tv Americas News Headquarters FOX News July 11, 2015 10:00am-12:01pm PDT
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bears are being disparaged. >> remember, if you have your own hit or miss tweet us. that's it for this week's show. thanks to my panel and all of you for watching. hope to see you right here next week. donald trump takes his message to the border state of arizona. it's a sellout crowd here. we'll ask the question is his campaign more bark than bite? plus stones and shoes go flying at a hated balkan leader. why so many people can't forgive or forget. once again a cyber attack is worse than we thought, and you might not know if you are one of the 20 million plus americans affected.
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nice to be with you this saturday. i'm leland vitter. >> and i'm elizabeth prann. welcome to "america's headquarters" from washington. donald trump is drawing criticism but is drawing record crowds at campaign stops as his message's nats withresonates with some people. a border state with issues such as immigration and drug smuggling front and center. hi peter. >> reporter: that's right. elizabeth it's not that much of a supply governor scott walker is expected to officially announce his run for president monday. it was a big surprise that last night his twitter account showed a message saying scott is in. oops. all we know now is twitter says we're looking into today's issue
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and have determined the walker team was not at fault. meanwhile, others who have announced their intention continue to campaign like senator marco rubio who says his run is personal. >> this country owes me nothing. america owes me absolutely nothing. i have a debt to america i will never repay. this is not just the country i grew up in this changed the history of my family. >> reporter: and then there's donald trump who last night brought together a group of families that had been torn apart because of violent acts committed by people who are in this country illegally. to demonstrate the point ever since his announcement in new york. >> somebody hears that it was an illegal that was involved with the death of their children it
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becomes politically incorrect for a politician to help them. that's how messed up our nation is. >> reporter: and on the democratic side bernie sanders continues to surge. things could get awkward this tuesday in d.c. because hillary clinton is coming to capitol hill to talk to democratic lawmakers including sanders, her top rival on the left. >> peter doocy reporting live. thank you. leland? >> trump's comments have pushed him from a candidate many folks didn't take seriously to top of the polls, at least some polls. so will there be a long-term trump effect? might he even win it? here to break it down charles hurt. the headline was washington finally united in hatred for donald trump. why? is washington scared of him? is the establishment that worried he's shaking things up in this way? >> i think that has a lot to do with it.
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people don't like the unknown factors factors. the bigger reason he's doing their job so much better than they're doing it in terms of relating to people reaching people and framing the debate which is what politics is all about. he does it so much better and that scares the day lights out of them. >> some say his campaign is a joke, it's this, it's that. 48% of the social media traffic regarding politics in the past week 48%, belonged to donald trump. those are numbers, half of those numbers people would love to have. >> all of these professional politicians would literally pay millions and millions to get that attention, to command that attention and they can't do it. he does it in an impolitic way
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and says things that make a lot of people cringe but he's saying things that resonates with people. it also has a lot of folks supporting. take a look at the latest polls showing jeb bush on the top. go down the list from there. is this more bark than bite? can he be this bombastic and incendiary or does this run out? >> the professional answer would be, no, he can't keep this going like that and certainly especially polls right now are very -- not unscientific but unreliable at the moment because it's very early. >> more name recognition.
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i do think that he can be very effective in basically putting on a clinic showing republican candidates these are the issues people care about. >> the chairman of the gop called donald trump and said hey, you're about to screw this up for us in terms of the republicans. is that because the gop believed that or are they just handling this wrong in harnessing the donald effect for lack of a better term? >> i think they're scared of him. he's making a lot of good points illuminating a lot of issues in plain talk that is actually resonating with people and they do not like that. and i think it's a terrible terrible impulse on their part
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to try to go and say, knock it off, be quiet. you're going to hurt us. this concerns me a little bit, my biggest tern is if donald trump gets ostracized from the republican party -- >> that's a big wow. >> that terrifies me. >> ross perot all over again. when it comes to donald trump giving a speech on immigration later today in arizona we're told people are actually scalping tickets. charles herd washington times, appreciate your time sir. obviously we've now talked about the republicans, so how is the democratic race shaping up? our fair and balanced political panel will break downhillry's support slip and the rise of bernie sanders coming up with elizabeth coming up from now.
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>> we have over 20 million applicants compromised within the federal government. this is classic espionage. to turn them against us. >> that's homeland committee chairman mccaul revealing the personal data of millions was stolen. how they were able to steal sensitive records as the government looks at its system with new scrutiny. let's bring in adam levin, the chairman and co-founder of credit credit.com. >> thanks for the invitation. >> i want to start with some numbers that are startling. we learned of the first breach between 2013 and 2014.
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we learned a startling statistic 22.1 million people affected by this breach. can you talk to me about the collateral damage here? >> the collateral damage is enormous. we're not talking about a situation where you have a credit card where you make a phone call and change your number which is annoying and a problem but there's almost zero liability. here you're talking about social security numbers and now fingerprints. this is stuff that never changes. where there might be a zero possibility with credit cards there is no zero liability when you talk about social security numbers and fingerprints. people will have to be looking over their shoulders for the rest of their lives and with fingerprints especially in the intelligence community, you can change your identity but you can't change your fingerprints. >> if you're a victim here how does this change your life? how would you be affected? >> in so many ways.
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you could be open to bribery, to extortion, you could be turned because of the intimate details of your life. and this could be sold on the black market. you could be a victim of full name identity theft, tax fraud, criminal identity. you can end up on no-fly lists. your life could be in jeopardy if you're on a stretcher in an emergency room. >> so what could or should the government be doing now to better protect itself? is the cyber environment dated here? >> i think start with the premise that breaches have become the third certainty in life and the cold war has been replaced by the cyber war. we're in it. it's an arms race.
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we have to have data that's segmented, intensive training. minimize risk of exposure and minimize damage. >> that would take a huge overall and a lot of motivation on the part of any company or person online. don't you foresee that being a big issue for people? >> it's the new reality. the pot of gold is totally enormous and for the victims it's life changing. we really have to step up our game here. there were three breaches united airlines computers, new york stock exchange had an issue that stopped trading for hours.
