tv Happening Now FOX News July 9, 2015 8:00am-9:01am PDT
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>> did make you think? >> a little bit. i think it is fastcinating. have a great day, everybody. we will see you tomorrow. >> and we begin with a fox news alert from south carolina where governor nicky haley just said ceil sign the bill calling for the removal of the confederate flag from the perch on the state capital ground three weeks after the murder of nine people in their church sparked the fight to take down what mean view as the symbol of hate. i am jon scott. welcome to "happening now." >> welcome back jon. i am jenna lee. >> i had a week and a half in
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italy. it was great. >> the state house approving a bill this morning after hours of debate and a few tears from lawmakers. the governor will sign this at 4:00 this afternoon. she called for the flag do is come down after the murder saying the massacre and the suspect with those photos said in her mind it was a symbol of south carolina's past and she wanted to down. >> reporter: this debate went into the wee hours of the morning. it seemed this bill was destined for revision and one lawmaker stood up making a tearful plea. >> i can nutnot believe we don't have the heart in this body to do something meaningful such as
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take a symbol of hate off of these grounds on friday. >> i am sorry. i have heard enough about heritage. i have a heritage. i am a lifelong resident of south carolina and i am a descendant of jefferson davis but that doesn't matter. >> i attended pickney's funeral and observed his wife and two children and that made me emotional. i am still emotional about it. it has been three weeks only. >> reporter: that was jenny horn explaining why she got so emotional. she wanted to make a decisive statement in the wake of last month's shooting at emanual ame
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church. the attack claimed the lives of nine people including the state senator who she was referring to in that sound byte. the governor issued a statement saying it is a new day in south carolina. a day we can all be proud of and a day that brings us all together as we continue to heal as one people and one state. this bill stipilates once the governor signs it the confederate flag will be removed within 24 hours. >> jonathan thank you. the murder of a san francisco woman who authorities say was killed by an illegal immigrant and sparking words as the mayor blast the county sheriff of not letting the feds know when the man ended up in their custody. >> reporter: a public blame game is unfolding over the sheriff's
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handling of francisco sanchez. he had been deported back to mexico five times and was in federal custody in april when the sheriff's department had planned to bring him here to answer for a 20 year old drug offense before being deported. when the charges were dropped he was let go even though ice made it clear they wanted him back. the sheriff said he was following the city's sanctuary law which says a detainer request is not enough and officials need to issue an arrest warrant and there was none for sanchez. >> a simple phone call from the sheriff letting them know we were going to release someone
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they gave us custody of. the victim 32-year-old kate steinle will be laid to rest today in a private celebration of here life as officials try to figure out how her accused killer slipped through the cracks and why the sheriff department had him come back and answer to a minor marijuana charge. >> such a sad story. we will move to wall street. here is a look at the dow trading higher after seeing relief from the stock market crash in china. the new york stock exchange is open for before after technical issues stopped the trading and
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this came at the same time as united airlines grounding all flights because of a technical issue and an issue at the wall street journal website as well. >> reporter: serious problems resulting in the exchange of being shutdown at 11:32 but this morning it is business as usual. and representatives from an investment firm specializing in what else? cyber security range the opening bell. but exchange officials say the computer glitch had nothing to do with hackers or anything sinister. the exchange person told the sister network at the end and it was a configeration error in the system. most traders expect the
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explanation but a few prefer to believe there was an attack because united airline and "the wall street journal" had computer problems. it is believes nothing nefarious took place. the journal outage resulted from london investors overwhelming the website. the website was restored yesterday and it is fully operational. "the wall street journal" said the matter is still under investigation in reports. united airlines grounded all planes because of a computer connect connectivity connect connective issue. it appears these three incidents had anything to do with illegal activity or hacking but they do underscore how fragile our
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computer system is and how our lives can be affected when it is down. >> david lee, great to see you. and more now. breaking in the financial crisis rocking greece as the government races to finalize a plan of reform for its third bailout otherwise it risks getting kicked out of the eurozone. greg pal caught is live. >> reporter: jon the clock is ticking down. they will sink or swim. reports we are getting and seeing is the greek government has a bailout proposal that includes $13 billion in taxes and cuts and reforms but they are looking for $80 billion in loans.
