tv Happening Now FOX News July 13, 2015 10:00am-11:01am PDT
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work. >> we'll going over time. go to fox news.comslash overtime. noon eastern. and lou dobbs good to it have you today. >> fox news alert. a historic nuclear deal with iran? the marathon talks are not over yet. and we are covering all of the news "happening now". cleared we begin with scott walk with -- walker, the wisconsin governor entering the presidential race. i am jon scott.
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>> and i am jenna lee. governor walker is the 15th republican to throw his hat in to the ring and his late start doesn't appear to be hurting him. he is among the top contenders in poll after poll. we'll get it from carl cameron live in wisconsin. >> reporter: hi, jenna, the governor of wisconsin signed the conservative budget that a lot of people believe be in wisconsin designed for a national voter audience than the folks in wisconsin. he is a top tier candidate. in the national polls second only to jeb bush in iowa. and scott walker is the leadoff. >> and mr. walker is a social and a fiscal conservative who
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the republicans and campaign argues has the capacity to unite the establishment and conservative tea party base of the republican party and bring them together. he put out a video and saying he was in the race and critizing other candidates and getting heat from the other side. hillary clinton in her big approximate speech on the economic plan singled out jeb bush marco rub rub and scott walker. he said he crushed unions in his state. and he's next dorneighbor to iowa and playing as a blue collar every man candidate who tells it like it is and not only a fighter with political rhetoric. but will adhere to conservative principles. his announcement is later in the afternoon.
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and are a number of aides checking on what is going on. it is different than most. a lot of wood panelling showing he is from the heartland and humble roots and worked at mcdonald. not the jeb bush dynasty and privilege and different than marco rubio and he has executive experience as a governor and not a senator. and many conservatives have fought the fight and haven't been able to win the battle. >> i appreciate it. and we want to hear from your viewers as well. would you vote for the wisconsin governor in 2016? go to fox news.com/"happening now" to join the investigation. >> a historic deal with iran will be close.
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and earlier secretary of state john kerry promising it would prevent iran from building a bomb. but many arm control experts say the terms of the deal are not air tight. even if an agreement is reached in vienna and it is a tough sale to washington. >> john bolton is a senior fellow in the american enterprise. welcome and thanks for being here. >> the secretary of state said this deal would prevent iran from building a nuclear weapon. >> it will pave the way for iran to get nuclear weapons in a time of their choosing. the policy is a policy of appeasement and this is really a tragedy. and i do think they are very close and could be signed any day and the ups and downs and in
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the last-minute negotiations you shouldn't read too much into unless they mean more american concessions. >> and in essence, you think the world powers negotiating with iran are getting taken here? >> right. i think iran came to the table for a reason to get rid of the economic sanctions. they will achieve that objective but they have made only the most superficial reversal concessions on the nuclear program. the obama world view if we show iran is not a threat iran will be a peace loving nation. that is farthered from the truth. >> and the obama administration made a mistake in allowing iran
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any uranium enrichment that was banned? >> one of the real achievements in getting the union union security council to weigh in on the iranian weapon's program and say all enrichment had to stop. the obama administration was weaker than what china and russia agreed to 8 or 9 years ago. and anybody who studied nuclear proliferation will tell you that is the long pole in the tent. once it mastered the complex signs of uranium enrichment. they can break out in a time of their choosing. >> there is poorly advised concessions that we made and that was the central mistake. >> you are obviously not in favor of the deal that seems to be about to be signed here.
