tv FOX Friends FOX News December 4, 2015 3:00am-6:01am PST
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page. the national restaurant association suing new york city over new salt warning labels on menus. they accuse them of overstepping their legal bounds. >> that wraps it up for today. it's going to be another busy day. >> it is. "fox and friends" starts right now. >> bye. good morning to you. it is friday, december 4th, 2015. i'm elisabeth hasselbeck. this is a fox news alert for you. new details emerging about the killer couple's plan for murder. he was radicalized but did he go rogue. were they plotting something even bigger? what we have just learned live from san bernardino. >> and the faces of the victims revealed. a married father of six. a health care worker who wanted to change the world and a mom who fled persecution. she left iran for a better life here. >> came into the country to live the life of opportunity. she had that opportunity.
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unfortunately, it was taken away by an evil man. >> and his wife. the heartbreaking words from a devastated family straight ahead. if you thought yesterday's cover was a disgrace on the daily news, wait until you see what's on there today. the real terrorist, the head of the nra? >> really? >> "fox and friends" starts right now. welcome to "fox and friends" for this friday, folks. we start with a fox news alert. was this a terrorist gone rogue? new information emerging about the san bernardino shooting suspect. terrifying supply of arsenal found inside the killer couple's home and a vehicle. were they planning a second bigger attack? >> and the names of the 14 people murdered have been
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released as we hear chilling details from the first officer on the scene. >> we have team coverage this morning. will carr is live at the inland regional center. first, we're joined by anna kooiman out the suspects' home in red lands. anna, good morning to you and what do we know this morning? >> good morning to you and good morning to you at home. many questions this morning, does this have fingerprints of isis or al qaeda or self-inspired, self-radicalization by the two terror suspects in san bernardino? some new information out this morning, a family attorney for syed farook has told local media there were comments made to him about his facial hair. we've been reporting that he's been growing out that beard and that was the only really thing out of ordinary that his co-workers had noticed about him during his recent time as a county health inspector. farook did not have a criminal
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record, but the fbi is now saying that he did have correspondence on social media with some islamic extremists, at least suspected of that on social immediate yachlt the wife, 27-year-old tashfeen malik was here on a fiance visa we're learning, from pakistan. the couple deleted e-mail accounts, thrown out hardware, their hard drives, smashed cell phones. all of this in an attempt to really delete that internet footprint, that e-footprint and that happened just a day before the attack. back to you. >> anna, what did they find inside the couple's house in red larnds? >> reporter: that's where we are now. just an amazing amount of ammunition. 6,000 rounds of ammo. 1600 rounds found when they were in that -- when they were taken down by police following that chase. 4500 rounds were found inside this home. i want you to take a look at
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exactly what was found inside. 12 pipe bombs, hundreds of ied tools. more materials for bomb making. 2,000, 9 millimeters rounds. an amazing amount of what was in here is why investigators were thinking this couple may have been planning something more violent. also inside. they found explosive devices attached to remote controlled cars. >> thank you for that. >> in fact, we saw a picture and investigators are looking at that yellow toy car. this could be similar to the one used. in fact, they haven't determined yet. could be similar in the construction. they describe the al qaeda's magazine used in the boston marathon bombings. >> anna, thank you very much. anna mentioned that apparently the fellow, syed farook had made contact with somebody, some of
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the bad guys. he used social media to contact the extremists who were being watched by the fbi. so if the extremists were being watched by the fbi and this guy who murdered those people two days ago, syed farook was contacting them, why wasn't he on the fbi's radar. >> how did he fall through the cracks? >> whether this was workplace violence or another digital clue that they wiped clean their social media accounts in the days leading up to this. they were planning to do something. >> it wasn't the spur of the moment. >> whether it was a follow on the tank or whether it was hastily or whatever, that house is described as an ied bomb making factory. >> all that ammo and tactical gear isn't something that just appears in someone's home. everybody knows that. the tragedy is shattering lives and forcing families to face a new normal. >> saved my life, not knowing
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how to tell your kids that daddy is not coming home. >> the 14 people senselessly gunned down by terror have just been identified. >> for that we turn to will carr live in san bernardino. will? >> reporter: good morning guys. this community is devastated. families are mourning the 14 innocent lives lost yesterday the coroner identified all of the victims. nicholas that will sin owe. damien meins. larry kaufman, a self-described free spirit. sierra clayborn, always smiling. bennetta bet-badal. robert adams, married his high school sweetheart. juan he is pin ease a, shannon johnson. michael wetzel, aurora godoy. harry bowman. at the same time, the community is praising the police response especially now that we're learning how much firepower the suspects had. we're releasing pictures of the
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guns used. all purchased legally. farook bought the handgun. looking for the person who bought the ar-15 which they fired 76 rounds at officers during that battle. malik firing from the back of the black suv. they had more than 1400 rounds on them during that gun battle. so authorities really believed they were ready to do more damage. for the first time we're hearing from the first responders. lieutenant mike madden was one of the first inside the inland regional center. he says the carnage was surreal. even with extensive training, it was a scene nobody was prepared for. >> i noticed upon entry that there's a christmas tree in there. all of the tables were decorated for a christmas party. it just seemed so senseless that here's people going into their holiday festivities and now we were dealing with that. >> while the community celebrates the lives lost, they're also concentrating on
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the extraordinary stories of survival. there's kevin ortiz shot five times, one though deflected off an iphone in his jacket pocket t could have potentially saved his life. there are so many stories of first responders and people inside of that building rushing to the side of people who were shot, potentially saving lives. they're choosing to focus on the heroic actions instead of the devastation that played out. >> will carr, live in san bernardino. by the way, coming up in about 15 minutes, anna is going to talk to the victims -- one of the victim's families. she actually left iran, persecution over there. came to the united states for a better life only to be killed by this guy who does appear to be a radical. >> she's a mom of three. her name is bennetta bet-badal. >> it will be a powerful interview. you fled iran to come to the united states and avoid extremist and met here. it's the reality of what was there is now coming here.
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>> sure. law enforcement has told a number of media outlets, it does appear that this guy was radicalized. fox news has a story up now. the question is did she, actually radical eyes him. was she his terror training? yesterday during this program, we said don't be surprised if the white house refers to this as workplace violence just as they did with ft. hood. yesterday, the president of the united states went there. >> it is possible that this was terrorist rooelt d ---related. it may be workplace-related. >> think about it. workplace violence. military vet, wore go pro. they destroyed their hard drives, mother boards and cell phones the day before. >> the fact that this is a couple has many investigators
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looking into the focus of the online radicalization, pairing with the female. the president would like to walk the line wait on calling it terror. we're not waiting. he's calling for gun control instead. will gun control stop terrorists? peter doocy at the white house. >> does the president really think that common sense gun laws would deter terrorists now that he has admitted these two may have been terrorists? >> yes. the president believes that passing common sense gun laws, it makes it harder for people with bad intentions to get guns makes the country safe. >> so the president thinks that when there are potentially two terrorists sitting around planning a mass murder, they may call it off because president obama has put in place common sense gun laws?