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what type of safeguards need to be in place and this is a big wake-up call for consumers and companies. >> everybody knew that there are significant vulnerabilities when you come to the financial sector or the power grid. someone was developing an alternate energy source and says he realized there really wasn't very much and that we could be subjected to trillions and trillions of damage possibly loss of life as medical systems go down. you saw jpmorgan had been hacked. 83 million files exposed but nothing had happened and then for a period of about a year ago websites were going down one by one because certain organizations were trying to demonstrate a point which is look what we can do if we want to do it. and the financial sector is usually the most secure the
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truth is everybody is vulnerable. everyone has to continue to step up their game and it has to be an effort between government business consumers and the media. >> thank you very much. we also need to take personal responsibility so thank you for joining us. >> thank you. >> we want to hear from you. what more should the government be doing? send us your tweets and we'll read some of your thoughts later in the show. >> the islamic state now says they're behind the bombing of italy's consulate in cairo, egypt, this morning. officials there in egypt say the explosion killed at least one civilian injured eight others destroyed several floors after historic building in that town. an italian diplomat said the consulate was closed at the time and no staff members were
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wounded. the blast from the car bomb from that terror group contained 990 pounds of explosives and it could be felt far and wide around cairo. >> i lived in the neighborhood and i was sleeping. all the windows had been broken in the house and parts of the building fell on top of people and injured them. we went outside and the air was full of dust. >> over the past few months groups loyal to isis carried out countless attacks against egypt and its army installations. iran nuclear negotiations are in overtime after diplomats blew through their deadline again yesterday. they are meeting through the weekend in vienna with the hope of hammering out a deal. united states and iran have both threatened to walk away. secretary of s said some progress has been made but that it's difficult and needs time to be resolved. later on in our show we'll speak with former u.s. ambassador to
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the united nations john bolten to get his take on the nuclear talks. at this hour in brussels greece negotiating for its life. in the wie hoursee hours of the morning, bailout proposals. now they are being presented to eurozone finance ministers in a last-ditch effort to get a three-year bailout, head off a financial collapse and keep greece in the euro. amy kellogg is live in athens where there have been protests all day with the latest. hi amy. >> reporter: hi leland. it was only last weekend when greece in a defiant referendum said a very firm no to any sort of austerity package that would be in exchange for further bailout funds. and then just last night, leland the greek parliament voted yes to a very similar
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austerity package. so the whole situation is sort of complex and messy and it's inconsistent. there are plenty of euro finance ministers who are saying great, finally greece is onboard. they are taking their last chance. at the same time there are some in the eurozone at this meeting now in brussels who are really parsing the proposal and who worry after missed deadlines in the past and various other problems they've had with the greek government, this new proposal could be just words. >> can the greek government be trusted to do what they are promising to actually implement in the coming weeks, months years? i think those are the key issues that will be addressed today.
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you're looking at video from greece. there have been protests rocking that country all day over this weekend and obviously so many folks are so angry not only because of the possible reforms but because they can't get money out of the atms, people's credit cards have been turned off, can't get money out of the country. back to amy as soon as we can for more on where these negotiations stand in brussels. throwing and hurling a shoe and water bottles at the serbian president, even breaking his glasses. tens of thousands were marking the 20th anniversary of the srebrenica massacre. those were killed in what was supposed to be a safe haven, europe's worst massacre since the holocaust. dozens came to pay their respects including former president bill clinton.
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>> after 20 years i am thankful that bosnia remains a peaceful country. i am possible it is increasingly part of the european community, that it has participated with peace-keeping forces in iraq and afghanistan. i'm thankful for all of that. >> at the end of the ceremony families will lay to rest the remains of 136 newly found victims at a memorial. stay with us and we'll have a report from the ceremony later in the show. and still to come terrifying video of a home invasion. two parents shot dead their five children now orphaned. we'll have the details on that investigation. an illegal immigrant accused of murdering a woman in san francisco, one of the biggest questions that has emerged why was he hear? now the san francisco sheriff is pointing his finger at the feds.
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common sense rouls this is what we've been stating from onset that i.c.e. should have deported him. >> we'll talk to a "san francisco chronicle" reporter about the case and the fresh debate around immigration policies. and they're called zombie foreclosures. this real estate apocalypse took a bite out of sin city. how are things in las vegas and the rest of the country now? the host of our brand-new series will be here. the american dream is back.
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take a look at these surveillance images out of florida. masked men broke into a house where a family was sleeping. a man shot and killed a man and his girlfriend both 29. their children range in age from 1 to 11. the kids were not hurt. investigators, however, are trying to figure out a motive for this crime.
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they do say they do not believe this is a random attack. they believe this family was targeted for the crime. if you have any information about the crime or recognize the folks from the surveillance images you can call crimestoppers down there in florida 866-634-8477. there's also been a gofundme account established for the children as they grow up now without their parents. a new report released this summer finds there are roughly 127,000 so-called zombie homes in america right now. that's down about 10% from a year ago and far below the number during the height of the housing crisis. zombie homes are abandoned by owners and not officially owned by the banks. one of the worst hit cities for the zombie homes is las vegas according to the foreclosure monitoring company reality
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track. sin city is the focus of our brand-new series "the property man." sitting down with regular americans fighting against foreclosure and getting back on their feet. here is his take through the eyes of one couple. >> reporter: the home they gave up in the bankruptcy three years ago was never actually sold by the bank. >> the title of the house lists mark as the property owner. when i contacted bank of america, they said bank of america rescinded on the foreclosure process. >> reporter: the title to the property was never taken out of their name. it's what we call a zombie foreclosure or title. the lender to this date still has not foreclosed on the property. what that means to mark they cannot buy a property a new home to house their family until that lender decides to
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foreclose on that property and they find themselves stuck in tim. time. >> bob massi joins us live from new york. i caught the show at noon. i thought it was interesting. it covered a lot of topics in just your first show. what was it like to work on this project? >> you know i had a greater sense of appreciation for what you all do every day. although i've been a legal analyst for many years, from the beginning actually to have a show and see the amount of work that the men and women put into the show you have a different sense of appreciation. actually what i end up doing, although i enjoy it very much they're the ones who make it what it is. i'm blessed to be able to do it. i learned a lot and the people the viewers over the years, fox and friends, send e-mails to me and others who form the topics we cover. >> absolutely. so if people didn't catch the show tell us what it's all about. >> personal stories like the one we were just talking about, the zombie foreclosure issue.
