tv Happening Now FOX News June 2, 2015 10:00am-11:01am PDT
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>> thank you. >> sir paul. >> more singing in overtime. we'll stay right here for outnumbered over time on the web. there may be more vocals from sir paul. click on the overtime tab and we'll be back noon eastern "happening now". >> fox news alert. more fallout from a widening investigation in worldwide soccer and a big name now stepping down. five- firm fifa president. sepp blatter is stepping down. he was just reelected and defiant. and he's calling for a new election as soon as possible and blatter is out. and also this fox news alert. a man is dead following a police involved shooting in boston. the suspect may have had links
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to terrorism. molly? >> reporter: hi, john that is right. they had this man under surveillance. the shooting happen 7 o'clock in the morning in a suburb an boston neighborhood. this is a quiet residential area of the city. we are getting word that both the fbi and the boston police department were involved in this investigation. they approached the man intending to ask the questions and he pulled a black military style knife and lunged at investigators. >> officers asked him several times to put that knife down and gave him several commands and the officers tried their best retreating, again several more put down and at that point he came in the proximity that the officer used deadly force.
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>> reporter: both the fbi agent and boston police officer opened fire on that individual. he was shot and transferred to brigham hospital and it is a trauma center. he did pass away despite his treatment. we are waiting on what the jtf was interested in this man for. >> much more to learn about that case. molly. thank you. >> we are covering all of the news "happening now". terror as a woman in a safari park gets pulled from her car and mauled to death. the lion lunged through and bit her through the open wendo. and what the battlefield can do to the brain. doctors say combat cause in our service members. and i balled up my fist.
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the tough grappedy takes down the would- be attacker and the guy got more than he bargained for and now in critical condition. it is all "happening now". >> and a lot of the great stories to get to today. we begin with the irs chief once again in the hot seat on capitol hill. he will talk about the tax breach that left taxpayers vulnerable. >> i am jenna lee. >> and i am jon scott. it is a busy day in the senate. the bill chlorred a major hurdle. meanwhile they are holding hearings on the hack attack. a data breach resulted in hackers getting access to the private information of more than 100,000 americans. and law makers blasting the agency for failing to act on
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years of warnings. >> to protect the taxpayer from cyber crime, the irs needs a 21st ip system. the eran of punch cards and paper forms, ended long ago. >> shannon bream has more on what happen. shannon? >> reporter: well jon, irs commissioner said the agencies doing everything to track down the source of the breach to protect taxpayers and make sure it doesn't happen again. he did not sugar coat the reality of what the irs is facing. amid sophisticated organized crime that works from around the globe koskan said it is not possible to stay ahead of the threat. >> our goal is to make sure we are even with them and protect taxpayer data from these ongoing
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attacks. >> reporter: also in the hearing in the senate this morning inspector general russell george who said since 2011 the top concern is trying to keep taxpayer information secure. his office made dozens of recommendation and finds they are not implemented fully or not at all. tim scott said the constitents are fed up with the irs and the inability to get phone calls answered and more than hundred thousand taxpayers facing theft of their most personal information. >> it is consistent as i talk to my constit epts that their concerns grow and the breach will only add more fire to people who are absolutely petrifid by the irs. >> reporter: he said the latest
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breach is not related to lack of funding but the over all agencies suffering because of the out dated infrastructure that could cost billions to update. >> shannon, thank you. >> and the bill would save most of the patriot act clearing the hurdle in the senate. the freedom act will restore nsa, collecting powers. senate majority leader mitch mcconnell is aiming to make changes to appease the septemberors on the fence about it. >> now is the time to put it in the past and work together to diligently make discreet and sensible improvements to the house bill. before scrapping a system that it helped us in the attack. we should work toward securing a modest degree of assurance that the new system can in fact actually work.