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and congress has to approve it though, does that give you heart? >> and remember the most congress can do is prevent obama from waiving u.s. sanctions. there will be a vote in the u.n. security council and obama will vote in favor of them. once they are reskinneded europe and china and the rest of the world will lift their sanctions and iran will trade with them and invefment and new contracts and we'll be back in the world of 2005 and 6, when iran faced very little economic inhibition to the continued pursuit not only of nuclear weapons but terrorism. >> and what about the deadlines
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and lifting them and going beyond the original time frame to get the deal done to what advantage. >> setting a deadline can help everybody engage in a little self discipline. you set the deadline and make it a condition for the talks to go on at all and give it up. it is like staking out a position. you lose credibility in all of the bottom lines. and that is an unfortunate case with john kerry or hillary clinton. if i had a parking ticket i would be afraid i would end up with a life sentence. >> you point to a law that fls issued by the a yatolla saying they would not use nuclear weapons and the administration
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justifies the approach. but no one saw. it there is no evidence that it exists. >> there is no written copy of it that anybody in the west has. and it shoes the unreality surrounding the obama administration position. it is an overwhelming bulk of the negotiations. catching iran when they violate terms of the deal to do something about it. i think iran will violate the deal before the ink is dry. >> let's hope you are wrong. ambassador john bolton. >> greece reaching a deal with european creditors to avoid financial collapse. that agreement has to be approved by the greek market. global markets are reacting on the news blake. >> reporter: just because there is a deal in place for the bail
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out, it doesn't mean it is a done deal. greek parliament has to pass austerity reforms including tax hikes and pension changes and that's what the greek voters rallied against. the greece parliament will take up the issue on wednesday. and several countries in the european union has to put this deal in front of their parliament. greece will remain in the euro zone and that brings short- term stability. but the bail out lasts three years and many wonder if they will be staring down this same crisis once again in 2018 or possibly sooner than that. and one leading analyst fears that the weeklong episode exposed tensions. >> and here at home.
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volatility on the stock exchanges continued but for the better. investors looking at the board. the dow has been up the entire day. nhillary clinton takes aim at a newly announced republican candidate. scott walker. what clinton said and impacting the presidential race. and check this out. severe flooding in the midwest and threat of tornados the latest on the terrible weather next. (vo) me? i don't just wait for a moment. i watch for the perfect moment. the one nobody else sees. and when i find it- i go for it. (announcer) at scottrade, we share your passion for trading. that's why we give you the edge, with innovative charting and trading features, plus powerful mobile apps so you're always connected, wherever you are.
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there have been some key issues in the negotiations that have been closed. and that's a good sign. and that said there continue to be sticking points that remain unresolved and i have been saying for a better part of a couple of weeks now, the president is remaining engaged as lombing as they remain useful and given the promise and success and closing out key issues that is an indication that the talks are useful. and the president has also been clear there is a bottom line that must be met and any final agreement living up to the perimeter and there will not be a final agreement agreed to by approximate the united states and the partners until the final agreement reflects that. >> based on what you are saying there it sounds like the president is willing to let john
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ker examiner and negotiators to stay past today because the talks are productive. >> if approximate it is necessary to continue the conversations. and the negotiating team will remain in viepa. >> a lot of questions about this so is happening behind closed doors and it is hard to know what is agreed upon and not agreed upon. i don't have a sense of why the president feels like another 2 or 3 days will close the door on all of the issues. >> that is a legitimate question. the it is a demand of our talks thatty woo repeated nothing is agreed to unless everything is agreed to. >> is it that he's seeing the
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iranians make concessions whachl is he seeing from the iranians that lead him to believe that they move closer to the u.s. positions to keep it going. >> as the negotiations have gone on. what started out as a long list of differences has acknowledged slowly narrowed and that is progress toward an agreement. typically some of the most difficult issues is the ones that get kicked to the end. >> josh earnest talking about the new yorks in vienna. you might have seen the news yesterday, the big headline was that there is a deal and then no deal. and monday, we heard no deal and
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perhaps wait until tomorrow. it is a developing situation. and josh earnest mentioned important progress and sticking points are unresolved and like sanctions and arms embargo and hearing out of vienna. and we have a great panel coming up on the iran talks later on in the program, hillary clinton goes on the attack in the first major policy speech. the democrat candidate said the economy benefits those on the top and calling for higher wages for the middle class. she no, ma'amed some of the republicans. including scott walker. she said he built his career stomping on worker's rights. john is a writer for the weekly standard. >> one of the questions is if she will take on wall street?
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she has campaign money from powerful wall street interest and shane, doesn't have a lot of criticism for wall street right now. >> you say a little bit of that but quite frankly her aides said it was not a reupping of the speech she made in 2008 and critized wall street. given the fact progressives and folks lining up beapproximate hind bernie sanders who is some how gaining momentum and gaining enthusasm in the early primary states, there is no doubt that there is pressure on the part of hillary clinton to give progressives something to like in what she is saying and this was the start of that you don't hear her mentioning bernie
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sanders by name. but she is providing meat to the folks in the left. and she will have to do approximate that with bernie sanders surging. >> some observers say she is moving left as she tries to counter the charges from martin and ernie. >> i struggled to hear anything new in the speech. it was a grab bag of items that president obama couldn't get through the congress when democrats controlled the house and september. it is unrealistic. the republicans will have to have a response about the tax. republicans favored tax cuts across the board. and worked for president reagan and george bush. they have to consider in the age of big debt that the tax cuts in the rich will have a hole.
