tv Happening Now FOX News July 24, 2015 8:00am-9:01am PDT
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i'll quick note if you're in new york over the weekend or anywhere, mike massimino talking about our intrepid museum. great place here in new york. >> he is one of our favorite astronauts. we have a few favorites. have a great weekend. bye, everybody. jenna: the search is on for answers in louisiana. why would a man open fire during a movie killing two and injuring at least nine before turning the gun on himself? hello, welcome to "happening now." we start with that big question. i'm jenna lee. jon: i'm jon scott. the chaos began with a popping noise according to witnesses in a multiplex theater in lafayette louisiana, two hours west of new orleans. police say the gunman fired 13 rounds before trying to escape and ultimately killing himself. police are identifying him, john
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russel houser a 59-year-old drifter. they think he acted alone. about 100 people were in the theater watching the comedy "trainwreck," when the shooting started. >> it is apparent he was intent on shooting, then escaping. what happened is the quick law enforcement response back into the theater. at which time he shot himself. jon: casey stiegel is following this story from our dallas newsroom. casey. >> reporter: jon, police say this guy had multiple addresses in multiple states though his primary residence was listed as alabama. he does have a criminal record, according to authorities which includes arson. now cops say 59-year-old john russel houser was oddly renting a room at a nearby moment tell 6 and had been staying there since the beginning of july -- motel 6. it is very movie theater.
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they collected evidence from the location. they found wigs glasses interchangeable license plate and other disguises. what remains unclear why he targeted this theater. that particular showing of the movie. any real sense of a motive. police say he bought a ticket for the screening at about 20 minutes into the film he stood up in the dark and started firing. the lafayette police chief said houser tried blending in with the crowd to escape until he went back inside and took his own life. eyewitnesses describe a scene of absolute pandemonium. >> you don't think you will hear gunshots. we hear some loud pops and, sirens go off, lights go on and telling us to go to the nearsest exit. we go to the front of the building there was a woman on the ground. she had already been shot. it was crazy. >> reporter: just a typical thursday night going to see a summer film. the two victims who lost their lives have been identified as
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21-year-old mayci breaux and 33-year-old jillian johnson. out of the nine who were hurt and taken to area hospital two people have already been released. one person is critical, rushed into surgery overnight. police tell us the victims range in age from the late teens to their early 60s. the fbi is among a growing list of law enforcement agencies trying to get to the bottom of this senseless and horrific crime, jon. jon: senseless is the word for it. casey stiegel from dallas, thank you. jenna: more on that developing story as we get it but also "happening now," we turn to another movie theater shooting a colorado jury is hearing from more witnesses as they determine whether the now convicted shooter james holmes should live or die. the sentencing phase is back in session. defense lawyers presenting testimony they hope will convince the jury to sentence holmes to life in prison. the jury found him guilty on all counts in the 2012 massacre in aurora colorado, during the
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midnight premier after "batman" movie. 12 people were killed, dozens more injured in his roehm page. jon: an airstrike takes out a al qaeda leader linked to plots against us here in america. ash carter says the head of al qaeda's suicide and explosives operations was killed. john huddy has more on that live from jerusalem. john? >> reporter: jon secretary carter said he plotted terror attacks against the united states and at one point he was linked to osama bin laden. this guy was a player. he was very dangerous. along with that secretary carter said two other quote, unquote violent extremists were also killed in the july 11th airstrike in afghanistan. that said, today, in iraq, the conversation, jon once again focused on isis and how kurdish fighters what they're doing
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right in the fight against isis and how other iraqi forces, jon, can really take a page from their playbook. secretary carter med with a kurdish regional president, the capitol of erbil in northern region of iraq. secretary carter said the mesh merge ga fight remembers quote-unquote model of what we're trying to achieve in iraq essentially motivating local forces on the ground to take on isis. peshmerga fighters played a key role in retaking syrian border town of kobani along the turkish border. turkey is joining the fight launching airstrikes against isis positions and allowing the u.s. to launch sorties from one of turkey's airbases this is major development in regional cooperation and coordination in the fight against isis. same message in baghdad yesterday where as we know secretary carter made a surprise