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people who walked away from their home or more importantly filed bankruptcy and discharged the debt but they never realized the home was never transferred out of their name. that's the big issue in america today. the lenders are starting to move on that now because they recognize people can't rebuild their own dreams and get new homes and at the same time they can't sell the home. it also talks about like i interviewed david siegel who basically is the largest time share owner in the world. he bought the las vegas hilton. i give tips to people if you're going to buy a time share, buy a home sell a home get a condominium, all these type of things to try to help people. what happened is when all of this happened before nobody had any idea what to do. hopefully we'll be able to educate people and at the same time entertain them. >> i thought that was interesting, too. right off the top of your show i learned a lot about hoas i didn't know before. you had spoke wen a couple that were really powerless to the
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rules and regulations. so this can apply to a wide range of homeowners not just a certain demographic. >> anybody that lives in a development generally has an hoa, homeowners association. one of the biggest things we talk about, they have the right, the board has the right to put a lien on your property in most jurisdictions if you don't pay your dues and could sell the home. what happened in one of the shows we're doing, a million dollar home was actually bought elizabeth, for $8,000. and as a result of that people didn't realize that's how much power they have. they have the right to foreclose. >> bob, thank you for joining us. be sure to watch bob's brand-new series tomorrow at 3:00 p.m. if you missed it it was at noon. it will air next saturday at 12:00. bob, thank you so much. we really appreciate it. >> thank you for having me. >> we were talking, he features some incredible homes on this unbelievable some with hockey
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rinks, baseball diamond. >> it's a great show. great to see what he comes up with next. all right. what's next? a big win at wimbledon for serena williams today beating a woman from spain whose name i cannot pronounce. since she didn't win i don't have to try. 6-4, 6-4 in the final round. today's win is williams' sixth wimbledon title, the fourth grand slam. she doesn't even celebrate that much now when she wins. it's like yeah i've done this before. she's now completed the second so-called serena slam of her career holding all four grand slam titles at once times two. >> they're unbelievable athletes. it's really fun to watch. i've been watching a lot of wimbledon. >> unbelievable athletes and competitors. >> they make it look easy but it's not. >> we watch it on tv. you have no idea how fast that ball is coming at you. coming up tracking a typhoon. the storm pounds a major city
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and forces the evacuation of more than a million people. and negotiators overseas try to strike a nuclear deal with iran after pushing yet another deadline while here at home a heated debate over the potential dangers of a deal. former u.s. ambassador john bolton will weigh in next. >> this scares me that iran would be a nuclear power and it's going to create a nuclear arms race in the mideast. americans. we're living longer than ever. as we age, certain nutrients... ...become especially important. from the makers of one a day fifty-plus. new one a day proactive sixty-five plus. with high potency vitamin b12... ...and more vitamin d. r credit score
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can a business have a mind? a subconscious. a knack for predicting the future. reflexes faster than the speed of thought. can a business have a spirit? can a business have a soul? can a business be...alive? so far neither the iranians or the united states have made an offer the other can't refuse. reports seem to contradict each other on an almost hourly basis. exhausted diplomats are meeting through the weekend after they extended yet another deadline. it remains far from clear if the
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parties can resolve the remaining issues that are so far blocking an accord. joining us now fox news contributor john bolton. is it worth sticking around and continuing these negotiations or do you have to just call it? >> well they should get up and walk away. i wouldn't have even started these negotiations because i don't think the iranians are ever going to be talked out of their nuclear weapons program. it has sent all the wrong signals indicated to the ayatollahs that the president is desperate for a deal and, therefore, they can ring more concessions out of it. >> you're saying it shows we are desperate for a deal. take a listen to what secretary kerry has to say to that point. >> this is not open ended.
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president obama made it very clear to me tonight. if the tough decisions don't get made we are prepared to call an end to this process. >> did the iranians not believe him? >> while there's some theoretical possibility secretary kerry might could the back without a deal i think as a practical matter they will get it within the next few days. >> why does this deadline matter? >> i think the iranians understand that the calendar is what it is. they want to deal with him before somebody else becomes president and they're finding what that point is when they can go so far and no further. >> when you say so far and no further it brings up the issue of red line what this deal will entail.
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the french have laid out nonnegotiables. as you can tell and have watched these so astutely over time does the united states have any red lines and have we crossed them? the biggest mistake was admitting they could have any uranium enrichment capability. administration officials have said to the press that we knew from the outset of these talks three years ago that iran would insist on having an enuranium enrichment. they should have said there's no deal here. the prior military activities connected with the program, the scope of international -- sanctions, so on and so forth. >> there's a report out of israel that there has already essentially been a deal now they're putting the dots and
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crossing the ts and it governors giving up snap inspections of iran's nuclear facilities. how significant are the concessions we've given in the sense the president says i'm not going to sign or allow a deal that prohibits iran from getting a bomb? >> i think he's already gone past the point of no return. i think what's been happening is not resolving outstanding differences but papering them over so they can have a deal to sign that will result in more negotiations once the deal is done. people have talked about a committee. >> continue to kick the can down the road. >> for iran the signing ceremony in vienna is just a rest stop between one set of negotiations and the rest. >> then you can get the sanctions even sooner. >> the timing is so important because once those sanctions go
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it's going to be very hard to put them back in place. it's the flaw of the congressional opposition in america. if the u.s. votes to lift the canceled sanctions resolutions, there's china, russia, india, ours may stay in place but the rest of the world will be open for business with iran. >> ambassador bolton woe appreciate you being here. >> glad to be here. >> thanks sir. . china is being hit for the second time by a typhoon this week. it's dumped more than 4 inches of rain flooding streets and stranding people. more than 1 million people evacuated from the area. hundreds of flights canceled the national weather service says it might be the strongest
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in more than 60 years. we'll get a live update next hour. >> still to come police say they think they have found the suspect in an 18-year-old cold case. he is as you might guess, an illegal immigrant just about to be deported back to mexico. that didn't happen. we'll tell you why coming up. the death of katherine steinle revived the immigration debate in america. big political implicated. we'll have a live report from california up next. >> tell me specifically what is preventing us when we have people in this country illegal and they have had seven prior felony convictions, why aren't we deporting them? >> on that particular case our detainer was not honored. >> who didn't honor it? >> san francisco sheriff's department did not honor our detainer that we lodged.