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>> the next step came with warnings from the house side i should say. and law makers saying any changes to the freedom act could shatter a fragile coalition and risk the change bill passing in the house. and the story is not over and one we are watching this week. >> america's election headquarters. some republican presidential hopefuls gathering in florida to address the summit by rick scott there. jeb bush who has not officially announced he is running yet is the headliner and features scott walker and katy perry and a recorded message from florida's senator marco rubio who could not be there. you can go where the florida economic summit is streaming live. the latest republican visiting the race meeting with voters in a diner. south carolina senator lindsay
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graham making national security the cornerstone of his campaign and expected to speak on that in his two- day trip. >> the supreme court expected to rule on the legality of subsidies of the states. what about the political fallout. and a lion kills an american tourist in a popular safari park in south africa. a wild life expert tells us what may have provoked the attack. >> and democrats in 2016. how important is the issue to you? our live chat is up and running and go to fox news.com/"happening now" to join the conversation. escape, three new tropical dishes take me straight to the islands. so i'm diving fork-first into the lobster and shrimp in paradise, with panko-crusted lobster tail and jumbo shrimp
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were seriously injured in a roller coaster incident in a british amusement park and dozens others may have been hurt. the ride reopened right before the crash. the cause of the crash is under investigation. >> we are expecting the supreme court to announce its decision on obama care. expected to rule on the health law that restricts subsidies to states that run their own exchanges. more than 30 states did not set up such an exchange and so millions of americans the healthcare.gov site for the subsidies. what happens to them. it is kind of interesting nina the republicans didn't vote for
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the law or pass it and now incumbent on them to come with a fix if the supreme court throws it out? >> yeah that is right, jon. both supporters and opponents of the bill refer to a death spiral if the supreme court rules against the subsidies, because the system is built on taxpayer subsidies so people can buy the required insurance. about 34 states don't. and because they were set up and because they rely on the federal government, they could be at risk of losing those subsidies when the supreme court rules and that means republicans in 27 of those states will have to figure out a patch and they are not particularly motivated and a lot of them don't want to rescue obama care. and that could leave millions of people at loose ends. it is a potential risk for
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republicans too, i might add. if you throw all of those people off of health insurance, that is a political danger for republicans and potentially dangerous for obama care. >> the supreme court could not throw it out because of the chaos in the health care system. >> nina is right. the republicans are not prepared as of today to show the supreme court that they came up with a resolution. they are divided on whether or not it could be repealed and experts say it could not be repealed in full. and who the subsidies should be in place temporarily and whether or not to come up with an answer now to nudge the court and assure the court that there would be a replacement plan or to stay silent and wait for a court ruling. a lot of people are concerned that if the republicans don't
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come up with awe plan they may rule in favor what they can't stand. and the court doesn't want chaos. and up the premiums and sink the program and dump it on the congress. this is a real political conundrum. it is not right for the congress to do work on behalf of the dourt. it is co-equal branch of government. >> and sticking with you, ab for the moment there are so many republican senators running for reelection in the upcoming cycle and they want to make sure the voters in their states are protected and happy, right? >> you get close tore repealing the obama care if you don't replace the subsidies and this is what conservatives wanted for a long time. they promised to repeal the law
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and now republicans want to do this. and it is looking very difficult. and you have 24 senators up for reelection and they don't want to tell constituents that we didn't like the law anyway. and people with health insurance and find that the prices are sky rocketing and they can't get it back without the subsidies. it is a political pickle for those running for reelection and even those on this law all of those years. >> and a secret conference with representatives in the states that are in danger of losing the subsidies. did anybody come up with concrete solution. >> it is a secret and that suggest panic and they don't want to tell people they don't have a great solution. and so the solutions they are looking at are ways to noodle
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around the law and end up partnering with the federal government rather than setting up the exchanges which is a long and cumbersome promise. and that could be subject to legal charges and states that have state run exchanges are not at risk under the ruling and partnering with other states to it create regional exchanges. and they are looking at hard progress on this. hard solutions. but none of them are going to be easy solutions. and there is again, the possibility of legal challenges to anything that they're looking at. >> it is going to be something to watch. we are still waiting for the supreme court decision and we'll find out exactly what the states will do as a result. nina and ab thank you both. >> terrifying lion attack. a big cat kills a young american
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the damage there. homeowners in wimberly coming home to scones like this. an suv washed into a tree and mandatory evacuation orders are lifted in some areas and authorities are warning people. >> and a 22-year-old american woman was killed after a lion mauled her through an open window. this leaves a lot of questions. and we have a expert here. dave i know you lived in this park before. we bring our own thoughts when we see the head line. when you first heard the story, what went through your mind? >> i wonder what mistake was made. typically you are supposed to drive your car in and out and
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you look into it and realize windows were open and things like that you realize the opportunity for danger. >> you say this is not typical behavior by a lion but predictable. what do you mean. >> they are opportourist. they so opportunity and they take it and in this is a type of park and we drive with the windows open in this situation. and there was an opportunity to decide whether to go in the car or not and that lion decided to take the opportunity. once the lions jump in the window and that panic could scare a lion and when a lion is scared, they react aggressively. and that would be my opinion of what happened in there. >> what do you think of the news that the park is open and people are driving through the park.