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friendly nations like france is helping but germany is talking tough. what happens when the decision is made. >> i will bet there is going to be a deal this saturday. >> why? >> because i think the greek side wants the deal and euro zone wants to deal too. it isn't a minor issue for both. >> reporter: help will come just in time. the worst crowds we have seen. banks are closed and will be closed through monday. and with a deal they could open up and there could be chaos. here is what other folks are thinking: >> this is the real greece working class people struggling to make a living. all of the politicians are lying, they said they don't
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have euros but they have hope because they are alive and they are greek. >> reporter: again, in some areas here we are warmly received and the u.s. is seen helpful to greece. secretary lou has been pushing what greeks want. a reduction or rescheduling of a mountain of debt to help them start growing again. again many see a greek exit from the euro as a real possibility. others are hoping that summit will not be necessary. back to you. >> as you point out, you have to feel sorry for the ordinary folks on the street who are waiting were the government to help them out. >> well, police say they finally have their man in a brutal rape and murder of a woman more than four decades ago. how they got a break in a very cold case. and is our computer
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infrastructure safe and secure? many americans are wondering how vulnerable we are. next what one cyber security expert says about all of the risks. ♪ ♪ when you're living with diabetes steady is exciting. only glucerna has carbsteady clinically proven to help minimize blood sugar spikes. so you stay steady ahead.
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shooting a man to death over texting in a movie theater. ac >> the new york stock exchange is grinding to a halt united airlines' website down and "the wall street journal" was down as well. coincidence? you have the headlines hackers stole data on millions of government workers. many americans are wondering if we are safe? how safe are we? we will talk about it with fredrick layton who is a former airforce intelligence officer and spent 26 years specializing among cyber security and other things. it is great to have you on the program. thank you for joining us >> it is my pleasure.
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thank you for having me. >> we will go through the issues separately. how long does it take to figure out what transpired yesterday for some of these companies? >> there is a wotwo-fold answer. when you know there is a vulnerability it is a week to ten days before you can figure out it was a hack attack. sometimes hackers are resident of networks for over 243 days on average before discovered. some breaches take longer to discover than others. we have had incidents of up to ten years before being discovered. but when the cases like yesterday prove to be hacking attacks you have a week before you can determine whether or not it was truly a cyber attack. >> what did youo you make of the government saying there is nothing nefarious going on?
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>> i think they should say if the indications are there is no attack but say we are still investigating this. to be fair they need to be able to investigate this thoroughly because these are incidents we can learn from whether or not it was a cyber attack. >> i wonder if they have more information than perhaps we do so they are confidant it wasn't a hack attack. >> the other possibility is they may have information going the other way. it may have been one but wanted to reassure the market and be careful how they couched it. cyber attacks are very you know, in many cases not revealed when they happen and sometimes months or weeks after the fact. >> you work in a government agency. did you have personal experience where the government came out
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and told the public one thing when indeed something else happened? >> not directly. the time i worked the issues cyber security was very much in the background. there were a few instances that were publically reported but nothing like today. there was nothing where we said one thing publically and another thing was happening behind the scenes but it is in the the realms that could happen. >> the new york stock exchange said configeration and the united airlines said technical glitch and wall street journal had a 504 error. what does that mean? >> it points to the fact in each case there is an issue with redundancy. these networks are supposed to
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be resilient so it is becoming critical to make sure the networks can bounce back and there are network vulnerabilities. in the case of united they were talking about a router being the issue. and there shouldn't be one router that controls of the activity between the airlines and the employees and passengers and the airlines and all of that crashed because of one particular failure and if that is the case they need to redo their network. >> i am sure conversations are happening on that. the context for this no evidence at all of any cyber attack at this time we have the explanations as they stand. but the backdrop is one where it is easy to understand anxiety
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about this. you had lawmakers coming out saying this is the toughest threat environment since 9/11 there have been hacking of federal agencies where 30 million plus people's information has been released based not just on the news yesterday but the last several weeks it is easy to understand are we being attacked? the explanations we get after the stories and as soon as they go away is too much time, too much money and we will not be able to get up to speed to protect ourselves. how do we invest the right way so next we're more secure? >> i think the idea we need to pursue is we need to look at the newest technology that out are there. there are technologies out there that are not being used. in the opm hack with information stolen what you need to look at is the end to end encryption. and you need to look at what is