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an illegal immigrant about to be deported back to mexico has been arrested in a nearly 20-year-old cold case murder. 36-year-old miguel mansuras will appear for his alleged involvement in the death of 43-year-old linda louise archer. she was homeless and found beaten to death along the highway in santa barbara in 1997. the case was revived when dna evidence submitted back in 2013 matched a profile that belonged to the suspect. authorities are blaming each other in the wake of a shocking shooting at a san francisco pier. the city sheriff is defending the release of the illegal immigrant accused of killing a young woman saying federal
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agents failed to take the proper steps to keep him in custody. officials are firing back saying the sheriff is misinterpreting the law. henry lee, a reporter for the "san francisco chronicle," has been following the story from the very beginning and joins us now. henry, thank you so much for joining us today. >> my pleasure. >> can you tell us the latest in the investigation? >> well the team did recover the gun that turned out to be the murder weapon elizabeth. the suspect allegedly kick the gun off the pier but it was found and right now he has pleaded not guilty to a murder charge. >> i was going to ask you, have we heard from him or his attorneys? >> we have heard him allegedly confess to the crimes. there is an open question whether he fully understood the questions posed him in english by a reporter. his first language is spanish. >> and what does he say? i know he has talked about, you know the weapon. i believe he said it was an accident. it fired accidentally? >> he's given a fum of
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explanations elizabeth. he initially told police i was aiming for some sea lions and then i found this gun in a shirt that was on the pier and it accidentally went off. either way, whatever happened we have a 32-year-old woman at the prime of her life essentially gunned down. >> absolutely. where did he get the weapon? when was it stolen? why wasn't there an investigation into the gun trying to get it back into law enforcement hands? >> well, just four days before this brutal homicide the gun that was used was stolen from the bureau of land management ranger. he was in town on official business. his gun, for whatever reason was stolen. we do not know if it's the same man who stole the gun, but this gun was used to kill the woman. >> obviously we've heard all across the nation this week about sanctuary cities. san francisco is one of them. you covering the city of san francisco, this something, unfortunately, you have seen
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before? >> yes. yesterday we had another individual the second defendant. we had a couple of gang members who were convicted of a triple homicide a man and his two sons were gunned down in a mistaken identity gang-related homicide by several gang members, one of which also had been protected, shielded from deportation. this had happened in 2008. this is an ongoing controversy, elizabeth with finger pointing the blame game, the feds are blaming the sheriff and nothing is getting done. >> yeah what is the fallout with this? what are you seeing there on the ground? >> well we have here of course as we mentioned, sanctuary city policy indicates that if you're an average citizen maybe they want to protect grandma or someone who is here albeit illegally from being deported. if he or she might be considered very valuable witness in a crime, they don't want to deport every single person out there, but the problem is while on the other side of this controversy
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people are saying you know what we need to follow all laws. we can't have a patchwork quilt of laws and decide willy-nilly who stays and who goes. we need to protect the border some people say. very very intense debate that will continue in the weeks to come. >> what about the public? what are you hearing from the public? >> well certainly the public is up in arms elizabeth, just shocked that this woman just walking on the pier in a beautiful part of town popular with tourists and residents alike, just moments earlier she had taken a picture with her father. moments later she was gunned down from a distance. there was no altercation between the two. he opened fire once and she was shot through the chest and died later on. >> we only have about 30 second left henry, but what have you learned about this young woman? >> this young woman is a 32-year-old woman from pleasanton the bay area. works for a medical electronics company. the sad part is her brother is
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expecting a new child and through tears he has expressed immense grief. she will never meet my child. very sad all the way around. >> wow of that's devastating. henry lee reporting for the san francisco chronicle. we appreciate it. >> thank you, elizabeth. coming up right after the break, we're going to show you some new out-of-this world images from nasa's space probe. we're going to tell you what it is taking pictures of way, way out in the cosmos. ♪ ♪ one day a rider made a decision. the decision to ride on and save money. he decided to save money by switching his motorcycle insurance to geico. there's no shame in saving money. ride on, ride proud. geico motorcycle
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do it. come on. do it. come on! yes! awww, yes! that is what i'm talking about. baby. call and upgrade to get x1 today. ♪ it is worth taking a look at a very cool new picture of pluto. after a journey of more than 3 million miles and nine years, nasa's space hub is getting closer to sending back what they call pretty sharp images. scientists can identify a pattern terrain around the surface of pluto, who knew. they hope to get even better pictures as the probe passes by pluto at its nearest point. that's going to happen on tuesday. and get this it's expected to take 16 months for nasa to collect all of the information
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and research for the mission because it takes that long to get all the information back from pluto as it is just that far away from earth. 3 billion miles, that's dedication. >> i love this story. i think it's fascinating. i think it's fascinating what we're doing and what we're learning. i think it's very cool. >> very cool. still ahead, is it now time to shrink the army by 40,000 soldiers? many on capitol hill are questioning the president's plan amid increasing terror threats across the globe. we'll tackle that issue on the other side of the break. coming 40,000 troops from our army is bad news for national security at a time when we're facing some of the greatest threats we've seen in decades. it's bad news for the soldiers and their families. but it's probably recognized as good news in places like iran where ayatollahs are chanting death to america. ♪ have you ever thought, "i could never do that"? have you ever thought... you just didn't have anything left
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and government research shows they live just as long as whales in the wild. caring for these whales, we have a great responsibility to get that right. and we take it very seriously. because we love them. and we know you love them too. thank you for spending your saturday with us. i'm melissa pran welcome to "america's news head quarters". >> nice to be with you at home. i'm leland vittert. a suicide bomber disguised as a woman, deadly terror attacks across the globe all in the past 24 hours. and all three appear to be the work of islamic extremists including isis. >> with daily reports of violence coming in from across the globe, is it now time to cut
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back our military? we'll talk to fox news military analyst general bob scales coming up. bernie sanders is packing them in at events and rising in the poll especially in iowa and new hampshire. so is the insurgent campaign a real threat to hillary clinton's political machine? our panel is here to weigh in. but first breaking details coming in from around the globe. islamic militants appear to have launched attacks in three countries in the past 24 hours. a group calling itself in the islamic state in egypt is claiming responsibility for today's bombing at the italian consulate in cairo. one person was killed and eight others were injured when a 1,000-pound car bomb exploded. meanwhile, in somalia at least ten are dead including the gunmen who stormed two hotels.
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the islamic extremist group al shabaab is claiming responsibility. the attack started with suicide car bombings before the gunmen fought their way inside. it started just as people were starting to break the ramadan fast friday evening. >> translator: i was passing near the hotel when there was a heavy explosion at the gate. then i saw a gun carrying man. then the chaos continued for hours. >> and in chad nigeria-based extremists are suspected of being behind an explosion at the main market in that nation's capital. a man wearing a burka approached the area and detonated a bomb as people were praying. that's according to to eyewitnesses who were there. at least 14 people were killed and we are told dozens more injured. and fox news has learned that a drone strike targeting the head of the islamic state's afghanistan branch took place outside of kabul close to the pakistan border. the u.s. declines to confirm it but afghanistan says the strike
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destroyed the top leadership of a fledging islamic state affiliate there earlier this week. the pentagon confirming a drone strike killed an isis second in command for the afghan chapter. nato is expected to have a statement later today on the strikes. >> a decision to make these reductions was not easy. and will affect almost every army installation. all of aur installations provide valuable capability for the army and are important to us. >> and still they cut them. general randy george this week after the u.s. army decided to cut 40,000 soldiers from 28 bases across the country. this as president obama says there are no current plans to send troops to iraq and isis remains a major threat to the middle east as we have reported. here to look into the impact of these cuts fox news military analyst major general bob scales. general, appreciate you being here with us. >> hi. >> they're cutting your army. >> they are.
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let's be very clear. it's not just 40,000. if sequestration kicks in in october, it will be 80,000. it gets worse. the army among all the services does not have a single weapons program that's viable. it will be a generation before the army's ablg to replace its reagan era stuff. secretary carter himself said the army will not have the money to train above the squad level until 2020. meanwhile the any chairman of the joint chiefs of staff says our new enemy that we're facing is russia and russia as you know leland is a land power. >> i would say they have an enormous army. so the question is at some level when you look at what's going on in the middle east we're using drones we're using teams, these kinds of things people say we don't need to prepare and have a huge land based army. but then you hear from general dunford as he testified earlier. take a listen. >> in russia we have a nuclear power. we have one not only has the capability to violate the sovereignty of our allies and to
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do things that are inconsistent with our national interests, but they're in the process of doing so. so if you want to talk about a nation that could pose an existential threat to the united states i'd have to point to russia. if you look at their behavior it's nothing short of alarming. >> statement from josh earnest at the white house podium tried to walk some of those words back. there's a line when it relates to military planning. we're always preparing to fight the last war. and that's one of the reasons these cuts have happened. we say we don't need to go back to the war of the past. in this case do we? >> let's look at the record. president truman cut the army back in 1949 because we were not going to fight world war ii again, two weeks later we're in korea and tens of thousands of soldiers died. vietnam, remember we weren't going to get involved in vietnam. we did. and then the army starts cutting back in 1973. the plan was to cut the army from ten divisions to eight divisions in 1999.