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i don't think mitt romney did in 2012. hillary clinton talks about building on obama care. and gave no details on how to accomplish. that >> she did mention, shane, governor scott walker by name in his speech. that is unusual. he then responded and here's what he had to say. hillary clinton thinks you grow the question in washington i think the american people grow the economy in cities and towns and villages in the u.s. >> is that the over arching battle? >> i think clearly one of hillary clinton's accountive was start laying the grouped work that she will take on the republican. she went after jed and scott and marco. and i think she is showing she
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will fight. >> shane and john thank you. and we'll keep an eye on all. campaigns. talk to you again son. back with more "happening now" in just a moment. i help you recharge with nutritious energy and strength. i'll take that. yeeeeeah! new ensure active high protein. 16 grams of protein and 23 vitamins and minerals. ensure. take life in.
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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. >> tornados and hail possible in areas still recovering from another round of storms. indiana and heavy rain filled the streets there and prompted evacuations. and strong storms in minnesota and rocking the state. and powerful wind gusts and down stros. it is expected to continue throughout the day today. >> and a firefighter is recovering after a sudden food truck explosion.
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nterrifying moment caught on camera as the truck burst in flames in eight greensborrow, north carolina parking lot. the firefighter was knocked to the ground with a concussion. officials believe it happen when an oxygen cylinder ruptured. >> and navy issuing a now warning. marine and sailor who killed out the questionary could have had personal information breached and all of this related to a massiveidate reach. >> reporter: there is a repel affect and the damage was not contained and in an interview with fox news. the homeland security who received briefings, said the chin ease are behind the breach
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and they have found the same enitty listeninged to hacks on health care and. that put 18 million records at risk. it is in the same source in china and will be all linked together. it is classic espionage. and want to compromise people to turn them against us. former intelligence officials tell fox news that it points to a nation state. and such as this one. pla. and that is housed in a nondescript office building. it is known for advanced threats and designed to harvest
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information. when we see attacks against the data and they are stepping up all over the world right now. what is done by president actors. they are not aggregating it. but normalizing it. and make it to be searched. >> even with with the overlap right now it is upwards of 50 million americans affected by the breaches. and part of a larger campaign jenna. thank you. >> law makers on both sides of the aisle. saying that the u.s. and other world powers are making too many concessions.
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much leeway. >> we have to make clear there is a deterrent. in 12 or 13 years, we'll be back where we are today except from iran will be promoting terrorism in the middle east. joining us is the haven't for the research of democracies. it is great it have you both. will we have a deal by the time we talk. and we are waiting details. you have been one that held out optimism about this deal. i would like to give you the first goal. we heard from ambassador bolton. what does it have to have to make it a success in >> i outline that in my testimony before the senate foreign relations committee. it has to reduce the number of
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centerrefuges and shrink the nuclear material and allow the inspectors to do their job with enhanced man dates and better technology. for me it is 16 or 17. and as far as ambassador bolton goes. he said it is historically bad. things are same people that the interim deal joint plan of action was the worst deal ever and like dealing with hitter and the sky was going to fall. it didn't happen. they have done before the than folks thought. at least the most recent deal. when all parties went back to their sides. iran said wait a minute we department agree with the specifics and it was a problem with the translation or somebody didn't have the agreement down.
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is that a good model to look at and say things might stay there? that may be the case and we'll see treasury extend the sanctions. sometimes a couple of days or longer and it seems like the talks are going on in a never endless fashion. and the communication has been bad and i think in general we have been concerned and sanctioned relief and how the money may go to terrorist organization am we have a lot to worry about what iran will be and what will be in the possession in the end of ten years. ten years came up in reports about whether or not it will be ten years at all. is that nonnegotiable. did is.