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>> peter, we're still learning of the precise motive of the individuals who carried out this heinous act of violence yesterday. one thing we do know is that the four firearms they were wielding were legally purchased under the laws in place now. that's a fact. >> josh earnest didn't answer the question. >> no. >> because he couldn't answer the question. the answer is utterly absurd. if you look at the amount of gear, the planning, the resources, follow the money on this, they were going to get their hands-on weapons if they wanted to. this is a well-supplied outfit. has nothing to do with legal firearms. >> sounds like a deadly case of denial. >> one thing about money. apparently they had in their house about $30,000 worth of guns and ammo. he only makes $51,000 a year. where did that money come from? >> meanwhile, we showed you the headline from the daily news where a number of people across the country, including republicans were saying after one of the potential victims in their buildings said pray for us. >> she texted her father. said pray for us.
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>> the daily news puts that -- god isn't fixing this. media research center says that offended most americans when they mocked people praying after the tragedy. today they've doubled down in the stupid department. this is the headline. they got it right to here. he's a terrorist. that guy there. so are these guys and shows a number of mass murderers and then the guy who runs the nra. there is a big difference between the nra and terrorism. >> they've done that before. called in jihadi wayne, the head of the nra and going after him. notice what isn't on the cover, radical islamic terrorism. they're conflating it all. >> [ overlapping talking ] >> contact with jihadi followers, he traveled to pakistan. he became what has -- what has bm clear, the daily news having circulation problems, on the cover of the newspaper, it's not news. it's an opinion. they say this guy is a
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terrorist. that's their opinion. there's a big difference between the nra and terrorism don't you think. >> they may be proud of their covers but not selling many of them. >> let us know what you think about the latest. coming up, all eyes are on the wife of syed farook. the big question, did she prey on her husband and did she radicalize him? >> a lesson in why you should never approach another driver. this guy right here was shot through a car window. he's okay. but the story you're not going to believe coming your way next. . so when my asthma symptoms kept coming back on my long-term control medicine, i talked to my doctor and found a missing piece in my asthma treatment. once-daily breo prevents asthma symptoms. breo is for adults with asthma not well controlled on a long-term asthma control medicine, like an inhaled corticosteroid. breo won't replace a rescue inhaler for sudden breathing problems. breo opens up airways to help
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jeb bufrom our president:h you will not hear we are at war with radical islamic terrorism. it is the struggle that will determine the fate of the free world. the united states should not delay in leading a global coalition to take out isis with overwhelming force. their aim is our total destruction. we can't withdraw from this threat or negotiate with it. we have but one choice: to defeat it. vo: right to rise usa is responsible for the content of this message. (dramatic music) centrum brings us the biggest news in multivitamin history. ( ♪ ) a moment when something so familiar becomes something so new. (impact on metal) introducing new centrum vitamints. a multivitamin that contains a full spectrum of essential nutrients
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you enjoy like a mint. new centrum vitamints. go to centrum.com for a $4 coupon. we are learning more about the husband and wife's california killers this morning. he was a devout muslim and traveled overseas to bring his bride back to the united states. the big question this morning, did she prey on her husband as part of the bigger terror plot and did she radicalize him? here's the president of the american islamic center. doctor, thanks for being with us. >> good to be with you. >> what's your reaction coming out of this horrific slaying of 14 in san bernardino by this couple? >> you know, it's just the same horror over and over again. we're not treating the problem. clearly the radicalization narratives will be different between the chattanooga shooter and the boston marathon bomber
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and now this san bernardino shooting. this terror jihadism and they're radicalized through the trips to saudi arabia and basically places where these ideologies flourish. his relationship with his wife, it's interesting that she may have contributed to it. but i still think as the fbi is reporting, he had some contact with known terror suspects and the bottom line is that often patriarchal society, the women become enmeshed into this operation and they put the virus into their head. the question is whether when the virus of jihadism became operational, if that was the intent or was enraged by something and went to the softest target possible. the same narrative, same disease, we're not treating it and the president by denying islami islamism. it's enabling our community from dealing with the disease. >> two things, doctor, if you
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could connect the dots. you're seeing online radicalization. we're seeing pairings, dating sites between the men and women and dose this point to isis -- does this point to isis, fingerprint of isis and is the white house still walking that line of could be terror, but could be workplace violence. why not say radical islam? >> all of those things are very important. number one, the fact that it was more than one person, the fact that it was a couple speaks to the isis narrative, which is this total life that they give individuals and couples. the videos told them they would go to heaven. that there's paradise waiting for them in the caliphate. they're starting to speak to that and the couple sort of feed off each other and they left their baby with the grandma and took off and knew that they wouldn't come back. second thing is, it's important to name it because if you want
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to enable muslim reformers. today we finished our summit against political islam and islamism. we're going to make a declaration that others can use to say who are the muslims that are part of the solution and who are part of the problem. that is how -- you can only make us relevant by actually looking at the declaration and holding muslim organizations accountable to those things because this couple did not get radicalized overnight. by the way, his brother was a u.s. navy vet who had -- >> decorated one. >> exactly. maybe if you look at the differences between the tworks you'll start to see maybe how one gets radicalized from ideology and the other didn't. identifying it lets you identifying who is your friend and who is your foe. >> doctor, thank you for your time. >> thank you. coming up, shocking news overnight. the former front man for the stone temple pilots is dead. what police are saying this
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welcome back. 24 minutes after the hour. a look at some of the other news this morning and a fox news alert. a tragedy in the world of rock. former stone temple pilots frontman scott weiland is dead. ♪ >> the singer was found on a tour bus before a performance. the band was getting ready for a concert in minnesota. he struggled with drugs for years. scott weiland dead at 48 years
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old. in just two hours, we'll know the new unemployment rate. the economy expected to add 200,000 jobs for november. but the bigger news is perhaps this. the federal reserve is expected to raise interest rates for the first time in seven years. finally, germany joining the fight against isis. that country's parliament approving plans to send more planes and support personnel to the middle east. they will not actively engage in combat. >> pete? >> well, what happened in california may have been inspired by what happened in paris a few weeks ago? it has all the hallmarks of an isis attack. did the killer couple have bigger plans? joining me now, former fbi counterterrorism operative eric o'neal. >> the details coming out about the size and scope of what they may have had planned, the details we've seen so far about the amount of ammunition, the style of attack, what does it tell you about what kind of
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backing these folks had? >> we're missing some facts. my gut feeling says that there was a bigger attack plan. while this is a horrible and terrible event that just happened, it doesn't really fit the profile for where isis would want to launch an attack. the amount of ammunition, the fact that they had the capacity to manufacture pipe bombs, that they at least were trained in some pair a military tactics suggest that is there may have been other actors and that there was a different target. it kind of makes me feel that the way that it was set up, a little bit like paris. that's very much concerning. >> eric, you have a sense that information we're getting shows they may have deviated from the plan. we've also not heard anyone claim credit for that, whether isis or al qaeda for that attack. is that surprising to you? >> it is surprising to me. i almost can picture isis and al
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qaeda scratching their heads and wondering where this actually came from. remember, in the past we used to see al qaeda claim responsibility for everything. so that suggests to me they might have gone off the rails. if there was something else planned, maybe it was taking time to come to fruition and these two jumped the gun for whatever reason. the plans could have failed. they could have got angry for something that happened at the one attacker's employer. but for whatever reason, whatever was planned, i don't think this is what they had determined to do. >> even with all the ammunition, scrubbing the hard drives, even with all the clear signs in retrospect an attack was imminent, this is a human exercise. you may have had an individual here who decided to say now is the time, now is the moment having been radicalized and that's something that terror networks have to deal with. these are humans. to be violent among civilian populations.