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think what would have happened after 9/11 had we done that. generation after generation we've seen the army break. it's broken three times in my lifetime. and every single time republican democrat whichever administration they forget history and they forget what's about to happen and they cut the land forces and literally the next day suddenly we have to send an army too small and unprepared for the mission. >> you talk about an army too small and unprepared. after we saw 9/11 you can scale an army up pretty quickly. you can get more soldiers you can replace where folks have been cut and those kinds of things. but it seems as though it's a little different than hiring people to work at 7-eleven. >> there's no question about it. remember now mr. rumsfeld held on for three and a half years before he increased the size of the army. so you have soldiers in iraq and afghanistan serving 15 straight months in combat. soldiers going back four five six, seven times. and what happens when you overuse an army that's too small
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for the mission? we see things like suicides. we see substance abuse, ptsd. when you overuse an organization in war, soldiers and their families suffer. and i'm afraid we're about to do it again, leland. >> is there aside from just not doing the cuts is there anything that you're seeing being done in the army to make up for it if you will? are we getting smarter? are we getting better? are the soldiers we have better equipped? or is this just an across the board cut that's going to be detrimental? >> the army is a manpower intensive force. lyndon once said quality has a quantity all of its own. you can make soldiers better you can make better equipment. but at the end of the day when the enemy is essentially a ground force and he's facing down america, you have to put, to use the term boots on the ground and when you don't have enough boots on the ground you have to send the same soldiers back over and over and over again. >> and your enemies know you don't have enough boots to be in more than one place at one time. i do appreciate your vast
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quotation references includeing lennon. i was not expecting that today. general general, good to see you. a somber ceremony this morning as a massive crowd including world leaders gathered in bosnia to mark europe's worst massacre since the holocaust. it's been 20 years since the massacre killed 8,000 people but many there are not forgiving or forgetting. brian joins us with more of the story. >> tens of thousands of people came to mark the anniversary of the massacre declared a genocide by two international courts. most of the ceremony started out as planned which included a funeral for the 136 newly discovered victims who died in the massacre. they will be buried tomorrow. among the dozen foreign leaders was serbian prime minister angry mourners pelted him with stones and other objects causing
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him to reportedly break his glasses. he and his guards were forced to run out of the event. news agency says his administration is calling this an assassination attempt. the mourners say he down played the killings by not calling it a genocide. took refuge during thesnian war. it was declared a save haven by the united nations yet 20 years ago today serveb troops overran killing 8,000 muslim men and boys. today, former president bill clinton who was in office at the time of the massacre was one of the speakers. clinton thanked the serbian prime minister for having the courage to attend the event and offered his reflections. >> i never want to see a killing field like this within thousands
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of miles of here. but the world is still being dominated by wars and killings based on ethnicity and race and religion. >> the clinton administration later led nato air strikes against the service positions which led to the end of the three and a half year war in bosnia. a total of 100,000 people lost their lives. bodies of those who died in the massacre are still being excavated.000 victims still have not been found, some have been identified through dna technology. emotion still very much raw. elizabeth. >> thank you, bryan ilenas reporting live. thank you, bryan. friends and family remembered the 298 people killed on board malaysia airlines flight 17. an emotional ceremony today. it's been nearly a year since the plane was downed by a russian or pro-russian missile
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over eastern ukraine. the perpetrators need to be brought to justice, even then one of the brothers of the victims says it wouldn't be enough. >> justice, i don't know might do something financial, but that doesn't replace what we have lost. >> russia continues to deny any role in the accident and places the blame on ukraine. donald trump has certainly been doing his best to revive the immigration debate on the campaign trail and around dinner tables across america. the republican presidential candidate is expected to take the stage possibly in las vegas within the hour. then he heads to phoenix where there are thousands of folks gathering. we are told even there are people scalping tickets to go see donald trump.
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peter doo peter doocy is following it all. we've seen this meteoric rise for trump to stay in the polls. >> he's putting a face to the problem he's been trying to highlight throughout the campaign introducing the country to families that have been torn apart by violence committed by people who came to this country illegally. >> whenever somebody hears that it was an illegal that was involved with the death of their children it becomes politically incorrect for a politician to help them. that's how messed up our nation is. >> the other big news this weekend, what appeared to be a misfired tweet from the governor scott walker campaign blasting out an ad about how walker is in the race which was surprising because his expected announcement isn't until monday. now though a twitter spokesperson is telling us that quote, we are looking into today's issue and we determine
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the walker team was not at fault. the walker team is saying this is just all adding to the excitement about what their boss might say at the start of the week. leland. >> interesting spin there. give us a sense of what's happening on the democratic side. where is everybody this weekend? and what are they doing in the week coming up? >> on monday hillary and bernie and o'malley are all going to speak separately at the conference in kansas city that's a big hispanic lobbying group and since immigration is the hot topic right now, we expect a lot of headlines from their speeches. the next day though we anticipate a little awkwardness here in d.c. when hillary clinton gets together with congressional democrats on the hill. because one of those congressional democrats is senator bernie sanders, her chief rival on the left. they have not spent much time together that we know of since announcing their runs until this week. so get your popcorn. >> i was going to say wouldn't you love to be a fly on the wall for that meeting. i'm doubting they're going to let cameras in but you never know. >> there will be plenty of people around who can tell us exactly what happened.