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it is not a good description of the agreement. there are access to rainy months for 30 years and some of the obligations will go on forever. and like the additional protocol and changing the reactor. once that reactor is fired up it will not go back. i agree. we have to think about the restrictions as they go off in 10-15 years. i heard scriptics. and when there is progress. they say the u.s. is making concessions. when there is not progress they say the iranians are playing for time. i would like to go back to that point where senator men endez said. one of the things the deal
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focuses on is the nuclear program. and as far as funding the terrorist operations. we talked about that and you have experience in the treasury department. what about that angle to all of this. >> jenna, this is a largest wind fall for terrorist organizations in modern history. we are talking about a 50 billion cash advance and another 110 billion after that. and you know we continue to hear from the administration that the pullk. money is invested in schools and hospitals as if iran hasn't been a sponsor of terrorism since the 1970s. and there is a lot of a concern here. and you are talking about hesbollah and palestinian and islamic jihad. njim let's say the deal is
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successful and there is a great deal and the public and administration is happy. and iran doesn't get a nuclear weapon and they get release to the arm's embargo. and it doesn't change the state of current affairs and then what? >> if you don't like iran endpajing in terrorism, you don't want them to have nuclear weapons. that is obviously a worse out come and so the core objective is preventing iran from acquiring the nuclear weapons. >> what about that. what leverage does it give us at all. and the regime that is behind that. >> we did armed control with the soffet union and they had 27000 weapons pointed at us. and we did a army's agreement with gaddafi and no one liked
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him. they are still adversaris and the problem we are solving is nuclear weapons. if we do nothing there would be no deal. you think that iran will agree to do everything and get no sanctions. >> jim, you said we don't know what is in the deal. this is something we need to pursue. and done it with soviet union and gaddafi why is it different? >> what we are talking about here is leverage that we had as a result of those sanctions. they were beginning to work. swift banking sanctions and we had them where we wanted them and then we loosened our leverage. and so the concern that we have right now, the more money iran gets back in the pocket, the less likely it will comply.
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and so there is a disiddents and it is worth exploring further. and we'll wait again for the details. and if we get them or don't get these. we look forward to having you back. >> an incredible story of triumph over adversity. >> a veteran bloindinded and partially paralyzed in the marathon. that hero joins us live. 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. it provides estrogens to help rebuild vaginal tissue and make intercourse more comfortable. premarin vaginal cream treats vaginal changes due to menopause
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el chappo still missing in mexico. and what does his mean. and who is up and down in the presidential index. surprising moves you don't want to mix in the top of the hour. nquoit a story for you. mange scott smiley lost his eyesight. and he was also partially paralyzed. he was the first blind active duty officer and accomplished what most of us can't imagine doing. an iron man triath lon. 2.4 mile swim and 112 bike ride and a full marathon on the end. major smiley braved record heat to do the rest. and that is in spokecan
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washington. and it is great to have you on the program and congratulations finishing the iron man. >> it is very good to be done. >> i bet. two weeks later, you are feeling good and ready for the next adventure and bring us back to 2005. it is ten years since the injury and what happen then and what did you recover from. >>? iraq i was found a mission to find a suicide car bomb and i found myself in front of a suspicious vehicle and the man had blown himself up and spending chapinal. i woke up bloind and half of my body was partially paralyzed and i thought my life was over and i have no reason to live or fight or do something. but it was the love of my wife and family and friends and god that inspired me to drive on and
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forgive and push forward in life and to continue to fight and eventually to serve. >> we thank you for your service. and how did you go from those moments and waking up one day, you know what i will do an iron man. how did you get to that point. >> my grandma thought i was crazy. and i agreed with here in the run. but in the end. it was not until i finished the 13.1miles, my wife and seeing the misery on my face you know scotty, you are not doing it for yourself but all of the others that served and can't be here and wish they were. i wanted to motivate and inspoir others and i publicly speak now.
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and there is a reason to gave and gave back. >> i am sorry to interrupt. but we are showing you going through sprayers and sprifrpglers. >> and how hot was it scotty? >> 105 about the time we started the marathon and we heard the heat off of the cement was 135 degrees. and so water on the bike and when you pour it on your head is like scalding water and it was hell>> and did you just have to laugh and say are you kidding, god, seriously. >> it is funny, people would ask, what are you going to do with the heat. we haven't trained. and we are on inside on a spin bike. it was hydration and my brother-in-law was there to
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motivate me. and fighting and drinking water and stay alive. and not quitting. >> and scotty how did you train and talk to us about some of the challenges that came with not being able to see the entire 16 hours. >> it is hard and not just 16 hours. it is the training to get to that position. andy would pick me up and pack our tannedum and poddal and she sheers and breaks and on runs. a tubing and left and right and move one in front. i can't do it without a partner and time work and motivation that he is able to give me that and do that with a triath lone. and it is time work and working together to give me an ability.