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visit, meeting with iraqi prime minister al-abadi and iraqi military officials. secretary carter emphasized really the message u.s. officials have been trying to drive home. that iraqi forces need to coordinate with local forces and militia fighters in defeating and fighting isis. the defense secretary also both yesterday and today met with u.s. troops that are training and advising iraqi forces and the defense secretary said that yes, the u.s. can defeat isis but that it would not be a long-lasting victory or success. secretary carter jon, also added this in his address to u.s. troops, that quote we're trying to get a defeat that sticks. that can be delivered only by the people that live here, that the secret sauce. secretary carter will end after his visit to erbil, jon, the week-long visit to the middle east. he spent two days here in israel
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talking with israeli officials about the iran nuclear agreement but also more so about israel's defense and also security and u.s.'s ongoing cooperation and support of that. secretary carter also met with officials in jordan and saudi arabia. again, talking about iran, also regional security. and the ongoing fight against isis. so it has been a very busy week for secretary carter. he will return to washington after visiting erbil. jon? jon: good news that we got alza dhani. john huddy, thank you. jenna: kenya the first of its kind for a sitting president. military jets patrolling kenya's border with somalia as sources say the united states carried out seven drone strikes in the past week an suspected al-shabaab camps. the al qaeda linked group is believed to be responsible for major attacks inside of kenya including the massacre nairobi's
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westgate maul in 2013. 67 people died in that attack. paul tilsley joins us live from johannesburg with more on this trip. paul? >> reporter: jenna, right now air force one we understand is only hours away from touching down in nairobi but there are still major security concerns at this hour. fox news has been given confirmation that the terror group al-shabaab definitely, today, we got this confirmation has surface-to-air missiles. this confirmation comes from peter boeing garth of human rights watch who told fox news al-shabaab already successfully downed aircraft with such missiles. bogart said the missiles are maybe from a stash of 20,000 surface-to-air weapons looted from libya in 2011. al-shabaab is believed to have sleeper cells in kenya. unnamed assets including a military jets off kenyan coast will accompany the presidential jet all the way down the flight
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path. further security assets we understand are on the ground below the flight path. several analysts say it is far more likely al-shabaab will try to make a public relations coup by striking a soft target in kenya perhaps up by the border with somalia. the group did that earlier this year when they attacked the university. one source claims that the u.s. has taken total control of somalia airspace to pin al-shabaab drown. surveillance drones and attack helicopters are patrolling gedo and the kenyan border while the air force one approaches. streets are in gridlock as further security precautions have led to much of the city of nairobi being blocked off. jenna. jenna: paul, big story for us today. one we will continue watch. thank you very much. jon: the army sergeant traded for the five taliban terrorists and accused desertion finds
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himself in the middle after drug raid now. here where sheriffs deputies came across bowe bergdahl and what the army now says about his status. you might remember this. video of a bloodied and injured ambassador just after a knife attack. why mark lippert's safety once again was an issue. a thief takes advantage of a golden opportunity stealing product as family ordered right off of their front porch. who the family is blaming now.
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all kinds of connections. connections you almost miss. and ones you never thought you'd make. we help connect where you are. to places you never thought you'd go. this, is why we travel. and why we continue to create new technology to connect you to the people and places that matter. jenna: fox news alert. we have breaking news by way of the associated press who has found some court documents revealing a little bit more about the shooter at the movie theater in lafayette, louisiana. you're seeing the man on your screen, john russel houser, 59 years old. here is what the ap learned by way of court documents. apparently the wife of john russel houser had asked for temporary protective order back
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in 2008 and the court documents go on to say, i'm going to quote here from the associated press who is quoting these documents that john houser exhibited extreme irrational behavior and made ominous disturbing statements. he lived in phoenix city alabama but traveled to the state of georgia, where the family lived to perpetuate various acts of family violence. also the documents saying he has a history of mental health issues. for example, manic depression and or bipolar disorder. according to the filing the wife in all of this, kelly maddox houser. according to these documents has quote, become so worried about the defendant's volatile mental state she removed all guns and weapons from their marital residence. these court documents going back to 2008. the protection order requested by the family was temporarily granted. that is where we leave off. the associated press finding these documents and we're getting at least a little bit of an idea of how this man was.