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>> maybe a few twitter pictures as well. peter doocy in washington, thank you. safe travels coming up. that's the republican side of the 2016 presidential race. bernie sanders making a dent in hillary's poll numbers. how is she trying to differentiate herself and will it work? we'll have a fair and balanced panel coming up with elizabeth to break it down. a major shakeup in the nation's capital. the director of the office of personal management is stepping down after it was revealed hackers had infiltrated her agency's database. more than 20 million people had their social security numbers and other information stolen in the data breach. fox news chief intelligence correspondent catherine herridge has reaction from washington. catherine arculeta is out, submitting her resignation to the president friday. saying quote, i conveyed to the president that i believe it's best for me to step aside and allow new leadership that will enable the agency to move beyond
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the current challenges. one of those challenges responding to a massive government data breach that happened under arculetta's watch. the obama administration announcing thursday hackers stole information from more than 21 million americans including social security numbers. white house press secretary josh earnest praising arculeta's record at opm. >> precisely some of the reforms that she initiated that this particular cyber breach was detected in the first place. >> but harsh words from the chairman of the house government oversight committee jason chaffetz who led the call for arculeta's resignation. >> her knowledge of the facts is shallow and she has no vision and capability to actually solve the problem moving forward. >> chaffetz saying opm needs, quote, a confident, technically savvy leader. >> this is a 1960s system. it's an operating system with no encryption no dual
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authentication. in this day and age, come on that's totally inexcusable. >> opm's deputy director will temporarily take over for arculeta saturday while the administration searches for a permanent replacement. catherine herridge fox news. >> now we want to hear from you. what more should the u.s. government be doing to protect your personal data from hackers? and for that matter protect the united states from cyber attacks? you can send us your tweets at elizabeth prann, have some great thoughts already come in and we're going to read some of the thoughts we've already heard and your thoughts if you tweet us coming up later in the show. greek and eurozone negotiators are back at the drawing board today hoping to hammer out a deal to save greece's failed economy. one of the major concerns is the possibility the euro could crash out. if that happens, it could have a severe impact on the global economy. so let's bring in our financial expert david nelson who has been
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watching this very closely. david, thank you so much for joining us. and what can you tell us about the summit today? >> well negotiations are ongoing, elizabeth. there's some breaking news actually right now coming out of europe. i've seen reports that german finance minister has proposed that greece exit the euro for a period of five years. i got to caution viewers this is unconfirmed at this point. but needless to say these negotiations are going to be very difficult. finance minister the dutch finance minister has said this will be a very difficult discussion. and frankly trust is very low between europe and greece right now. >> absolutely. so like you said that is unconfirmed information that we are getting. we can't confirm that at this time. >> it is. >> but let's speculate. if this was a possibility. because we know there is a number of ways that these talks could go one of them resulting in greece exiting the euro. what type of impact would that have? >> well i think it's important to note that you know greece represents maybe 2% of the
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european economy. so for the world and certainly for the u.s. it's not a tragedy. but obviously for the greek people it is. i think ultimately greece will probably be forced out of the euro if not now it will happen at some point in the future. they should have never been there in the first place. and it makes a difficult situation for europe right now because if they capitulate the greek demands and look for some kind of haircut in the debt then other weak economies like portugal spain, even italy might ask for a quid pro quo. angela merkel's not going to go there. she's not going to permit a haircut. i think bigger issues for the world economy are not in europe right now. they're really reside on the other side of the world more in china. >> okay. we do know that the greek government has denied these reports that are coming out. so if we speculate they would leave the euro i also want to speculate they stay in. if there is a deal made today or tomorrow what would that look like? >> well what it will look like they need cash right now because
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bank experts say past last two or three days left them cashless in the teller machines. they need cash. anywhere from $50 billion to $84 billion. that's a lot of money. there's a lot of lack of trust. i think the big issue right now for the finance ministers is they're looking at parliament in greece which had voted for this proposal. and what's interesting about this proposal that they're making it's almost identical to what creditors wanted in the first place. so why the referendum vote? so the distrust right now, the mistrust rather is that will they even implement these reforms that they're putting forth once the deal is passed? >> what type of precedent would it set if there was a deal made? >> i don't know. to be honest this is what the third bailout package for greece right now? they haven't lived up to any of the promises. and that's really the issue
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here. if this cascades over to say populous movements that are in portugal spain, italy and other areas of the eurozone it could be pretty severe for the euro as a whole. so i think they're going to make it very very difficult for the greek government. and i wouldn't dismiss totally the possibility of greece exiting the euro. it might in the long run be the best thing for greece. >> wow. well david nelson joining us live. thank you, david. that is a fascinating story obviously developing right before our eyes. thank you so much. >> thank you. fox news alert on a story breaking this summer saturday. one woman has been injured, we're told in a possible explosion at a beach in rhode island. the information is coming in from our affiliate there wpri wnac they are reporting that a 50-year-old woman was thrown into the rocks of a nearby jetty and then taken to the hospital
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for treatment. as we can tell from these pictures the beach itself has been sealed off by police tape there in rhode island. this is the salty brine state beach in rhode island. you can see there the coastline of rhode island. they've got a lot of coastline. we're not sure exactly where on the coast this happened. according to our sources from wpri this happened about 11:00 this morning. now we're getting some video coming in. you can see the beach closed off. in the pictures it appears the jetty right there with the rocks is where exactly that explosion happened. obviously we're going to continue to follow this story. see if we can't figure out if there was an explosion the condition of the woman, and if there was an explosion what caused it. we'll be right back.
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building new apps like this one that lets you choose a time for us to call you. so instead of waiting on hold, 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. folks in baltimore are taking to the streets today not to protest the city's police department but to show support for it. baltimore police department as you know has been hit with multiple problems lately including a high homicide rate a growing crime rate of course the criticism of their handling of the death of freddie gray. today's rally comes three days after baltimore's mayor, stephanie rawlings blake, the woman on the right, fired the police commissioner the anthony
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batts, the fella there on the left. deputy kevin davis has now been named the interim police commissioner of baltimore. typhoon causing damage in china. meteorologist janice dean is at the fox weather center with today's forecast. what do you have for us? >> elizabeth, very active season in the pacific. a couple of typhoons we're watching one just off the coast of china equivalent of category 1. then we're also watching this typhoon that is going to strengthen and possibly move very close to japan early next week. so this is our typhoon right now we're watching off of china. it's going to continue to move north and eastward and weaken. but then we're going to watch that other typhoon move in to portions of japan tuesday and wednesday watching the pacific for a lot of typhoon activity. across the u.s. it is warm. summertime heat for the central u.s. across the southeast heat index values close to 100
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degrees. yes, it's summertime across the south as well as portions of the ohio tennessee river valley. heat advisories for close to a dozen states here. be aware of that keep little ones inside check on the elderly and dress accordingly. we're also watching potential for severe weather today across the mid-atlantic. severe thunderstorm watch in effect for parts of virginia north carolina and a couple severe thunderstorm warnings as well as you move toward the beach area. just be careful, keep an eye to the sky and of course an ear to your local weather forecast. severe threat today across the ohio valley again across the mid-atlantic. tomorrow we're going to watch the risk of an enhanced severe thunderstorm risk for parts of the upper midwest down towards the ohio river valley and into monday as well. elizabeth, back to you. >> janice thank you. i would complain about the warm temperatures but i remember when it was snowing. >> very good because i have a snowball waiting in the freezer for the first complainer. >> all right. it won't be me.