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how do we plan for that? >> we're dealing with psychotics, right? it's not a normal person who wants to stockpile ammunition and shoot up anywhere. you have to have predictableability. >> the good news is that the fbi is very good at investigating. each though they tried to erase their digital footprint, that isn't going to matter very much. it's impossible to do that these days. i think we're going to learn a bit more about where this came from, the motivations behind it. we may not learned why they jumped the gun and deviated from what i think was probably a larger plan. but we need to be concerned about the terror networks and the new isis-based chaotic attacks are very hard to locate before they happen. >> eric, you're right. so much to learn from the men reported to have been coming and going to that home, to the mosque they attended, whether there's a connection there. so much to put together.
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we appreciate your help on this, this morning. >> thank you so much. this morning, we're learning about the victims. one, a mom who fled christian persecution in iran. >> came into the country to live the life of opportunity. she had that opportunity. unfortunately, it was taken away by an evil man. >> powerful words. an interview you'll only see here with that devastated family. any closer to finding a motive? a detective takes us through the house live in california, next. today people are coming out to the nation's capital to support an important cause that can change the way you live for years to come. how can you help? by giving a little more, to yourself.
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if you had a spinal injection while on eliquis call your doctor right away if you have tingling, numbness, or muscle weakness. while taking eliquis, you may bruise more easily... and it may take longer than usual for bleeding to stop. seek immediate medical care for sudden signs of bleeding, like unusual bruising. eliquis may increase your bleeding risk if you take certain medicines. tell your doctor about all planned medical or dental procedures. eliquis treats dvt & pe blood clots. plus had less major bleeding. both made switching to eliquis right for me. ask your doctor if it's right for you. another fox news alert out of california. a terrifying arsenal of weapons found inside the house of those killers out there. >> what exactly was found inside, you ask. >> live outside of that home in san bernardino is fox news contributor and former homicide detective rod wheeler. thanks for joining us this morning.
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>> reporter: sure, good morning guys. as you can see, this morning i'm actually standing at the doorway of the suspect's home. what's really interesting is that yesterday when i was there, exactly where i'm standing now is where the fbi crime scene search technician was located. they allowed me to walk around the perimeter of the home and take a look at some interesting facts that i found. >> we're at the intersection of center street and center place. this is the intersection closest to where the suspects resided. they're up the street. a window is busted out. that's the actual bay window that leads to the inside of the home of the suspects. so the authorities, when they got here, after they secured the perimeter, they had to go through that window, they went through other areas. before they bent in, they had to make sure there were no explosives or devices set to go off to cause them injury. >> this is a community where all of the homes pretty much look the same. if you can look back beyond this fence here, they all have this
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overhead, like a roof. once they secured the home, i want to point something else out to you. the actual garage, what you'll notice is this garage, as all of the garages in this yar are detached. for a criminal, that's an ideal situation. why is that? because what happens is by it being detached, they can go inside the garage as you can closely see here. close the door, continue to do what they were doing and according to the authorities in this case, they were building pipe bombs and other devices inside the garage. then the door being closed was their shield. >> reporter: as you can see, there was a lot of activity as early as yesterday. today they've opened up the -- the police opened up this entire area. the crime scene search tape has been taken down. we're going to see what else we can find in this community. >> rod, they -- when the police arrived on the scene, they realized there was something like $30,000 worth of guns and ammunition there. $30,000. this guy only made $51,000 a
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year. his wife did not have a job that we know of. >> reporter: right. >> have the police suggested where the money came from? >> reporter: no. but they are trace thag, steve. yesterday evening, i spoke with sources in law enforcement here. they're looking at all possibilities. they're also looking more aggressively today at who are the other individuals that had assisted these two people because the fbi is operating under the premise that they had to have some assistance from other individuals. it wasn't just these two suspects, steve. >> all right. ron wheeler reporting live from san bernardino. he'll be with us throughout the morning. >> what's interesting, with thousands of rounds in there, there is some suggestion and we told you at the top of the show, on fox news.com, the suggestion is that perhaps she, the wife radicalized him and they had so many rounds of ammunition, they were planning a second hit. some have said, you know what, why didn't they blow themselves up? they didn't have a vest.
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>> they weren't done yet. >> exactly. maybe they weren't done yet. >> she may have been radicalized but probably didn't have the expertise to put together the bomb making materials that you had. you saw that blown-out window. they probably went through that or broke that because you can't go through the main entrances. like in iraq and afghanistan, that's the environment that the police are dealing with. >> definitely pairing of this couple here. they left behind that 6-month-old baby. anna kooiman has been in san bernardino. there was a vigil that took place at the stadium last night. anna, what can you tell us? i know you spoke with one of the victim's family who actually left a life behind fleeing radicalism. what did you learn? >> reporter: we've been talking a lot, elisabeth, about that headline in the new york daily news saying god isn't fixing this or prayer won't help is what residents in san bernardino are hearing. but they're giving it a strong and faithful rebuke with words like this. as you comprehend this profound loss, let yourself cry knowing
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each tear is a note of love rising to the heavens. this is a program from last night's vigil. take a look at folks stood up singing god bless america. >> god bless america ♪ ♪ land that i love ♪ stand beside her ♪ >> reporter: i spoke to the husband and the children of bennetta bet-badal, one of the 14 victims who died in the attacks. she was living the american dream after fleeing the middle east. she's a christian woman at the age of 18 her parents got her out of there. she was actually working alongside the shooter, syed farook as a health inspector. after fleeing islamic extremism, it is very bizarre that this is the way that she went. her husband spoke with me last night. he spent 20 years as a police officer.
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he said this is indeed islamic terror. >> what's the best thing about your wife you're going to remember? >> everything. there was nothing -- she was an angel. my house is her house. everything that she touched -- >> my mom was amazing. she was always there for me. everything i wanted to do. she was basically my best friend. i told her everything. it's kind of hard to like see all that. but i have to be strong because she would want me to be strong. that's what i'm going to do. i'm going to be strong. >> when you hear this was workplace violence or terrorism or radical islamic terrorism, which one would you classify it as? >> all of the above. from my chiefs to my sergeants and my partners, they've been great. they've been there for me. they've been there all night. personally, i want their support as praying for my family, pray for my kids that they do well
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without their mom. >> reporter: and bennetta bet-badal leaves behind her husband and three children, ages 10, 12 and 15. she loved her job as a health inspector and serving the san bernardino community. but her greatest love of all were her children. there is a go fund me page. i'll put that up on my facebook and twitter and on foxandfriends.com. elisabeth, pete and steve, back to you. >> thank you very much. >> great work, anna. >> that's just one of the stories. >> we will pray for that family and the others who suffered such a great loss. >> it is important. we'll turn to heather nauert with headlines with a busy friday. >> we certainly do have a busy day. pete, great to see you. >> got other news to bring you now. parents at a new jersey elementary school are outraged after officials delayed telling them about a plot by fifth graders to blow up a school? police detained students on a
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field trip after school found suspicious letters detailing an attack. listen to this. >> spoke on text messages, everything -- i get no phone call. i got four kids in this school. how is that even possible? >> the children were released to their parents. no charges have been filed. all five were suspended. do you remember this mugshot of this adorable drug kingpin from texas? well, it turns out that young lady, 19-year-old sara's father is a veteran dea agent. she was picked up for hoarding and selling pot and cocaine and meth out of her college apartment. she was released a day after her arrest at a bond of $38,000. well, that cheeky mugshot went viral. why should you avoid road rage? other than your wife telling you just chill out, you could get shot. that's the headline here. take a look at this shocking video out of miami. a driver gets out of his rolls-royce at a red light and walks up to the mercedes in
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front of him. he throws a punch before the other driver shoots him in the chest. and then speeds away. that man has been hospitalized. he is in stable condition. the gunman on the loose, police say that that shooting stemmed from an earlier argument between those drivers. be very, very careful. then folks in california learning how nuts squirrels can be. >> what are they doing? >> they're testing to see if she's bad nut. oh, my goodness. >> that's just from a movie. this is happening in real life. at least eight people in the pleasant valley area say vicious squirrels are attacking victims. the victims include an elementary school student, they've been nipped on the arms, the legs and the head. officials weigh in and say the feisty guy was hand raised and has totally lost fear of humans. those are your headlines. i'll see you back here.