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>> i shout out to your wife. tiffany rode as well. >> she said she wanted to give up because it was so hot and she didn't know how we were moving faster and it is just the love of my wife tiffany and kids and family and friends that inspired me to move ochl and ten years ago in the hospital bed, the love that surrounds me and the desire to fight and move forward and impact. and i hope i did make an impact in the region and in this world and move forward and make it a better place to live. >> you are doing that for us today. hope unknown.comis your website. what will the viewers find there.
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>> i am a public speaker and i speak to churches and cooperations and inspiring words and talk about an iron man and adventures and in the end giving people hope and we can make the world a better place. >> you are not tattoos. see all these guys walking around with iron man tattoos, not so sure about that. >> if i do it will be well hidden and don't tellmom. >> a promise between you and meed a a million people. lack forward to your book coming out and look forward to having you back on program. >> sounds good. have a great day. >> inspirational, that's great. >> still to come another serious race for you. what happens when you mix bikers and doughnuts? you get the tour of doughnut. what it takes to finish on top. >> get a five-minute time bonus if you eat a doughnut at any of the doe nutd stops. >> winding ten minutes off of my
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time here. >> plus four astronauts will take the next step in spaks exploration for u.s. how they feel about this opportunity. today her doctor has her on a bayer aspirin regimen to help reduce the risk of another one. if you've had a heart attack be sure to talk to your doctor before you begin an aspirin regimen. get the complete balanced nutrition of ensure. with nine grams of protein... and 26 vitamins and minerals. and now with... ...twice as much vitamin d ...which up to 90% of people don't get enough of. the sunshine vitamin! ensure. take life in.
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a tasting spin on the iconic tour de france. hundreds of cyclists participate willing in the tour de doughnut. bikers making stops at the doughnut shops along the 32-mile ride. bikers get a five-minute credit for each doughnut. >> my kind of bike race. >> four astronauts chosen for an out-of-this world mission and are set to leave nasa's first commercial space flight program. phil keating spoke with the four shortly after the announceman and joins us now live. phil? >> reporter: less than two years from now in early 2017 first
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spacex and then boeing will once again get america back into the business of launching humans from florida's space coast. that hasn't happened for the past four years ever since the space shuttle program phased out and we've to rely on and pay the russians about $70 million a ride to get our astronauts up to the space station. many last that recalling how 55 years nata trumpeted the mercury 5 astronaut seem who successfully led us to space and the moon and back in the 1960s. now nasa excitedly debuting the next four astronaut pioneers chosen to take our next step into the space cap actual future. bob bankin eric bowe doug hurley and sonny williams the test pilots on board of boeing and spacex rockets and returning to the u.s. to launch humans from cape canaveral, and they are excited. >> part of it is pride. part of it is the technology development. part of it is just you know
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we've been a space-faring nation for the better part of 50 years and to not have an indigenous capability is probably something that we should fix. >> boeing and spacex won about $7 billion in nasa contracts to tell their capsules and rocket systems, and the new launch america team also keenly aware that space travel is risky and in the past nine months twice we've seen commercial cargo ships explode, most recently with spacex two weeks ago. the exact cause still unknown. john? >> phil keithing in florida, phil thank you, and we'll be right back.
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seattle's -- ahead of saturday's seattle-los angeles game. >> and just quickly, a lot of you are writing in about scotty smiley his wednesday i'm the hopeunseen.com getting a lot of traffic and that's information to find out more about scotty. we're all fans. >> a great american. >> "the real story" starts now. hi everyone. search is on for one of the world's most notorious drug lords. joaquin guzman known as el capo on the loose after escaping a maximum security prison in mexico for the second time. the leader of a powerful and ruthless cartel getting away through an elaborate underground tunnel over the weekend and there's fears he may never be found again. as the search expands his cousin jesus gutierrez guzman also being sentenced but he's in america. he's in new hampshire, being sentenced for attempting to widen cartel's reach right here in the u.s. more now live from l.a. how did the most dangerous cartel leader in the world manage to
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