have to say there are some really nice wonderful people who work for the tsa. >> yep. >> i have to give a big shoutout of paulette at lax because she gives me a hug every week and she call mets sugar and is really -- before this she soft 'ened me stance on the taste because she permanentized the experience. now i have to ask for a patdown. >> some of us do. >> i haven't heard anything except excuses and half stuff out of this. you wonder if they don't need to start over. >> they do need to start over. they tried starting over after 9/11 and they formalized the people who were going through your stuff and made it much more difficult and you can't have your shoes on and you can't have water and can't have and
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all that nonsense but the fact they can't too their basic jobs, regardless over the minutiae and fake protocols, it's scary. what's to the point of having them there if they're not doing the baseline of their requirements. >> they could find a four ounce bottle of shampoo no matter how bad you hide it. the shampoo they can get. and a bottle of water? send you to jail for that. >> i accidently had a leatherman tool in my bag which had a blade on it and i thought the whole thing was legal and they pulled me aside and gave me a stern talking to. >> they found it. that's comforting. i guess this report will come out and then we'll hear things and then keep flying. >> we'll see more specifics, and what will happen is absolutely nothing. if you remember there was a tsa agent who was shot and killed at lax, and at the time they were talking about arming tsa agents, and now you see if they can't even detect guns they shouldn't be allowed to carry them. >> good point. we'll be watching for lou dobbs,
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and then tonight for the first time kennedy 8:00 eastern, 7:00 in oxford, on the fox business network. brand new and improved with extra juice. >> lou will be my warmup. he juice box. and i'll be the oreo. don't mind. >> this brand new thing. marieways on for throw hours in the morning. >> 6:00 to 9:00 a.m. eastern. >> she is fantastic and then right after that is stuart varney. >> when the market is open, stuart opens his mouth and that's the way way like it. >> speaks with a british accent which we know is fake. >> he's from nebraska. >> but the british accents makes him more interesting. >> very classic and. >> and then a lot of people come on during the day and then by 8:00 they're ready for kennedy. >> i'll tuck them, in put them to bid, sing a song, talking about lisch and make the world a better place one moment at a time. >> amen. >> thank you. >> wow. caitlin jenner. have you seen it?
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call me caitlin. the former olympian unveiling her new identity on the cover of "vanity fair." caitlin jenner has made her debut. we knew this was coming out of vanity fair but didn't know when. boom. >> kind of just randomly happened today. caitlin has her own twitter account. her first tweet was i'm so happy after such a long struggle to be living my true self. welcome to the world caitlin can't wait for you to get to know her/me.
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almost a million. >> this has been out four hours. >> three hours. >> good timing. >> exactly. of course, jenner first revealed publicly to diane sawyer. >> an interview, haven't talked to you since then. hit that out of the park. >> exactly. but at that point she still wanted to use mail pronouns, still wanted to be called bruce. of course, we first -- jenner first came into the public spotlight in 1976 when she won the gold medal and part of the kardashian clan, how could you not know that. >> good grief. >> and this beautiful "vanity fair" cover call me caitlin. >> annie lieb witness. one of the best photographers of the time. there will be more. a whole story to go with it? >> 22 pages. >> and the magazine is coming out the same time as the rest of the story comes out. >> yes. she is going to have a reality
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tv show. >> it's tough. that he/she thing that's going to be a learning experience. >> ,. >> and even caitlin said that. >> nice to see you, thank you happy monday. >> thank you. you, too. >> call her caitlin, and we will. we'll be back with a nod to this day in rates hoyte and look at when a battle broke out over seafood. stay tuned.
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♪ (music plays throughout) ♪ the pursuit of healthier. it begins from the second we're born. after all, healthier doesn't happen all by itself. it needs to be earned... every day... from the smallest detail to the boldest leap. healthier means using wellness to keep away illness... knowing a prescription is way more than the pills... and believing that a single life can be made better by millions of others. ♪ ♪ healthier takes somebody who can power modern health care... by connecting every single part of
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it. realizing cold hard data can inspire warmth and compassion... and that when technology meets expertise... everything is possible. for as long as the world keeps on searching for healthier... we're here to make healthier happen. optum. healthier is here. on this day in 1976 the so-called cod war came to an end. not the cold war. the cod war. happened after iceland extended its fishing waters off the coast. the country's coast guard would cut the nets of foreign ships meld the new zone. the british navy sent warships to protect its own fishing vessels there. boats from the two countries started ramming each other even firing shots. over fishnets. britain finally agreed to limit
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the number of ships near iceland's shores and the world's supply of fish sticks is still safe but the cod war was all over, 39 years ago. today. cavuto is next. >> i had a feeling we'd be breaking news with the new fox business schedule. didn't know it would happen so soon pause this senator is taking a stand. let's say two generals i had with me are not giving him a hand. welcome everybody i'm neil cavuto and this is why you need to watch fox business. now that the schedule has been completely revamped. because as this nsa showdown goes down, we had general david petraeus saying this. >> do you that that sticks in people's craw, the collection offing me da dat -- mega tata was too much. >> it's corning to a number of individuals. if one understands the process through which the
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