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>> apparently so. >> squirrely. >> right in your hair. >> grandma doocy in ban craft, iowa, we would go out and she would say rocky, she'd have nuts in her hand and a squirrel would climb down and jump on her shoulder. >> i was cornered by a squirrel in a park once. scary. >> call a relative. >> new york city with the kids in the park. they were stealing all their snacks. >> there is other news out there on this friday. also, the bomb squad using rebots to find pipe bomts and explosive materials inside the killer's california home. kurt the cyber guy looks at the real life robo cops. the dangerous new form of heroine hits the streets. what we can do to stop the epidemic. the woman who led the fight in florida. pam bondi is next.
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good morning. quick international headlines to bring you. at least 16 people dead when a nightclub in kwie row was firebombed. officials say it may be a revenge attack after a disagreement between staff and a suspect. in paris, a cafe where five people were gunned down by jihadi gunmen is open again. the cafe is the first business to reopen since 130 people were killed and more than 350 were injured three weeks ago. elisabeth and keith. >> thank you. the mass shooting in san bernardino putting focus, of course, on crisis response robots. >> the bomb squad using high tech machines to make more explosives at the shooters' home. kurt the cyber guy is here with a look at some of the real life robots taken to the streets. >> given the ammo in this
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apartment and the potential explosives, they send the robot in first. how does that work? >> in addition to the great men and women in san bernardino right now, these are the heroes. this is a technology that's really at the forefront right now and getting a lot of focus. we saw that the bomb robot go in. we've seen this before. they go after the -- into the dangerous area where the explosive is to manipulate it and in this case, it worked flawlessly. it paid to put this in the aim of danger rather than officers who are out there at the scene. it brings about, okay, what else is available for police departments around this country at this point and as we take a look at that, it's pretty incredible what's right around the corner or what's already showing up. >> one of them is a telebot police robot. you talked about that. >> look at this. >> this is a stelebot. >> this is out of florida. this is florida international
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university. they developed this and it's designed to look intimidating so that you would in fact deter crime when it's out on patrol. this actually would replace a police officer in the field or support them. designed to intimidate. it's got a remote control with it. it's controlled by other officers. it can do simple chores like hand out parking tickets. >> less police, you replace them with -- >> no question. the invention happened to be somebody with a good intention saying i've got disabled cops in our beat. i'd like to see something come about that could help them. that's where that sort of started. what didn't start with this one was anything like that. it's called a skunk riot controlled copter. you're not going to have to -- actually, this one here first, just hours ago out of japan, just coincidentally, there was a robot conference going on.
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there's a pair of robots -- these are rescue robots. we're talking about what could help out in a crisis scenario in this country. these are it. the hrp 2 and one called the kai and these both. the kai and the jackson. they'll go into, say, an earthquake scenario or an area that has had an explosion happen. they will go through the debris and actually can get to -- go through chemicals, can make the path for first responders and extinguish fires. >> at the same time, can they bring them back? >> not those. i don't know if they collect data for that. i imagine they have that kind of sensor for this. >> and there's other ones we're going to put online that are phenomenal that actually one controversial being tested now in silicon valley that will -- that's out on the street. called a k-5. it's really taking in some data and patrolling streets.
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>> this is an example of where technology saves lives. you can put technology at risk instead of a human being. >> thanks so much. next, we continue our series on addiction in how is so much heroin hitting the streets you ask? it's hitting in a pill, that's how. we'll show you what to look for. itching for relief? preparation h offers the most maximum strength solutions for all hemorrhoid symptoms. from the brand doctors recommend most. preparation h. don't stand for hemorrhoids. (waves crashing) (audio distortion) (splashing) (audio distortion) i absolutely love my new but the rent is outrageous. good thing geico offers affordable renters insurance. with great coverage it protects my personal belongings should they get damaged, stolen or destroyed.
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a new form of heroin is hitting the streets. it now looks like a prescription pill. attorney general of the great state of florida led the fight against painkillers in florida. good morning to you. >> thank you. good morning. >> once upon a time florida was the pill mill capital. >> unofficial sadly. >> you cracked down on that. >> we fought hard for tough legislation. we had seven floridians dying a day which is unreal and unacceptable. so we passed some of the toughest laws in the country. we locked up drug dealers wearing white coats, really bad doctors, putting them in prison and cracking down. >> one of the things that's developed over the last couple years is so many people hooked on prescription drugs and oxycontin can be $80 on the street. >> absolutely. >> what's cheaper than oxy, heroin. >> you used to think of heroin as a dark alley and dirty needles but now this is what
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folks have to know, now heroin -- >> pills. >> look at those. they're in the form of a pill. some are even marked to look like a prescription drug pill. it's so frightening. parents have to know that. kids have to know that that think they can take one oxycodone pill. if you snort that pill, you could die. >> people think maybe i would do heroin but i have to shoot it in my arm and now you pop a pill. >> it's so much cheaper. manufacturing it in mass. you don't know what's mixed in with it. that's what we have to warn people about. >> a lot of this stuff they mix it with can kill you. so now it's so much easier to consume, obviously it's going mainstream, your worry is it will be as mainstream as pot or as coke or any of those other things, right? >> i really do. as attorneys general throughout the country, we come in early.