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known as data laws prevention technologies. these are out there. and you need authentication and the ability to sanitize the files you have. it sounds technical but they are available and businesses and government agencies need to avail themselves of those technologies. they are not doing a good job of knowing what is out there. industry probably isn't doing enough to tout the wears. the main thing to remember is that technology is advancing. every day there are varientants out there and it is up from 250,000 last year. one million new malware out there and makes it hard to keep track. there are way do is do this that are non-traditional but need to be looked at. >> we certainly hope they are
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being looked at. and by the way, cyber security company stocks are trading higher today. thank you so much and great to have you on the program. police need the public's help catching a brazen arsonist. jublia is a prescription medicine proven to treat toenail fungus. use jublia as instructed by your doctor. look at the footwork! most common side effects include ingrown toenail, application site redness, itching, swelling burning or stinging, blisters, and pain. smash it! make the call and ask your doctor if jublia is right for you. new larger size now available.
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potential late comers to the republican race. scott walker talking about florida senator marco rubio as his running mate. and senator rubio is busy with his own campaign and walker hasn't announced running. and there is the ohioernor whose campaign committee is purchasing a major ad buy. let's bring in the panel and welcome to both of you. >> good to be here. >> ab these two are late to the party. are they fresh faces or old news? >> well, they have to have release the governor of ohio because he wants to be into the debate on the 6th. governor scott walker is well known in iowa and gets the
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neighborhood discount and he is poplar in the first caucus state and he is fine on polling so he doesn't need to scurry. they are going to be competing with each other for likely the same coalition of voters. he is going to out experience walker with his experience as a governor and executive appearance in iowa and two decades on the armed service committee and the author of the balanced budget committee. he needs to get going. >> they both come to the table with impressive resumes and turned around economic situations in states that are important. it doesn't get more important than ohio. >> or wisconsin for that matter. it is important they hail from
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those states is affect feather in their cap. and it is especially a feather in their cap because they did well in those states meaning they know how to speak to people that live in places like ohio and wis consciousconsin and that is important, especially for a republican to reach beyond the typical conservative voter that now live in the west and in the south. and so this is very important. i agree with ab that certainly walker comes into the race very much as a top tier candidate because people have been talking about him for years. the ohio governor comes in as less than a top tier candidate because he sunday talked about
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about -- isn't -- he goes off script sometimes and that is a liability sometimes but this year it might work to his advantage. >> they are candidates 15 and 16 officially announced on the republican side. former virginia governor jim gill more is talking about getting into the race as well. we don't have any indication the two we are talking about are not going to do it. in a field this size peppered with sitting governors and former governors and sitting members of the united states senate, how do they make themselves stand out? >> well it is very difficult. but i think they are getting in because they don't see anyone running away. they don't see a strong front runner so they think they can get a handle on this. it is hard for the nominee to be in the race. everyone is going to get a little vote and they will be
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dragging through a delegate fight. it is hard to see one of the breaking loose. but there is a debate coming soon and perhaps that will happen and one get away from '17. it is looking large. >> fred thompson got in the race late and went to the top of the polls and rick perry got in sort of late and shot to the top as well. one might think coming in late is an advantage >> i think there is some truth to that. but i think the phenomenal was made worse by the fact voters wanted anybody but romney. at the end of the night they had no one to turn to however but mitt romney. in the big race like this, you cannot overstate how great of an advantage it is to be a governor. if you have not a governor with proven result of executive
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experience to point to you are left -- and marco rubio is a very good candidate, but you are left with someone like him and all he is is a senator or politician. he is left to simply telling good stories and he does. but i still think that the advantage of having that governorship it is hard to overstate how important that is. >> easier to point out that you are one of one instead of one of a hundred. thank you both. speaking of the election, donald trump not backing down from the controversial comments on immigration. what the chair of the rnc told trump. and after they closed on this million home the new owners got threatening letters from someone dubbed the watcher. how creepy is that? they are suing the previous owners. do they have a case? our legal panel weighs in next.