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again he was found dead inside of the movie theater after taking his own life. police have looked through a motel 6 in the area where disguises were found. there is a lot of question about the motivation as there always is in these mass shootings. we're learn learning little bit about this man john russel houser and questions about his mental state and violence against his family. as we get more information we'll bring it to you. jon: right now some crime stories we're following. four months after a knife-wielding man attacked him leaving gashes to his face and his arms, u.s. ambassador mark lippert receiving another threat. a 33-year-old man made an online threat to kill lippert, with quote, nuclear poisoning. investigators in california believe the snowbird bank bandit might be a retired police officer. family members of randolph adair
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turning the 70-year-old in to authorities. the snowe bird bandit give the age because of age and appearance. a suspect in five robberies earlier this year. the investigation continues. a bold thief steals security cameras and some more electronics right off a phoenix's families front porch. another security cam caught the thief in the act. the family said had post office worker knocked when he made delivery somebody would have answered. that is according to the family. the post office says workers do not have to ring the doorbell or knock. jenna: army sergeant bowe bergdahl detained by sheriffs deputies and let go after a marijuana raid. william la jeunesse in the west coast newsroom what this is all about, william? >> reporter: deputies raid ad pot farm yesterday in men din seen know county in california. they found bowe bergdahl who had spent five years in captivity
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until last year when the administration traded five gitmo prisoners to gain his release. bergdahl came back to the u.s. he is currently on active duty but was on leave when the raid happened yesterday. police found 180 pot plants and made several arrests but once they saw bergdahl's military i.d., they called the army and arranged to have him picked up. bergdahl was not arrested. deputies say he appeared to be visiting a friend. that however does not mean he is out of trouble. beryl dahl is already being -- bergdahl is being court-martial for desertion. smoking pot is against army regulations. most likely will give him a drug test. if he is positive three things could happen. number one they could roll the drug charge into his court-martial. two he could be court-martialed for using drugs. or give him some kind of administrative punishment. either way given his less stan stellar record his future in the military doesn't look good. >> hire is a soldier that got
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mad at his chain of command and deserted. he put his fellow soldiers in harm's way including me and my special forces operators of the he put his family through hell and put the country in terrible position. this is what he is doing while he is on leave. >> reporter: so these are the five taliban prisoners who were involved in that swap which already has drawn a lot of criticism since there was evidence that showing bergdahl was a deserter and hated being an american and several soldiers died when he wept awol. if evidence, shows jenna, sergeant bergdahl was also a pothead contrary to army regulation it, only makes the release and the price others paid for it look worse. back to you. jenna: what a bizarre and unexpected update to that story. william, we'll continue to watch it. thank you. jon: back on the road, a key artery in the southwest set to reopen days after a bridge collapse. drivers will face unusually heavy traffic for the
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three killed in a minivan. the driver of the tractor-trailer that caused the crash died along with one other driver. one victim was a child. all lanes are expected to be back open by noon today. jenna: part of the storm batter section of interstate 10 in california is reopening today. both directions of traffic will use one lane each off the westbound side of the bridge until the eastbound side is fixed. that happened after flash flooding after five inches of rain making travel from california to arizona very difficult. a man dangling over the edge there credited believe in god for saving him. traffic is expected to be heavy until that eastbound side is repaired. jon: pocket dialing with your phone, you've done it right? embarassing? now your private conversation can be public domain. a u.s. court of appeals in kentucky ruling that people who