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>> whoa. a volcanic eruption wreaking havoc for travelers in indonesia. where it's happening isn't far from the vacation hot spot of bali where flights were canceled and airports now forced to close. after several weeks of rumbling activity it is now picked up this week. the volcano has spewed ash more than 12,000 feet into the air. and there doesn't seem to be any immediate danger. but area residents have been asked to wear masks as a precaution. so much for your beach vacation. >> yeah how do you measure that? 12,000 feet. unbelievable. >> pretty high. >> meanwhile, bernie sanders drawing thousands to his campaign rallies. is he closing in on rival hillary clintonpolls, meanwhile she's making her first pitch in the national media. what effect it will have on the campaign? we'll ask our fair and balanced panel after the break.
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fox news alert on that breaking story out of rhode island we told you about earlier. a beach in rhode island salty land beach is closed after a woman being injured after what is described as a possible explosion. police have roped off a large part of that beach on a busy sum saturday. our affiliate there, wpri/wnac is reporting a 50-year-old woman was thrown out of her beach chair and onto a rocky jetty. you can see the jetty going out into the water. she was taken into the hospital for treatment. unclear exactly on what her condition is there. and you can see now exactly where salty brine state beach is there right on the atlantic. the associated press is reporting that one rhode island department of environmental management spokesperson said they are looking for a suspect, but they believe that that suspect may have planted something in the sand. what that something is we don't
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know. a state police bomb technician is reportedly being called in. evidently may be on the scene right now. we're going to bring you more on the story and perhaps what the bomb technician find as it develops here. recent poll shows bernie sanders closing in on hillary clinton's wide lead in the democratic primary. now she's putting gun control, one of the only issues she leans more left than bernie sanders on. at the top of her agenda on the trail. so is hillary clinton feeling threatened? here for a fair and balanced debate david and chris. thank you both for joining me. >> thank you. >> thank you. >> we have a poll and i want to show you these numbers. we can see bernie sanders is in just the course of a couple months is gaining a lot of traction. so i want to start with you, david. what do you think -- why do you
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think this is? why do you think he's gaining so much traction? >> there are plenty of people in the democratic side of this election that wanted to see a contest. they wanted to see hillary have some competition. and i think that a lot of those folks were far out on the left side of the party. and i think he fits that ticket. he fits that bill. and a lot of people want to support him and his announced socialist views that he's delivering in all these rallies. >> right. chris, good or bad for the party? >> well listen competitive primary is not necessarily a bad thing. makes you a stronger candidate. i think we saw that when president obama ran against hillary the first time. the question is you're not going to see the democratic primary i think the same kind of vitreal or personal attacks or political, you know back and forth that you're doing to see -- >> but do you see him getting more aggressive toward her? >> not his style. i think he is clearly tapping, you know a very active left part of the base -- >> okay. we're having a little problem with your audio.
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oh and can you hear? we're having a little problem with your audio. it's not intentional, i can assure you. exactly. but in the meantime they're going to let me know when it's fixed. i'm going to toss it over to david for our viewers. >> whisper closer to him. >> that's true. we can get you closer. i want to ask you because this was initially directed towards you, chris, i'm sorry. but do you see him getting more aggressive? i know chris said it's not necessarily his style, but do you think you may break your style if you're in the middle of a heated primary? >> well he looks at himself as an ideals guy. he's going out and campaigning and talking to the people and talking to journalists and delivering ideas, some very radical. i think what happens coming up in this campaign is he starts to let some of those radical ideas out there and he becomes less attractive to democratic primary voters he looks less mainstream and a lot less like he could beat a republican in the general election. >> okay. i want to hear your response to that chris. you said it's not necessarily his style and i think we can actually hear you. >> it's not his style.
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when i worked in the senate i met senator sanders. we actually went on a -- to afghanistan with senator manchin and him and some others. he's a very smart guy, very cerebral clearly i think more left than most of the country. but he's also talking about i think a lot of issues that have some real significance with the debate. does he have the ability to win the nomination? i don't think so. i don't think at the end of the day it's going to come close. even if he does well in iowa and he might, even if he does well in new hampshire because it's a neighboring state, and he might, he doesn't have the ability to kind of carry that through and rack up enough primary support to win the nomination. but all that being said it just makes it a little more dynamic and interesting for folks to kind of cover. >> you brought up a couple things. you brought up him being very to the left of the party. and we just heard hillary clinton this week take a stance more left than bernie sanders on gun control, perhaps something we weren't expecting. do you think that's intentional? >> yes, very much so.
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so bernie sanders does have a record of being occasionally and tepidly in support of second amendment liberties. hillary clinton of course very much opposed to that. i think it's a calculated and smart move on the part of her campaign and get out there and say there's a distinction between me and congressman sanders. >> do you think she's risking losing some voters? because, you know she's going even farther left than bernie in this instance. >> on gun control, you know senator manchin for example was championing common sense gun control. i think you're going to see a very kind of similar position by secretary clinton that actually reflects the majority of the country. to me the more interesting point about when you look at the two primaries is look at where the republican battle is going to be. look at for example the impact that donald trump is going to have and how does the republican race deal with that? that to me is a much more interesting dynamic and much more threatening to their election -- the general election
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than it is senator sanders impacting secretary clinton. >> because we had a problem with your microphone that will be the last word. and we thank you very much. chris, david, thank you very much. very interesting. thanks for joining us. still to come on "america's news headquarters," an illegal immigrant is accused of killing a woman in san francisco. it's heating up the immigration debate and we're going to have the latest coming up. a drug addict drug pusher that's what he is. 45 years old, no resources, just a thug the lowest rung. a guy like that sneaks in her six times, what does that say? we don't have a border. >> have you seen this woman? this mother of five has been missing for nearly a week and her family is desperate to find here. her. we'll tell you how to help in the search coming up next. >> never left the kids. >> she never did. >> never left them alone. them babies was always beside
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a desperate search is underway for a mother in kentucky. family members found crystal rogers car abandoned by the highway in nelson county with a flat tire. it was just miles from her home. authorities say the 35-year-old's purse and cell phone were inside. more than 100 people gathered to pray for her safe return and are helping with the search. rogers boyfriend is the last one to have seen her. police are searching his mother's farm for more clues. >> we're going to bring her home. she's going to come home to us. we love her. we know we're connected. we'll find her. we got angels. >> you can help in the search effort by calling any tips on this hot line, $71,000 has been collected so far as a reward for any information that leads to an arrest.
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officials in san francisco conceivably responsible for releasing an illegal immigrant who killed a young woman now say it's not their fault. authorities are blaming each other for letting this man, francisco lopez sanchez go free. the case is prompting a new round of heated debate over the u.s. immigration policy. it's even playing into the presidential debate as well. will carr is following this story and the fallout from los angeles. hi will. >> reporter: hi leland. one of the people answering some of the toughest questions is the sheriff in san francisco. that's because it's his department that let francisco sanchez out on to the streets where according to police he ultimately ended up killing kate steinle. you may remember sanchez was actually in custody. he was behind bars immigration and customs enforcement ended up handing him over to the sheriff's department to face an old warrant. at the time i.c.e. placed a detainer which is important to this story, on sanchez.