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university and the warning sent to students about a disease being passed around. >> reporter: donald trump was called out on his immigration comments as protesters gear up in front of his new hotel. carl tucker is live with more. >> reporter: candidate and the republican chair talk all of the time so it isn't a big news splash that happened. trump has been all over the news saying the united states is a dumping ground for illegal criminals causing a crime wave. the talk was something they all do and he was reminded that tone and presentation do matter. after the 2012 defeat the rnc
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growth and opportunity report warned quote if hispanic americans perceive that a gop nominate or candidate doesn't want them in the united states they will not pay attention to our next sentence. it goes on to say it doesn't matter what we say about education jobs or the economy if hispanics think we, meaning the rnc doesn't want them here. that will close their ears to our policies. trump reports were saying the call went for 45 minutes and he got dressed down and the rnc is not saying that. trump tweeted totally false reporting on my call. he called me ten minutes, said i hit a nerve doing well and end. the rnc said they were returning trump's call. the comments do make republicans nervous and businesses nervous enough to cut ties with him in
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some cases. most of the candidates have distanced themselves and even ted cruz is quick to say he doesn't use the same language and tone. a lot of republicans running against him don't like him being ahead in the polls and a lot are concerned concerned. >> we talk about the candidates walker and trump, who is he going to vote for? our live chat is open now. there is court action for the pre-trial hearing for the woman accused of killing her husband while kayaking. investigators say she told them she tampered with her fiance's
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kayak and watched him drown. but the lawyers blames the alleged confession on a language bear and claims she was suffering from hypothermia and her husband's death. she's going into court and her lawyer says this is a woman from another country where english is her second language and she doesn't have a grasp of the facts here. is that defense likely to work? >> i don't think so. ultimately the issue is did she understand the words coming out of her mouth or understand she was making a confession. the victim in a case is an american man, someone she had an intimate relationship with so she understand english well enough to communicate with her dead fiance so it is not unreason
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unreasonable she can understand english enough when con fezfessconfessing to a murder. >> she is quoted and we have not seen the video tapes but she is quoted to say it felt good watching him drown. no matter the language you are speaking words like that seem incriminating. >> that is right. if that video becomes admissible if this goes to trial that is damaging from your case. these are statements you would argue a grieving fiance wouldn't say. there is not much physical evidence in the case. so the prosecution is going to have to focus on her statement and actions. motive is not required in criminal prosecutions but it is certainly helpful. if she felt trapped in the relationship and let's not forget she was allegedly the beneficiary of a $250,000 life
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insurance policy. and that is what the prosecutors are going to focus on to try to get a conviction. >> we will keep on a eye on that. let's talk about this case of new home owners claiming a self described watcher is stalking their million home. so they are suing the previous owners who they say knew about the watcher and even got a letter write before the sale went through. they got their first threatening letter after they closed on the house. in with the watcher wrote his or her grand father watched the house in the 1920's and his father watched it in the '60s and now it is quote my time. the letter refers to children in the home as young blood. diana, do they have a case? >> it is going to be a difficult
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one to prove. the issues are notice. did the seller have notice that for was this person watching the property? and that is stalking essentially the house. the burden of proof lies with the plaintiff. they have to prove the owner had notice and didn't disclose the facts when selling property. the issue is whether they knew this watcher existed, and they are saying there was no watcher and this is fabricated. the only proof is from the self proclaimed watcher himself. there is a credible issue. and the other issue is is that a disclosure they would have to make. is there a notice? >> you are with her, anna, you
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don't think they have a case? >> buyer be wearware and that does defend on if the seller reer knew about the watcher and if they received a letter was it threatening for the current owners? if it wasn't do they have a duty? >> i think the buyers have an up uphill battle. >> the letter the watcher claims he sent to the previous owners no body has seen that as far as we are aware. we will keep our eye on that one. thank you both. >> thanks jon. overcoming disabilities with inspiring grace. an army veteran injured in iraq teaches us a lesson in living live to its full- est.