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place those accidental calls should not have expectation of privacy. it all stems from a case in 2013 in which a man tried to sue a coworker who listened in on his conversation after he accidentally pocket dialed her. the woman also record ad portion of the conversation on the iphone. the judge upholding a district court's decision saying that people should know that the dangers of pocket dialing and take steps to prevent it. so what about this ruling? former federal prosecutor fred tecce joins us live from philadelphia. another former prosecutor, arthur aidala is in our studio as well to talk about this case. >> thanks for having me. jon: interesting case, guys. so this woman essentially worked for an airport. the phone rings. she picks it up. she hears the chairman of the board of airport having a private conversation apparently
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maybe in his hotel room or something. he is talking with another board member. what he is talks about firing her boss, the woman's boss. >> correct. jon: so she starts taking notes. she starts recording the conversation. he finds out about it. and he sues. court says, no, his fault. he had no reasonable expectation of privacy. what do you think about that, arthur? >> well, i think you did an awesome job summing up very complicated that case. jon: thank you very much, counselor. >> he didn't say butt dialing. >> didn't say butt dialing which is the essence of this conversation. bottom line what the court found is because the call came to this person, came to the assistance of the boss who maybe was going to get fired, she didn't do anything. she didn't snoop around. she didn't go to the hotel room listen in on the door. didn't look at somebody's window. she does innocent act of answering her own phone of the
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information comes to her and listens to it. she uses the information she hears on the other line of the judge says, hey, they should have better care to make sure nobody was butt dialed. jon: so you think, you're good with this court decision? >> i think -- >> come on. >> i think that because, because the woman who received the call didn't do anything to infringe on someone else's privacy, she did very passive act, jon. she answered her phone and listened. something we do thousands of times a day. >> arthur, i will call you on your cell right now while fred and i talk about you and let's see. >> no problem. listen careful. if the court had done what you had just said arthur that would have been fine. intentionally, the statute says you can't intentionally intercept. that is not what the woman did. she did not intentionally intercept. the sixth circuit said she did not violate the statute as you argued that would have been a great decision. that is not what they did. they said this guy should have taken steps not to butt dial
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somebody. let's those of us who haven't sinned cast the first stone. we all make a mistake. it is reasonably foreseeable. the court didn't need to reach that conclusion to reach the decision they did and i think that is where they got it wrong. jon: the court said basically this is akin to leaving your drapes open accidentally. if somebody on the street happens to walk by and sees what is going on in your bedroom, it is not their fault. >> i close my drapes. beyond me why anybody would want to hide in bushes near my house and watch me. the you know the instant you walk into the room you know the drapes are open. unless you pick up your cell phone and look at it, you don't know it butt dialed someone. i made that mistake. >> the court is saying you should. in other words the court is saying you should know that your phone is dialing someone. fred is right i did kind of enhance the court's decision -- >> did a good job at it. >> only because judges don't
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write everything they're thinking. if you look at the body of the case law that is real issue. the woman who received the call she didn't try to infringe on somebody's privacy. >> correct. >> she didn't try to wiretap someone. she didn't look in someone's window and hide in the bushes. she answered the phone and used information she got from the butt dial to help her boss. the court said she didn't do anything wrong. that evidence is inadmissible. jon: i remember one case with a couple of thieves who commit ad burglary accidentally pocket dialed 911 after they committed their burglary. >> the law doesn't protect stupid. jon: they talked about everything they had stolen and how easy it was and so forth. can they go to court saying you have to throw out our conviction -- >> no, according to this ruling no. according to this ruling no, now it is admissible. in other words they made the mistake. they should have taken precautions so they didn't butt dial anybody. now that they didn't it is
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admissible evidence. jon: fred, last word. >> i disagree with the way the court went out. should look what the deft did and looked what the plaintiff did and i think that was the wrong analysis. jon: we'll see if it goes to a higher court. could happen. >> have a great weekend, guys. jon: arthur, fred have a great weekend. jenna: have you ever done that by accident? jon: i have occasionally pocket dialed people. jenna: i like pocket dial rather than the other anatomy part. basically what happens right? jon: yeah, basically. i hope i haven't done it to you, have i? jenna: no, not that i know of. i don't know -- see i don't know. there is lot of questions what we potentially have done. jon: i have the recordings. jenna: we're learning much more about planned parenthood and the senior director at the center of the controversial video making so much news this week. how much the abortion provider reportedly paid that director on top of her salary. plus new problems for hillary clinton linked to her private email the