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>> listen and be alert. you have to realize just because people tell people keep their windows closed. they will roll the windows down because they want a better photo. they will look at a lion 20 foot away and say it is not dangerous. but 20 feet for a lion is three- quarters of a second to close the gap. you shouldn't allow people who don't know lions to decide if they would like to or not follow the rule. >> that is 20 seconds. we are learning where the lion was coming from and whether or not the woman was leaning out of the window. and for a normal person who doesn't have experience with the large cats like you do you can see letting your guard down and so fascinated with the animals, that you want to grab a picture or be closer. you are someone who has been
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close to the animals. and for the general public what is the safest way to view and appreciate them? >> i think in this case you have a couple of things working against you. the idea is to have a barrier between yourself and a large predator like. this if not, make sure you are with an expert to tell you if you are acting safe or not. southafrica is a great place to go on safari. but you be with an expert at all times telling you what to do because they know better. in this case you are self- led around there is an opportunity for mistakes. >> and going back to the beginning some look at the story and say it was a crazy blood- thirsty lion and you say that is not necessarily for the case. the lion is not looking for
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a human. >> they don't see humans as threats and prey source. they are fed and never attacked by people. that lion was probably curious and getting in trouble because he was board and that led in to a life threatening situation, but not typical of what a lion would normally act like. >> we have a picture of a lion licking your head dave and that is not typical. >> not typical. but i have 20 some-odd years experience working around the animals and i have a better ability to predict when they are aggressive and when my head would be a meal or lollipop version. >> we see the lollipop version is the better version and we hope to talk to you about that a happier topic, dave. it is great to have you on the story. and it was a headline that has
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us stunned. thank you for talking with us today. >> don't use the ground beef conditioner. he was so relaxed in the photo. >> we have had to ask him. >> are there spy planes flying over your neighborhood? it is the fbi running the surveillance air force right here at home. and what the fbi has to say about this program. and hundreds of people missing and feared dead after a chinese river cruise turns to tragedy. did someone say burn? try alka-seltzer heartburn reliefchews. they work fast and don't taste chalky. mmm...amazing. thank you. alka-seltzer heartburn reliefchews. enjoy the relief.
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>> we are getting new information about the government spy association here at home. each carrying video and sometimes cell phone surveillance technology and often put to use without a judge's order. catherine harris joins us live from washington. >> reporter: hi, jenna, the investigation found that the fbi is flying surveillance flights in many cases without a court's approval and using technology for video and cell phone data. they found over hundred flights over 11 cities including seattle houston, and phoenix and boston and minneapolis and southern california. they asked them to not disclose the names of the shell
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companies. this plane has unusual antennas and a camera photographed in northern virginia. a document indicated 115 flights. the fbi field office in baltimore confirmed earlier this year in the freddie gray protest they flew surveillance flights to assist the local police in their investigation. and they told fox news this morning he wants to know more about the fbi program and whether it is in compliance with the law. is it consistent? is it authorized and does it have oversight? we'll ask these questions sooner than later. and the surveillance flights comply with the agency rules that puts the lengths on the monitoring and the fbi aveation program is not a secret spokesmen said. they are protected for
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operational security purposes and in a short time ago in a statement to fox, the fbi emphasized that it was not engaged in mass surveillance or reflection, but that is the key word here because the fbi did not rule out targeted collection, jenna. >> interesting, contact cath thank you. >> and iraq minister said the international community is failing in the fight against isis. and calls for the coalition of countries to reexamine their strategy. no significant policy differences will be expected. >> in iraq right now we have the right strategy a combination of coalition air strikes and training and equipping and assisting and effective local partners and that is the winning strategy. >> this all comes as the unite the unitedination reported
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stallingering casulties by isis. and john hutte joins us live. >> reporter: the majority of the people killed and injured including women and children sadly as we have been seeing. and in the fight against isis and many of those happen in the anbar province. that is happen since isis took control of ramadi. tens of this happeneds have been displaced since the violence in ramadi. and they are fleeing in the baghdad area where more than a thousand civilians were killed or injured. the u.n. said that iraq's
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government must build people's confidence and judgment to have a sustainable fight against isis and of course there are concerns that iraqi forces lack the confidence and the defense secretary carter said the will to fight. that is a big part of the paris conference. discussions are going on where the prime minister of iraq is meeting with foreign ministers to discuss the fight and the ongoing strategy. the number of foreign fighters joining isis is increasing and that more international help is needed and saying there is a lot of talk about supporting the forces on the ground but not enough help on the ground. and deputy secretary of state tony blankin, said that the u.s. would make it easier for iraq to obtain new weapons and that includes the two thousandant-
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tank rockets. more than 2700 civilians killed or injured in iraq. those numbers don't include the secondary affect of the war,oc? that means people who died because of lack of food and water and lack of medicine and supplies. those u.n. estimates and numbers could be much higher. >> thank you, john. >> hundreds feared dead after a cruise ship capsizes in a river in china. 450 people were on the ten day pleasure cruise when it all happen. 50 people were rescued. five confirmed dead and more than 400 others were still missing. greg joined us with more. >> it is well after midnight in the river where the emergency workers are dealing with the worst maratine accident in decade. mostly elderly chinese were on
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board. no foreigners at this point we are told. hit strong winds and rain. and a few people swam to the river bank and other bodies were found downriver. most of the 400 passengers and crow are trappeded in of the hull of the bowl. they are hammering and survivors are responding and workers are cut nothing the hull of the boat. and two who made it out disgratefully the chief emergency and pilot. they were taken into custody. and no sos warning came from the ship's bridge. they learned about it only when survive offers made it to the bank and called on a mobile phone. the chinese government is keeping a lid on this.