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we're seeing this in massachusetts, ohio, kentucky, a bit in florida. we just made a huge heroin bust in florida and it had -- these guys had the ability to do a pound of heroin a week with $120,000 street value. it's very lucrative. >> the people putting the pills on the street obviously these are drug dealers. they're not going to follow the laws. what can you do? >> we'll go after them. dea has been great partner all over the country with our sheriffs and police chiefs. that's what they have to do. you have to crackdown. these pills are even difficult for law enforcement to detect. >> they look like the other pills. how do you know without sending them to a lab. >> that's what people need to know. be on the lookout for that. >> right now a whole bunch of people just heard you. >> thank you. >> coming up on this friday as you heard, the white house is refusing to call the deadly shooting a terror attack at this
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aw man are you kiddin' me? good morning to you. a fox news alert now. new details revealed about the california killer couple. was he a terrorist gone rogue? did they plan to kill even more people? we're live in san bernardino for you. >> then he was trained for it but the first officer on the scene of the shooting says nothing could have prepared him for what he saw. >> the situation was surreal. it was unspeakable. the carnage we were seeing. >> that officer's chilling account straight ahead. the president will wait to call the california terror attack terror but won't wait to call for more gun control. our own peter deucy wants answers. >> does the president really
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think that common sense gun laws would deter terrorists? >> the answer and more from that exchange. "fox & friends" second hour starts now. 7:00 here in new york city. fox news alert inside the lives of a killer couple in california. their murderous rampage left 14 dead but did they have a bigger plan in mind? what the investigation is now revealing. will carr is live in san bernardino with chilling new details. will? >> reporter: good morning, guys. it appears the suspects were ready for war when you think about the armory they had in their house. investigators are trying to figure out exactly what led up to this so they are taking a hard look at the overseas trips that farook took. we know he went to saudi arabia twice in the past two years. the fbi also says that at some point he went to pakistan, both
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farook and his wife malik, returned to the united states in july of 2014 and government officials say he was in contact with a small number of extremists and may have been radicalized. they are also talking to his family. his brother is a decorated navy veteran. now, when you think about the firepower that you think they were ready to do battle. they had four guns on them during the shootings. those were legally purchased. farook bought the handguns. authorities say they are now searching for the person who bought the ar-15s that farook and malik used to fire 76 rounds at officers. they also had 1,400 rounds in their black suv. we are learning about their home in the redlands a few miles from here. it's being called an ied factory. they had 12 pipe bombs. 2,000 .9 millimeter rounds and investigators say they had a second target in mind.
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for the first time we hear from first responders. a lieutenant was one of the first inside and says the carnage was something he never could have imagined. >> i did my job i was supposed to do. people don't call the police because they're having a great day. they call because there's tragedy going on and this was tragedy that i've never experienced in my career. and that i don't think most officers do. >> reporter: the community praising the police response here as well as thinking about the stories of survival. there is kevin ortiz who was shot five times. one round went into his chest. it was deflected by a cell phone that he had in his jacket and it's believed that may have saved his life. a number of stories of the heroic actions not only by first responders but by people inside of that building rushing to the aid of those who had been shot. this community really trying to concentrate on those stories
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instead of the killers and the carnage they left behind. guys? >> will carr live on the west coast. thank you very much, will. >> thank you, will. we'll bring in former white house national security council staff member, julianne turner. as more information comes in about these killers, the amount of ammo they had and what their plan could have been further if they actually did execute what they were going to intend to do, we're looking now at ties to pakistan. what role did it play? we understand that his wife is from pakistan. he traveled on a passport from pakistan. draw the connection for our viewers at home. >> radical islam is a major problem in pakistan. the face has changed over the past decade. there was taliban. we had al qaeda and now isis poses the largest domestic threat there. pakistan's chief of the army acknowledged that publicly the other day. something they are battling as well. >> the countries we heard when thinking of domestic terror,
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iraq, syria, libya, yemen, there was original speculation about al qaeda's connection there but now we hear pakistan and we hear direct connection to pakistan, the country that harbored osama bin laden. could this have serious national security implications at this point? >> absolutely. because osama bin laden found refuge inside that country undetected allegedly by pakistan security forces for so long and relations with the obama administration have been very strained. it's no secret that during the raid in which he was killed we didn't inform the pakistanis in advance so there's been an ongoing feud and remaining tensions since then. >> there's some suggestion that she may have actually been his terror trainer. he could have radicalized her. when you look right now in this country, there's a debate about the syrian refugees and we hear from the administration they'll be vetted. we don't have to worry about it. when you look at her, she applied for a k-1 visa in
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pakistan. under the laws of the land, she should probably not have been granted that because there was a good possibility she would overstay the visa because she was going to go with this guy. you know and i know they shouldn't have given her a visa. >> absolutely not. for whatever reason they didn't stake out those warning signs in advance. pakistan, i want to point out, is also a huge challenge internationally in terms of migrants. up to 50,000 go to the eu every year to work just this past year, 20,000 of those people were then sent back to pakistan because the eu determined that they entered the country illegally. >> that's one of the cardinal rules. if someone is going to overstay and it looks like they'll overstay, don't give them a visa. we gave her a visa. >> gillian, given your work experience in the white house and your expertise, why would the white house walk this line and not call this what everyone else is seeing it to be which is terror. >> i don't know. i don't really have a rationale.
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>> politics? >> maybe politics. maybe it's a nod to the investigation that's ongoing now. maybe the administration is trying to very carefully stay behind the investigation. >> here's the president yesterday. he wants it both ways. listen. >> it is possible that this was terrorist related, but we don't know. it's also possible that this was workplace related. >> i mean, it's embarrassing to watch. if he were to implicate and say this is a terrorist attack and we'll identify where it came from whether it leads to pakistan or saudi arabia. doesn't that trigger a series of obligations from our government to do something about it? isn't he holding back whatever response would be necessary to get at a threat like this? >> yes. we all know it makes zilch difference to the victims and their families whether it was foreign terrorism, domestic
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terrorism, there are legal obligations in terms of the response from the u.s. government. terrorism versus none has different implications for which departments and agencies in the federal government get involved in the investigation, whether this is a doj matter. >> that's absolutely true but for families i would say they wouldn't want a state of denial from their government. they wouldn't want the government to use this as a reason to back off action that pete pointed out and gillian you just supported. families would want the government to step up and say this is why it is and this is why you no longer have your mom, your brother, your father, your sister and here's what we're going to do about it. that state of denial would go right to the heart of the victims' families in fact. >> it does look like politics are involved here. i mean, we heard so many people from the political left say this is exhibit a why we need more gun laws. yesterday at the white house,
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peter asked josh earnest about the president's suggestion that we need more common sense gun laws because they would have stopped it, right? here's peter and josh. >> does the president really think that common sense gun laws would deter terrorists now that he admitted these two may have been terrorists? >> yes. the president believes that passing common sense gun laws that makes it harder for people with bad intentions to get guns makes the country safer. >> so the president thinks when there are potentially two terrorists sitting around planning a mass murder, they may call it off because president obama has put in place common sense gun laws? >> peter, we're still learning of the precise motives of the individuals who carried out this heinous act of violence yesterday. one thing we do know is that the four firearms they were wielding were legally purchased under the laws that are in place now. that's a fact.