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we're talking about is debra nucotola. she has been director of services at planned parenthood since 2009. she has been with planned parenthood since 2005. during one year stint she was paid more than $200,000 as an independent contractor. that is according to documents from the irs. on the side she found her own firm, imogen according to irs documents provide ad clinical service for planned parenthood. the company was incorporated in 2008 and she is still listed as president of the corporation. not only is she getting her regular planned parenthood salary but got the six-figure paycheck from her side company. she is one of the main plan the parenthood officials caught in the undercover sting video about selling aborted baby parts. it shows, nucotola and another official talking about less
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crunchy techniques to get better fetal specimens and haggling over the price of fetal tissue sales at same time they're ordering their lunch. plan the parenthood says this video was unfairly edited that it is part after decades long smear campaign. a of the revelations about the salary and side payment, so far planned parenthood hasn't commented. jenna. jenna: kristin, thank you. jon: new concerns for hillary clinton surrounding her email problem. according to "the new york times," the inspectors general of the state department and the intelligence community sending a joint memorandum asking the justice department to open a criminal investigation saying there is evidence that she or her staff mishandled classified information on her private server. so how are the media handling this issue? let's bring in judith miller pulitzer prize-winning investigative reporter and author.
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ellen ratner, bureau chief talk radio news service. both are fox news contributors. judy, a lot of the media seem to have kind of poo-pooed the possibility of any kind of a scandal at heart of hillary's email problem but "the new york times" is now, your old employer i should note -- >> that's right. jon: saying there is possibility of a criminal investigation here. >> yeah, now it has gotten serious because "the new york times" has taken notice but i have to point out that fox news was the first to report that story. and when they did, the clinton campaign denied it. said it wasn't true. demand ad retraction. now if anything it seems that the fox story understated the potential exposure that she has and potential difficulty that she is in. look this is just the latest thing that has happened to hillary that has eaten into her trust numbers. she is now according to the "quinnepiac poll," not even able to beat any of the leading republican contenders except for donald trump.
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i think in addition to criminal potential and exposure here, she has politically damage as well already. jon: ellen, mrs. clinton said that she never emailed classified information using her personal account. that is a little hard to believe since she was secretary of state and apparently she didn't email anything using official government servers. fox has found evidence at least 25 items were later deemed to have been classified. "the new york times" is reporting that now after they have gone back and taken a look at everything, the state department is finding hundreds of items that were classified or should have been classified before she sent them out. are the media paying attention? >> well, the media is not paying attention and particularly because her spokespeople said that these emails were classified after this came out. so the question is when did it
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come out, when were they classified? the media needs to pay a lot of attention to that and they haven't been. they have been given a pass. i want to say one oerting the media has not done, taking a look if people go after her, if there will be same kind of backlash there was with monica lewinsky and bill clinton where people rallied behind her. that is another possibility and media needs to explore t well. jon: i also want to compare, judy the media treatment of former general and cia director david petraeus who was convicted of you know, passing along secrets because he gave his private journals to his biographer a woman who was west point graduate presumably a trustworthy individual but it is not like he was, handing stuff to the soviets. at any rate he was accused of mishandling classified information. petraeus got pretty well roasted in the media for that, wouldn't you say compared to what is going on here?