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and keeping most away from the scene of the crash. families are complaining that the government and cruise line didn't tell them about it. they are learned about it through the heavily sensored chinese media. back to you. >> craig, thank you. >> and new concerns regarding the war on terror and why our nation's heroes may be in greater danger than previously thought. plus a house goes up in flames after a bizarre accident. a carjacker targeted a mother and grandmother who fought back. >> i am fine. other than the headache. i will live to see tomorrow and the next day.
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thanks for calling angie's list. how may i help you? i heard i could call angie's list if i needed work done around my house at a fair price. you heard right, just tell us what you need done and we'll find a top rated provider to take care of it. so i could get a faulty light switch fixed? yup! or have a guy refinish my floors? absolutely! or send someone out to groom my pookie? pookie's what you call your? my dog. yes, we can do that. real help from real people. come see what the new angie's list can do for you. >> breaking news on a shooting outside of a pharmacy in boston. police shoot a guy who was under
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surveillance by the u.s. task force. and why is the fbi flying surveillance airplanes across america. what kind of information are they collecting and is it legal? >> what is good for guys in the bed room could be good for girls too. is female viagra about to be approved? >> and a bomb threat against the flight today was a hoax. the plane was moved to a remote area. and passengers were bussed to the terminal. and a search of the aircraft uncovered no bomb. >> it is a lot of inconvenience though. and a disturbing study on how the war is impacting veterans
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and their brains. an expoliceure to bomb blast can early exposure to the brain. here is the co-author of the study and principle director and it is nice to have you on the program, doctor. so many things to look at when it comes to veterans and their health. why did you decide to study this angle. a bomb blast and impact on the brain? >> first of all, i would like to thank you for the opportunity to come here and talk about the great research that is happening in boston va. we have conducted a long- term study and we are now entering our sixth year, looking at the mental health and physical health of veterans from iraq and afghanistan. and over the course of our investigation we have discovered exposures to blasts are very numerous and in fact we have several people who are exposed to hundreds of these
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blasts. and not all of them in fact many of them are not associated with with symptoms of concussion at the time of the blasts and historically, they have paid attention to head injuries that result in symptoms of concussion and what i mean by that. alteration of mental status and people feel fuzzy and don't feel they could do math at the moment. and worst case scenario they lose consciousness of the exposure to the blasts. we are seeing a lot of people who were not exposed and didn't feel the affects of the blast and we were concerned that that might be having functional consequences in their thinking ability and how that might affect their ability to function in doing their doubts. >> let me just stop you there for a moment. i heard the expression getting your bell rung and you feel the
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affects of the blast like you described and you are saying that a soldier may not have felt that and what your study is looking into is the affects of the brain for being in within 30 feet of the bomb blasts. what is the impact of being around the blasts? >> let me clarify one thing. we have two studies and one study focused on blasts that were in close proximity within 30 feet of a blast and that study actually suggested that the way the brain functions and the way the different parts of the brain speak to each other, in the course of a normal normal day, were actually altered and people who had close blasts exposure. and a paper that we just recently published, was suggesting that you didn't actually have to be that close to a blast to show physical changes to the brain. and so those physical changes
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are in the area of the brain that we call white matter the physical wiring that connects different parts of the brain to each other and allows those electrical signals to pass through. >> so what could be the consequence of a impact on that part of the brain long- term? >> long- term what we are looking at is a degrading of the white matter tracks in a way that we see often times as people age in the course of normal aging and the signals in the brain don't transmit as well as they do. and anybody over the age of 50 might be able to relate to that and so that is the kind of changes that we are seeing and we are not seeing them in 50 or 60 years olds. we are seeing them in 20 and 30 years old. i am sorry to pause you there. but you can feel a slow down and
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whether or not it is medically diagnosed or not. and i was curious in looking at your study. thank you for for that. whether or not you are comparing to a lot of noise pollution and if it is veterans to other areas where noise is more of a factor than we thought? >> we have not looked at that issue. what we have been able to look at is individual veterans and service members that were exposed to blasts with versus those that were not exposed to the blasts. that was a comparison. and we can see the difference in the brain's ability to speak to each other and transmit the electrical signals. >> before i let you go what can you do with this information? can you treat the vets and give them a better result.