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>> that is not a fact because two of the ars were bought by someone else and given to them. that's incorrect. >> there's got to be a way to keep guns out of the hands of crazy people, right? it doesn't mean that you infringe on the rest of the rights of the american people. it doesn't mean you take guns away from responsible gun owners. >> he showed no signs of being crazy. co-workers thought he was calm. a normal guy. he was not extreme. >> as investigations play out, we always see there's red flags, there's certain steps that these people go through as they become radicalized and we, the government, has to get better on picking up on those signs. >> with all due respect, a new gun law is not going to stop a pipe bomb. >> of course not. >> the house is an ied factory. a bomb factory. if he didn't use guns, he would
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have used pipe bombs. >> neighbors were worried about calling the police for fear of looking like they were racially profiling. >> that's the kind of thing that -- >> don't you think by not calling the enemy by its name you create more environments where citizens can't see something and say something. >> we create an environment of denial that really undercuts our own national security interests. the terrorists are very clear about defining who we are. who the united states is. who americans are and what they despise about our way of life. as long as we refuse to call them out and put a name on them, put a label on them, we're do a disservice. >> this guy is a terrorist. "the daily news" says he's a terrorist but they become political on the front page of this newspaper. he's a terrorist but so are these mass murderers and the head of the nra. you know there's a big
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difference between the nra and terrorism. >> you know, it comes down to again the government has got to do a better job of identifying these people before they have committed mass atrocities. >> this particular guy was in contact on social media with extremists who the fbi was watching. so why wasn't this guy on the fbi radar? >> how could this be a surprise? i don't understand. >> why is it so hard to identify who they are after the fact? that's the problem. identifying them before the fact is a problem. identifying them after the fact is a problem for the white house right now. they've got a book end of issues right now. >> we shared the cover earlier. here's what you're saying about this headline in "the daily news." charles e-mailed us. i challenge "the daily news" to show how many mass murders were done by nra members compared to muslims and further compared to
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democrats but they don't want to answer that. gillian, thank you for joining us. a lot to talk about. it's 7:12 in new york city. shocking news from the world of rock and roll. scott weiland found dead. what police are saying this morning. lea gabrielle was a fighter pilot in the navy and now all military combat jobs will be open to women but lea says it raises questions and you'll want to hear this from here coming up. [vet] two yearly physicals down.
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defense secretary ash carter announcing all combat jobs including infantry units will be open to women beginning next year. >> is this really the right move? lea gabrielle joins us now with unique insight. she served as an intel officer in the u.s. navy. what do you think? >> i want to clarify my background. i did serve as one of the first female combat fighter pilots but i served with a unique s.e.a.l. unit in afghanistan doing intel operations. it brings a different perspective
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what it's like to be inside the most elite special operations forces units. i think if the defense department is trying to push the belly button of the services and say if women cannot do this, tell us why, prove it. that's one thing. at this point we really need to give the people in that petri dish, the people where they train navy s.e.a.l.s, the room and space to really assess women if they go through to determine can they really handle this? is this going to make our military stronger? the real question here is it shouldn't be an equal opportunity employer i don't think. the question is can women make the military the specific units stronger. if the answer is yes, great. if the answer is no, we need to look at what we're doing here. >> i hear terms like petri dish. do you think it's a social experiment? >> it is a social experiment. when i became a combat fighter pilot, i was one of the first women to do it. i had more senior male officers say we don't know if this was a wise decision or not. i said the decision has been made so i want to be part of
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this. there are dynamics that are intangibles that are difficult for anyone to understand if you haven't served in the most elite units. the interpersonal relationships that will happen and way units flow together and then when you look at a feel body and male body, the most absolute best physical specimen of a female body compared to the best physical specimen of a male body, there are differences. when you look at special operations forces, the best of the best, these are not people just passing standards. these are people above and beyond standards. >> as part of this process, the pentagon was supposed to go through service by service and examine capabilities. they did that. all male units are more effective. the integrated teams performed better in two machine gun related tasks and women had a 40% rate of injury compared to 18% for men. i was an infantry man in the
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army. do you feel like in this process the marine corps sought exceptions because they looked at that study and said there are differences between men and women but ash carter said end of discussion. women in all units. do you think is that the right way to handle it? >> this particular study there were some questions that were brought up by this particular study. i think that a civilian running the department of defense has to listen to the people who spend their lives serving our country, wearing a uniform and if people who are training, people who are assessing are saying this won't work, we really have to listen to that. right now we're talking about putting special operation forces around the world. they're doing our nation's bidding. they really have to have room and space. i don't want people who are running the buds program could be concerned about their career if they say it doesn't work. women that are trying it out, extraordinary women. i'm proud of what they've done. >> lives are on the line.
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>> we would love to hear what you think about it. let us know. e-mail us, tweet us, do that stuff. thank you, lea. all eyes are on the wife of syed farook. did she prey on her husband as part of a bigger terror plot? we'll find out next. i have asthma... ...one of many pieces in my life. so when my asthma symptoms kept coming back on my long-term control medicine, i talked to my doctor and found a missing piece in my asthma treatment. once-daily breo prevents asthma symptoms. breo is for adults
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drugs for years. scott weiland dead. > just hours after the latest batch of hillary clinton's e-mails were released, the state department is now overhauling its own e-mail archive system. the new system will automatically separate personal and professional e-mail and permanently store official records. clinton has come under fire for s setting up that private e-mail server in her own home and putting classified documents on it when she was secretary of state. let's head over to steve now. new details about the woman involved in that california massacre. 27-year-old tashfeen malik who we simply do not have a photograph of may have been radicalized by her american born husband, syed farook. if true, what does it say about
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the role women are now playing in radical islam? we have the author of "their jihad, not mine" joins us from d.c. good morning to you. >> good morning. >> first of all, would you agree that this husband and wife were radicalized? >> well, the signs are all there. all you have to do is connect the dots. it's obvious to anyone that would go out and kill 14 innocent people and random is definitely radicalized. >> go down the street and tell the people of the white house because they say it still could be workplace violence. >> i find that very disturbing when the headlines say don't know the motives. how many more attacks on the free world will it take for people to wake up and realize that islamic radicals are at war with the free world and if we don't recognize the problem for what it is, it's like trying to treat a virus, a cancer, with
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baby aspirin. we have to name it and call it for what it is because only then will we find the solutions and we as front line warriors are hurting from this as well are trying to do exactly that. the leadership does not seem to get over political correctness to call the problem for what it is. >> why is that? we are at war with isis and with radicals that want to kill us. >> i would put it the other way around and say that they are at war with you and they declared that on 9/11 and there have been so many attacks and i'm afraid if we don't name the problem and start doing something about the ideology, there are going to be many more attacks on the free world. boston, toronto, paris, san bernardino, how much more does it take for any community leadership to wake up and realize that we have a serious problem and that we need to address it before we can find solutions. >> let me ask you about the dynamic. so this is a husband and wife. there's a story on foxnews.com
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that says that experts feel she may have radicalized him for a variety of reasons. also he had met and chatted online with people who were known to be extremists and stuff like that and yet they were off the radar screen. what does it tell you about the husband and the wife dynamic? >> it tells us that the leaders of this movement, the radical jih jihadists will use anyone to manipulate them and brainwash him. now whether he radicalized her or it was the other way around, jihadists are finding the targets, the people they use for these terrible murderous attacks. the fact there was a woman involved is quite terrifying. if alarm bells didn't go off before, they should certainly go off now. as a muslim woman myself, as a mother, i feel it would take a great deal of brainwashing and manipulation for a woman to do
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what this woman did. but look at the connections. the pakistani connection, the saudi connection. i mean, these are all alarm bells. these are issues that should be addressed. >> look at the fact that this couple dropped their 6-month-old baby at grandma's house and said we're going to the doctor. we'll be back in a little while. what kind of family does that? >> somebody who has been terribly brainwashed to believe that what they're going to do is going to change the world or is going to take them to paradise. this is what i'm saying is that it shouldn't be a discussion about what were motives. motives are obvious. the discussion should be how can we stop it? how can we ensure this does not ever happen again? if we don't wake up and smell the coffee right away, it's going to be a very long, hard battle because the radical islamists have 30 years on us. 30 years of brainwashing from petro dollars of saudi arabia. 30 years of understanding the
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western mindset. the white liberal guilt that does not allow white liberals to address the problem for what it is. it's a war against the west. >> thank you very much. >> my pleasure. it's exactly 7:30 here in new york city. guns, ammo and pipe bombs found in the california killers' home. what does this mean for the investigation going forward. remember the teenager who killed four friends in a drunk driving crash but claimed he had affluentenza. he just got busted again. oose at limits where you earn bonus cash back. or, you could make things easier on yourself. that's right, the quicksilver card from capital one.