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>> absolutely. the media has been slow all the way along this political road with hillary clinton. the minute she is seen and has been for a long, long time now, is the frontrunner for the democrats, the media did not subject her to the same kind of scrutiny that they would anyone else in terms of her exposure. whether she moves to corral the press in new hampshire it is not even a one-day story for many networks. there is just a double-standard when it comes to coverage of this candidate versus anyone else who is accused of what she has been accused of so far. and the media really need to dig into, as they finally did after peter schweizer looked at her association with the clinton foundation. the media should have been doing those stories long, long, long before the book came out about her but there is just, she seems to get the free pass again and again and again. jon: just on its face ellen,
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the idea that a secretary of state would basically never, that is what she would have us believe would never email anything involving classified information given her problem nance, given her job? does that make any sense at all? >> well, it doesn't make a lot of sense and frankly, the other thing that the media is not looking at which is related to this is under freedom of information act, would the state department be forthcoming as we now know looking at emails? that is another issue the media has given a pass to freedom of information act as regards to her job as well as frankly other administration officials. jon: so where do we go from here on the email story, judy? >> i think what is going to happen, all of the focus will be on the justice department to see whether or not they respond to these recommendations from the intelligence community and the state department. this is an extraordinary story. it is very, very serious and
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we'll see whether or not it has as we call it in journalism legs. whether or not others follow up and do what should have been done a long time ago. jon: dylan buy yes, sir on the "politico" website noted something i have to give my coanchor credit for flagging me to "politico" noted that "the times" actually kind of softened up its reporting of this story overnight. they first write that the justice department decided to open a criminal investigation whether hillary rodham clinton mishandled sensitive government information on a private email account she used as secretary of state. well they then went back with some, sort of softer language and said, the inspectors general were asking for an inquiry into whether sensitive government information was mishandled in connection with the personal email account hillary rodham clinton used as secretary of state. so, they sort of take it out of
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her responsibility in that in that second quote. any surprise there, judy? >> well, that is sometimes what happens when an initial story gets posted and there is pushback, either from the campaign or from the justice department, from the obama administration. we don't know where it came from but clearly "the times" adjusted the story in response to something the paper heard. that is done a fair amount of the time. so i wouldn't read anything into it. but in general, i think the focus now must be, even harder and more more skeptically it has been how she could have gotten away with the decision to decide what is and is not classified. no other secretary of state has done that. and her decision to turn over 30000 emails to the state department, that she says contained no classified information. that has to be, that has to be checked and double-checked. jon: this first line suggests that she did it personally. the second line suggests that
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her email account did it. >> right. jon: kind of a fine line but really interesting the way they changed the language. thank you both. ellen ratner judy miller. see you next week. >> thank you jon. jenna: words matter. that is one of the things we can pull from that. "new york times" piece is relative to our next story as well. secretary of state john kerry is hard on the promotional tour today working to sell the iran nuclear deal. while this is happening our next guest says we can't forget iran's human rights abuses. why she says new statistics on public hangings serve as an ominous warning for us all. we'll have that next. if i buy a car through usaa, i know i'm getting a fair price. i was like, wow, if i could save this much, then i could maybe upgrade a little bit.
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cities is heating up as the house approves legislation punishing places that don't comply with immigration laws. president obama is vowing to veto it. >> a majority of voters think christianity is under attack in the u.s. >> we'll talk to our own #oneluckyguy about all that. "duck dynasty" star, willie robertson at the top of the hour. jon: going to be a big day. looking forward tonight. thank you. jenna: secretary of state john kerry hard at it again today promoting the nuclear agreement with iran. he is fresh off the hot seat before a senate committee, saw it yesterday in our show. mr. kerry told lawmakers this is best chance to called it a standoff. this is what he said today. >> if the united states congress unilaterally walks away from this arrangement we have reached we go right back to square one where we were with no alternatives. do you think the ayatollah will come back to the table if congress refuse this is and
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negotiate again? we're very restrained in what we did. we didn't, there is no signing bonus. there is no sort of gift for, you know saying you will do something. tough do something to get anything. i also told them that their chance chants of death to america are neither helpful and pretty stupid and -- [laughter] jenna: we have middle east analyst and fox news contributor. little snippet. >> he missed entire point. why should it be that we're fear if you recall of the iranian -- fearful iranian regime walking away from the table in fact they're getting everything they wanted? they get away human rights abuses and involvement in syria, iraq, yemen in the region. they get away with everything they're doing including minimal concessions on the program. best of all they get to go on shopping spree to beef up the military buy weapons, to put
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more money into terror. we're afraid they will walk away from the deal. jenna: secretary kerry says this is the best way right now to provide a more secure world. that is his opinion. i know you disagree with that. you also said he didn't want the human rights part of the conversation, part of the nuclear deal. we heard that time and time again. this is only a nuclear deal. you say human rates is the place to really target iran, them change away from being a state sponsor of terror. why is that? >> he is talking about now. this has been a conversation going on for years. in 2005 decade ago i was invited to congress to show my documentary film on regime change in iran. even since then the false narrative that continues till today there is only two outcomes that are possible if we don't engage in iran. let them get the bomb or we have to bomb them. that send tirely false. my documentary a decade ago was about the third option. to engage with the people of iran. put our support and focus on human rights abuses and victims of human rights abuses which now
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we have three americans possibly four who are on the list of those human rights abuses. >> we have new numbers on the number of public hangings inside of iran. we talked about this on our show. the numbers will start tell our viewers. we'll take a quick commercial break and back with numbers. that is why it matters next. jon: quick fox news alert. a news conference underway in lafayettes louisiana, regarding the shooting at the theater last night. a drifter killed two women. and injured nine others. and killed himself. that news conference is underway right now.