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and how do we apply the question? >> that is an important question and there is two lines. we'll continue our research so we understand the changes better and be able to track individuals over time to so whether this is progressive or a one- time damage as a result of the exposure. and we have a lot of the treatments thatty we have available for aging individuals and stroke and other kinds of damage to the brain that we think would be a good start to identify people who have been exposed to blasts and start them on these treatments and kind of change the course and either slow this down or even repair some of those damaged wires. >> it is very interesting work and i know complicated and thank you for condensing it for us so we can understand it. we look forward to having you back doctor as we follow your work. >> thank you for the
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opportunity. >> learning about the ocean's most feared creatures and how science is using technology to ck of sharks. plus the record- breaking sale of a pocketbook. you will not believe what this bag went for at auction. mr. auto-mo-deal! hey, it's the wheel deal! hey, hey, the duke of deals! i know a few guys in the rental car biz. let's go, 'wheels'. rental car deals up to 40% off.
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crocodile. >> i think the crocodile agrees with that. >> no more market for those guys. >> a guy in the hospital after an attempt to force his way into a car did not go as planned. 69-year-old francis mock arrived at her daughter's home in saratoga springs, new york when a guy jumped into her car and told her to drive off. much to his surprise she fought back. >> he started to reach for the steering wheel. what he did, his hand his one hand was on the steering wheel. he smacked me with the other and he says go. i just balled up my fist and i nailed his head about three or four times and told him to get out of my car. >> and i had the wrong saratoga springs. this was in ohio not new york. the man 38-year-old christopher bigler ran out of the car after being punched several times. he ran into her daughter's house, even setting fire to it.
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officers eventually arrested the guy who is now being treated for burns. >> sounds like he deserved the punches. technology making waves in the ocean. gps technology is now making it easier to track sharks allowing scientists to monitor their movement. claudia is live with more on this. >> reporter: that's right. this stretch of california's central coast is home to several hundred white sharks that have been tagged with gps trackers which are creating a lot of buzz online thanks to shark apps run by scientists available to everyone. like many ocean lovers mimi is enthralled by sharks. >> the sharks are such a mystery us to. they live in this murky water we can't see them and we are fascinated. they'll come up for two seconds. >> reporter: now she can get to know real sharks virtually through shark net an effort by
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stanford scientists to engage the public through satellite tracking apps interactive bios and more. >> sharks are part of our ecosystem. a healthy ecosystem has large sharks. knowing where they are and what they are doing, we hope to encourage participation and education about the sharks. >> global shark tracker lets users follow the research being done by the mariners at o-search. in 2012 they tagged mary lee a 16-foot great white off cape cod and tracked her numerous trips between florida and new york. scientists say thisese apps are not an early warning system but a way to share valuable data about sharks. >> they spend months of times in the open ocean where nobody can see them, but we are able to learn more how they are using that open ocean environment. >> reporter: more tagging
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expeditions are in the work as scientists try to learn more about these dark and sometimes scary predators. and encourage people to understand and ultimately help protect the marine environment. >> thank you. >> what do netflix and military tag and a baby bop cat have in common? they are part of our final 30 next.
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time for "the final 30." pardon the interruption as fans are reporting commercials before and after their programs. >> not happy. >> a small fender bender near berlin. a student driver turning into the middle of a convoy of military tanks. one completely flattened the front of her car. amazingly, she was not hurt. >> a lesson she won't forget. >> a tiny bobcat kitten using one of its nine lives in
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florida. wildlife officers finding it near a brushfire after giving mom a chance to return. they took it in for rehabilitation. cute little guy. >> thanks for joining us. >> have a great day. "the real story" with gretchen starts right now. fox news alert. major developments going on in boston where a police officer and fbi agent shot and killed a suspect today after the man pulled out a large military style knife. i'm gretchen carlson. here is what we are learning. he was under active surveillance by the fbi's joint terrorism task force. molly line has been covering this story. you can see this is video out of massachusetts from the scene earlier today. the big news coming out right now could be there was possibly an isis connection to this suspect. how long was the fbi surveiling him? what did they know about this
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