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francisco. will this make cities rethink their sanctuary policy? >> plus body cameras on cops is one thing. but on school administrators and teachers? why one district says yes but is that a good idea or too much? >> and can the obama administration really block the washington redskins from building a new stadium because of their name? >> who better to ask than the former redskins quarterback joe thiesman is back. >> we are looking forward to that. that is going to be fun. >> noah galloway is a competitive athlete as well as a double amp tee from injuries he received in iraq. he was a presenter at the cleo sports award last night and the audience recognizing the message
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of overcoming adversity. that is not all bay the way. he has a lot of move as he showed the world this season on dancing with the stars. >> just so the viewers know we will not be doing those lift during this interview. noah galloway is joining us now. did you think dancing was going to be part of your title? >> no, never. >> do you consider yourself a dancer? >> no i was on the dancing show made it to the finals but i am not a dancer. >> we will show the viewers more of your footage for those that missed. while watching you dance i think it is tough to understand how difficult some of the moves you were doing were. >> a lot has to do with they
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have had amputees on the show but they were above the knee so i was the first below the knee and missing arms. >> abc gives us one dance where you are shortlessirtless. what did you learn? >> we were working on movements and moving across the floor. >> when you watch it what do you think? >> i don't watch them back
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because i see where where -- where i messed up. >> when your are alone in the house do you repeat the dances? >> no it is over. >> instead of dancing you do a lot of competitions. talk about that. >> after being injured i went through a couple years of depression and after that i got back into shape and started running race and marathons and different things. all of these people reached out and i inspired them to get back in shape. i ended up with dancing with the stars and people reached out to
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we'll call you when things are just as wonderful... [phone rings] but a little less crazy. we're doing everything we can to give you the best experience possible. because we should fit into your life. not the other way around. >> noah galloway is talking to us. it has been ten years since the injur injur injury? >> ten years this december. >> what do you think when you reflect on all you have been through? >> i am proud of what i accomplished. i have a strong family support, amazing fiance my kids sisters, and parents help me get through this. and all of these people reached out and supported me to go further and further.
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>> you have the #noexcuses and talk about why that is relevant? >> that picked up from me doing the races. people started relating to what is your excuse and no excuses and i grabbed that. and noah i used and hash tags. it motivates me knowing i am motivating others. >> talk about that. i think it is easy especially in the world we are in. i know working on the news and the viewers watching the news it is easy to field the press now and then. >> you have to find something in you to be pushing. we can always do more than you think. i tell myself you can always give a little bit more. >> something for us to think about today. if people want to support you or talk to you what is the best way? >> i have my website and i am all over social media with
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twitter and fetchacebook. it is exciting because i can connect to people. i read everything everyone post. >> i think you will have a few more followers from our family and from viewers. and we wish you the best of luck. stay in touch. >> that is fantastic. next hour on "happening now" police getting help from across the country trying to learn the identity of a little girl's body who was found on the shores of boston n harbor. and two unlikely candidates getting attention. how sanders and trump could disrupt this presidential race. maybe they are already.
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when you travel, we help you make all kinds of connections. connections you almost miss. and ones you never thought you'd make. we help connect where you are. to places you never thought you'd go. this, is why we travel. and why we continue to create new technology to connect you to the people and places that matter. jon: no excuses. that is the message. jenna: now we'll really have to work hard over the next hour.
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jon: holy cow. jenna: i tried to get noah to do one of those lifts but -- jon: maybe his fiance wasn't either. see you back here in an hour. jenna: "outnumbered" starts right now >> this is "outnumbered." i'm harris faulkner. here today, andrea tantaros, co-host of "fox & friends" first ainsley earhardt, good to have you her back. from our sister network fox business's elizabeth macdonald. we lovingly call her emac. our #oneluckyguy welcome back, winning quarterback, broadcaster, businessman, your resume' is long, all around superstar joe theismann. he is outnumbered for the hour. >> thank you. good to be back. congratulations by the way. >> he was like making perfection, right? >> he really was, thank you. >> you're such a nice guy. so nice you loaned me your bling-bling
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