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let's listen in. >> why did he turn around and go back in there? why did leave his car outside with keys on top after tire? why was he living in a motel 8 and wigs and glasses all those types of things. any little thing that is what the dna scientists are doing inside of the theater right now to make sure. it was at least 13 gun casings. was it more? we know he loaded gun one time before he put the bullet in himself. we have to put things together to try to find closure for the phamly, this community the men and women that worked in the theater. the alarm wag pulled last night. teachers were involved. employees had presence of mine to pull those fire alarm to alert individuals what was going on inside of that theater. we're trying to put every single piece of that together to try to find a motive. we believe in talking to the family talking to friends trying to look at his writings on the internet and putting some parts and pieces together, maybe
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we can try to figure out what caused him to do it. i think main thing is, unless we've gotten, what chief craft has been saying the fact it is not an on going threat. jon: echoes of what happened in aurora colorado, three years ago. authorities in lafayette louisiana, trying to figure out a why a gunman a drifter really, burst into a movie theater last night, opened fire. two young ladies were killed, nine others injured that we know off. if you want to continue to watch the news conference we have it streaming for you live on foxnews.com. jenna: we're back now with lisa daftari, talking about iran and why a focus on human rights abuses matter. you have interesting information about public executions. why is that something our viewers need to know about happening inside of iran? what are the numbers telling us? >> the numbers even since last year, iran is constantly on the top list of second country only after china number of executions that they have had annually. these are again political
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members of opposition parties. journalists. stories i have done, not enough time to cover all of these stories dancers and musicians and people who are -- jenna: number is going up? number continues to go higher. >> january through july only this year, 700 people have been executed. that is three times the official number iran is stating. i'm sure that number is higher. >> the number from amnesty international. i have only 30 seconds what do you think is happening inside of iran? >> business as usual. what is important for people to understand. you see jubilation and dancing on streets of iranons are release ad and mainstream economy needs to be improved. this is people will go back to cursing out the regime on monday. another one of my sources said to me we're dancing and celebrating for the fact that we're going back to what our country was 40 years ago. i think two quotes are very telling what this really represents and how we now, international community is going to engage iran.
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we have to push them on the human rights. that is how we hold their feet through the fire through sanctions. now we don't have that leverage. jenna: we'll see if the conversation does shift. lisa great to have you on the program, thank you. we'll be right back. it's a fact. kind of like shopping hungry equals overshopping. ooh pizza rolls! ahh! they're ready! make summer awesummer with totino's pizza rolls. and get a free movie ticket when you spend $10. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ today, on 7/24
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whoever put crab on this salmon, that's who. with flavors like these, i'm almost too excited to eat! hey i said almost. and now that it's back get crackin' while you still can. >> "outnumbered" starts now. >> see you back in an hour. this is "outnumbered." i am sandra smith. host of kennedy is here kimberly guilfoyle is here kirsten powers, and today's hash# #oneluckyguy, willie robertson from duck nynas. >>
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