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meaning they wanted him back after local authorities were done with him. i.c.e. officials say all it would have taken was a phone call. but the sheriff ignored the detainer didn't pick up the phone because san francisco is a sanctuary city that does not comply with federal immigration laws. and he says a detainer is not a legal order. >> had i.c.e. sought the requested legal order or warrant, the san francisco sheriff's department naturally and will always comply and would have complied if that legal order or warrant would have been presented to us. >> reporter: so the sheriff there pointing the finger at immigration authorities. but take a listen to the former director of i.c.e. who appeared last night on "on the record." >> there was no way for i.c.e. to get a warrant in this case. they had already gotten a criminal warrant on this guy. and he'd been charged. he'd served time. they could not have gotten another criminal warrant. double jeopardy.
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>> steinle was buried thursday. her parents have really stayed out of foray we've seen since her death. they say they want to rely on their faith and concentrate on their daughter instead of getting into the political aftermath of her death. leland. >> on the political fallout continues, will carr live in los angeles. thanks will. and coming up on this saturday a new warning on something almost all of us have at home. i actually took some earlier. we'll tell you about the hidden danger now in your medicine cabinet. nobody told me to expect it... ...intercourse that's painful due to menopausal changes. it's not likely to go away on its own. so let's do something about it. premarin vaginal cream can help.
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it provides estrogens to help rebuild vaginal tissue and make intercourse more comfortable. premarin vaginal cream treats vaginal changes due to menopause and moderate-to-severe painful intercourse caused by these changes. don't use it if you've had unusual vaginal bleeding breast or uterine cancer, blood clots, liver problems, stroke or heart attack, are allergic to any of its ingredients or think you're pregnant. side effects may include headache, pelvic pain, breast pain, vaginal bleeding and vaginitis. estrogens may increase your chances of getting cancer of the uterus, strokes, blood clots, or dementia so use it for the shortest time based on goals and risks. estrogens should not be used to prevent heart disease, heart attack, stroke or dementia. ask your doctor about premarin vaginal cream.
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weekend warriors beware. some of the over-the-counter drugs may not be as safe as we all think. the fda has issued a serious warning this week making a subtle but major change to the warning label on some pain killers, like ibuprofen. it is removing the words may cause after new research shows regular use increases the risk of heart attack or stroke. fox news a-teamer dr. mark seagel joins us now. a double whammy for folks because as you get older you need more ibuprofen because everything is wearing out and at
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the same time also increases the risk for heart attack and stroke and as you get older that risk increases, as well. >> exactly, you can't win either way. i tell you, the fda is concerned and they have been warning against this since 2005 and now they discovered a 10% to 15% increased risk and we have 17 million daily users in the united states of allev, advil or ibuprofen ibuprofen. at the level of the kidney we get fluid retention and a lot more sodium and fluid enters the blood stream which increases your blood pressure. guess what your blood pressure goes up and your risk of heart attack stroke and heart failure goes up. that's where the problem lies. this ask not for someone who uses it occasionally but someone who is using it regularly. i, as a physician, cannot predict exactly who is going to have a problem and who isn't. >> okay so as docs will tell
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you and we've done a lot of segments about this. exercise every day. walking is great, running is better. one thing that happens is your ankle hurts, your knee hurts and is it better to run and fight through the pain do you take tylenol, what do you do here? >> great question. the answer is first of all, lose weight. choose a low-impact exercise if running is hurting your knee. what about that elliptical that i love and what about the bike? also you may want to ice yourself down right afterwards and may want to use heat and soaps and may want to use physical therapy instead of using that ibuprofen or aleve all the time. once you get in the habit of using those pills, you'll rely on them. i urge people to look for alternatives. again, where i started. lose weight. weight is the biggest reason you're putting too much pressure on those knees and on that back. >> that is an excellent point. has the fda come out with a guideline, if you will okay
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it's all right if you take this once a week once every two weeks. every other day. where do we cross over and flop into the causing heart attack and stroke fears? >> great point. they don't have a -- they can't do it that way. they can't say caution more than once a week because i am going to tell you don't use it every day. for my patients i say don't use it every day. it has to be applied on a patient-by-palsh patient-by-patient basis. the older you are, the more your kidney function is decreasing the less of this i want you to use. maybe once a week is enough twice a week i'll let you do. you have to ask your physician this and we found out recently that acetaminophen, tylenol doesn't work that well. what will you alternate this with? certainly once a day use is increasing your risk. if you have a problem with heart disease or a risk of heart disease or heart failure or high blood pressure, i might not want you to take it at all.
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take it on the worst days and take as little of it as possible because the dfda is also warning that this is dose related. one advil may be okay, don't take four. >> that's good advice. so many of us weekend warriors have been known to do just that. dr. marc seigel appreciate your insight. >> keep exercising. >> i believe in what oscar wilde once said occasionally i have the urge to exercise and then i lie down until it passes. >> get up there. do not lie down until it passes. >> we'll keep working on it. >> weekend warrior, leland what are you doing on the weekend? >> little too much yoga. >> i'm so sure. >> i know. still ahead, we asked and you answered what you think the government should be doing to stop cyberattacks next. the u.s. women's soccer team celebrates their world cup win by taking on the stage to sing with a major pop star.
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vo: with beyond natural dry pet food, you can trust our labels. when we say real meat is the first ingredient, it is number one. when we say there's no corn, wheat or soy it's not there. learn more at purinabeyond.com well throughout the show we have asked for your thoughts on this question. what should the u.s. government be doing to protect your personal data from hackers. cindy says invest in network defenses like conduct simulation training. christian, develop new networks with different protocols and
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only use u.s.-made routers, switches and chips. walter this is one of my favorites from a long time. go back to paper. the internet is not safe and, yes, he actually said duh. so there you go. well walter has a point. the pope communicates via faxes. >> he does. and fans also known as the u.s. women's soccer team fresh off their world cup win went up on stage in front of thousands of screaming fans. the team joining t. swift, you like how i'm hip and knew that. they let taylor hold the trophy. earlier they celebrated with a ticker tape parade in new york city. >> your hipness is exuding out here. >> i couldn't even say world cup win. that parade was awesome. >> were you there for it? >> i was not there for it but i
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watched it. that's all for us here in washington. "america's news headquarters" continues from new york. i'm lelandyland we'll see you next hour. >> ahead this hour -- >> if the tough decisions don't get made we'll call an end to this process. >> against the backdrop of intense negotiations for a nuclear deal with iran iranians taking to the streets burning the american flag and chanting death to israel. meanwhile, here at home many lawmakers how ed royce raising red flags and saying any deal now is a threat to our national security. he will join us live with more on the high-stakes diplomatic gamble. plus, as her husband suffers inside an iranian prison she's pr
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