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bombs hidden in a back garage. how are the feds handling this investigation? >> live at that house in redlands, california, is fox news contributor and homicide detective formerly, rod wheeler. tell us about where you're at and what you found? >> i'm standing here at the doorway of the suspect's home. let me share with you what happened two days ago when the first uniformed officers arrived here at the house. once they got here, they recognized that the suspects' personal vehicle was still parked on the street where it is still right now. they had to secure that because they didn't know if it was booby trapped. the other thing they had to do was evacuate the surrounding area. these homes are attached. there were people in these houses and police didn't know if this house was rigged with explosives so they had to immediately get these people out of the area. once they did that, they set up what we call a crime scene command post. that crime scene command post is actually right where i'm standing right now. this is where it's been the past two days.
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they just broke it down last night. what they did is had to assign investigators. these are specialized elite investigators as trained to go inside this home, room by room, they were assigned room by room, and then they look for any and all evidence that could be in there that would support their case. >> rod, are they getting into pipes, plumbing, how thorough do they cut into the walls and floors and ceilings? >> that's an excellent question. let me explain how that works. they bring in specialized infrared equipment and that equipment can actually look through walls, especially drywall. so they used this specialized infrared device to look in the walls and ceilings and probably cut out sections of the ceiling so they can take it for testing and sampling and then they do a very expensive search of the floor. what's underneath the floor? again, they're looking for any and all evidence that would support their case. >> all right.
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rod wheeler outside the house in redlands, california. one thing experts have been able to figure out is yesterday at this time we were talking about how they're going to go through their cell phones and look at their tablets if they have them and their computers. as it turns out, about a week before until the day before, this couple out in california were destroying their digital imprint and footprint as well. they had a computer, a pc. they took out the motherboard and hard drives th. they had cell phones that they destroyed. they've been sent to quantico to figure out if there's anything usable on them but on the day of the murders, they had burner phones. >> rod took us around the house last hour. they are talking to neighbors that saw suspicious activity in that garage. >> over at the san bernardino community, they are coming toei
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together to remember the 14 people killed. >> a mother fled iran when she was younger to get away from extremism there. this morning, emotional words from her family. >> and we go live to redlands with more on that story. >> good morning to you. residents in san bernardino see headlines like that on the cover of "the new york daily news" saying god can't fix this and prayers don't matter but they offer other strong words of faithful rebuke. as you comprehend this profound loss let yourself cry know that each tear is love rising to the heavens. everyone in the community rises as they sing "god bless america."
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♪ god bless america land that i love ♪ ♪ stand beside her and guide her ♪ >> i was able to speak with the family of one of the victims. she leaves behind a husband and three children. she fled islamic extremism in iran. was living the american dream with her family working as a health inspector with the county. her husband tells me he's been in law enforcement for 20 years and he calls this islamic terror and nothing else. what's the best thing about your wife you're going to remember? >> everything. there was nothing. she was an angel. my house is her house. everything that she touched bloomed. >> my mom was amazing. she was always there for me. everything that i wanted to do, she was my best friend. i told her everything. it's kind of hard to see all that.
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i have to be strong because she would want me to be strong so that's what i'm going to do. i'm going to be strong. >> when you hear that this was either workplace violence or terrorism or radical islamic terrorism, which one would you classify it as? >> all of the above. from my chiefs to my sergeants and my partners, they've been great. they've been there for me. they've been there all night. personally i want them to pray for my family. pray for my kids that they can do well without their mom. >> just awful irony after fleeing that islamic extremism there in iran following the iranian revolution. if viewers want to help out that family, they set up a gofundme page. she leaves behind a 10, 12 and 15 year old children and they're reeling from all of this.
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the loss of their mother. back to you. >> thank you very much. >> there's one other thing that we have not talked about and that is this killer couple from california. they walked into that room and killed the very people who had thrown a baby shower for them just a couple months ago. how do you do that? >> it shows you the depth of radicalization. those people were so human to them no longer as human themselves. >> you heard that one family's call. pray. pray for our family. we'll pray for your family and all of the victims' family. you have that promise from us. >> that's the latest from california. there is other news, isn't there? >> a couple other things going on i want to tell you about right now. this video will make your heart stop. a drunk driver misses hitting a pickup truck by just an inch. take a look at this. wow. that got wrenching video caught on a sheriff's deputy's dash
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cam. a white car speeds across that intersection. the pickup driver stops in the nick of time and barely gets hit. the driver of the white car under arrest at this hour. the mother of a newborn baby that was found abandoned in a church's nativity scene in the new york area is speaking out this morning. the 18-year-old mother tells "the new york post" that she just arrived from mexico with neither her family nor the baby's father knowing she was pregnant. the teen says she gave birth at home alone and left the child at a church because she knew the child would be safe. she hasn't decided whether she's going to keep that baby boy or not. he's healthy we're glad to report. stunning new images reveal a sea plane lost during the first few minutes on the attack of pearl harbor. divers have been trying since 1994 to explore the wreckage but they couldn't see it in the
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murky water. now with better cameras, they have a clearer picture of that plane. it was broken into three parts. the precise identity of that warplane is still not known. and those of your headlines. terrific work they're doing over there. >> that is something. thank you. it's a pretty nice day out on the streets of new york city considering we've had some wet days. maria is outside live with the foxcast for this friday. >> good morning. we're looking at pretty quiet weather across the eastern u.s., parts of the plains, exception coming up today and into the weekend will be south florida where we'll deal with heavy rain and massive storm system impacting parts of the western u.s. rain stretching from washington state down to california and across the mountains we're dealing with heavy mountain snow as much as one to two feet of snow possible along the higher elevations and we are going to be seeing a break in the action late tonight and into tomorrow morning but then the next storm system arrives. a very active pattern right now across the west. you can see we have winter
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weather advisories in effect and winter storm warnings anywhere from california into western parts of montana so active pattern continues across the west. >> thank you, maria. about 18 minutes to the top of the hour. we've been showing you the california terror couple outside their home which was an ied factory. huge stockpile of ammo and bombs found inside. what does this tell us? a former fbi agent joins us next. americans go through fire drills all the time. should we be training for active shooter situations instead? the exact tips you need to know next. the cold truth is... if a cold keeps you up at night you can't just catch up on sleep the next day. new alka-seltzer plus night cold & cough liquid relieves tough cold symptoms and quiets coughs for up to 8 hours... ...to help you sleep at night. new alka-seltzer plus night liquid. the first gummy multivitamin... ...from centrum.
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and if you're pregnant or planning to be. ask your doctor about otezla today. otezla. show more of you. it begins from the the second we're born.er. because, healthier doesn't happen all by itself. it needs to be earned every day. using wellness to keep away illness. and believing a single life can be made better by millions of others. as a health services and innovation company optum powers modern healthcare by connecting every part of it. so while the world keeps searching for healthier we're here to make healthier happen. new details emerging this morning about the arsenal amassed by syed farook and
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tashfeen malik. they had thousands of rounds of ammo in addition to what was found on the scene of their fatal shootout with law enforcement. were they planning on something much larger? we're trying to find out. joining us to talk about that is former fbi agent manny gomez. thanks for taking the time. you have spent time on scenes like this. what's the first thing you're looking for to determine whether this was part of larger plot or just an isolated islamic attack? >> any documents, nep reference to a potential attack. i know they've been scrubbing their social media, phones, e-mails, talking to their neighbors as you mentioned before and basically they want to see if they had a plan. the sheer evidence, the number of ieds, pipe bombs, number of rounds, number of weapons indicates that they had a larger plan in mind and this perhaps was triggered prematurely by this attack. it just seems to me that they had too much going on for this to have been just a random act.
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>> that trade craft, erasing of hard drives, cell phones, drop phones, how much does that tell us about the level of sophistication and potential outside assistance? >> it tells us that these people were not working alone. they must have had some sort of training, received resources, information, they were not acting alone. the fact that they traveled abroad saudi arabia, pakistan, several times also in the last few years indicates that these people were not -- >> there are symbols they may not have been working alone. reports of other men coming to the garage where the ied explosives were found and resources. it would take $30,000 to amass the weaponry explosives they had. how would they track down those men and the money trail here? >> we have already people that have told us about these neighbors. so now fbi, local law enfor enforceme
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enforcement, they're going house to house. who are they and what the tenants backgrounds are. they're working with saudi arabia intelligence as well to discern what this guy was doing over there while he was there and who was he with, who was he talking to, who he was associating with. >> we've heard about connections to either saudi arabia or pakistan. would we get full cooperation at this point from those intelligence services? >> again, intelligence services like ours are very greedy and like to hold our information very close to the vest. in the case like this, it concerns them as well. because now we're looking at them as a potential nest for terrorist activity. it behooves them to try to help us out as much as possible. >> i know you're on a lot of sites like this and here in new york on 9/11 so you've seen the worst of the worst in terrorism. thanks for bringing your expertise to us and thank you for what you've done for this country. coming up, in active shoote eee
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that's why if we're ever late for an appointment, we'll credit your account $20. it's our promise to you. 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. >> and i have a feeling that within the new year there could possibly be another one in america, possibly two in europe. it's a feeling i have. these people are not going to stop. we have christmas. that's what they want to destroy. we have celebrations for new year. these are things where they want to hit us and in 2016 it's going to be a very bad year for all of us. >> wow. haunting words of warning from former jihadist turned cia mole.
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what would you do to survive a shooting like this? pete has gone through the exact training. what can we take from this and everyone is calling this a new normal. what do we need to know? >> you're initial instincts are it's a fight or flight instinct. everyone's overwhelming initial reaction is flight. if you're not trained to fight back in the immediate moment, there are a series of steps you're going to want to take. the fbi talks about run, hide, fight. if you have the ability to flee the scene, you should and take others with you. if you can hide, give the shooter the impression there's nobody in there. then if you need to fight, you have to use the term we use in the military is violence of action. you need to fight and commit to that fight if you're going to take down someone who is heavily armed, maybe hopped up on drugs. a lot of training i got was in afghanistan. we were having problems. you have to bring violence.
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>> is this a new fire drill. when you say run, hide, fight. i'm thinking stop, drop and roll is what we learned. are kids supposed to go through this training? are schools supposed to go through this training? >> i think we'll see more of it. we have seen fire drills as a response. part of run, hide, fight is having a plan. sitting at your desk being where you are saying if this is where i would hide and what i would use to defend myself if i needed to. if you react in the moment, those precious seconds could be the difference between life and death. >> after paris, we had a conversation with our kids. it was, like, okay, if you're in a restaurant. that was a driveby. if you are at a concert or in large group of people, what do you do? how many people's stories do we hear from paris of where they survived because they played dead and so i said to the kids,
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you know, maybe you hear something, you drop down and play dead unless you can get the heck out of there. >> there is secenario if you ar in the cone of fire and there are others next to you down and hurt. if you're away from the gunfire, playing dead won't fake someone like that out. you have to figure out one or two other options. doesn't it bring back duck and cover days of potential nuclear armageddon with the soviet union. you never know. as parents, i want to prepare my kids. >> you know what? because we're talking about it and because we're worried about it, the terrorism thing is working. unfortunately. >> there's a difference between being prepared and being scared and worried. >> vigilance is different than cowereri cowering in fear. >> be prepared like the boy scouts. >> great work, pete. all eyes are on the wife of syed farook.
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good morning to you. new information coming out about the killer couples' plan for murder. he was radicalized. were they plotting something even bigger? for the first time we hear from the sister of syed farook, the shooter. what she wants the world to know. you'll hear it in a minute. >> and tashfeen malik was here on a k-1 visa. how easy are they to get? we'll find out. "fox & friends" starts right now.
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we're getting right to that fox news alert for you this friday morning. a terrifying supply of arsenal found inside the home of the killer couple accused of murdering 14 people in san bernardino. this morning syed farook's sister is speaking out saying she's angry. >> we go outside the couple's home with more. good morning, anna. >> reporter: good morning to you. good morning to all of you at home. the attorney for the family of 28-year-old syed farook is talking to local reporters and saying that there may have been some comments that sparked this massacre about his facial hair. apparently there were comments making fun of him over the last month or so also folks there at the county health inspector's office mentioned they noticed him growing out that beard and
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that was the only thing out of the ordinary that they really noticed. we're also learning more about farook's family. here's his sister. listen. >> i can never imagine my brother or my sister-in-law doing something like this. >> makes us very upset and angry. how can they leave a 6-month-old daughter? >> he put us in this predicament. we can't imagine the loss that everyone has gone through. all of the people that were injured. our thoughts and praise are going out to them. >> we're also hearing reports that farook's brother served on the "uss enterprise" in the navy for four years. he's been awarded multiple anti-terror medals. what a stark contrast there. we're also getting an inside look at the scene from the first law enforcement officer arriving at wednesday's massacre. >> i did the job that i was supposed to do. my job is to go in there and people don't call the polic because they're having a great day. they call because there's
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tragedy going on. this was tragedy that i have never experienced in my career. and that i don't think most officers do. >> reporter: syed farook did not have a criminal record but fbi investigators are saying that he did have contact with some islamic extremists that have been on their radar. also, we're learning that his wife, 27-year-old tashfeen malik was here on a visa. the couple deleted their e-mail accounts just a day before all of this unfolded. and they also destroyed hard drives, really trying to delete that internet footprint but the fbi continues to investigate all of that. back to you. >> thank you very much. joining us right now, geraldo and the judge as well. that sounds like a typical couple involved in workplace violence, doesn't it? >> no doubt in my mind but this
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was a homegrown extremists. this person definitely radicalized himself. this falls into the category of islamic extremism. to me, i don't think there's a close call about it. >> there is at the white house. >> that's their problem. my second sentence is it doesn't matter whether motivation is islamic extremism or anti-abortionism or racism or sexual impotence or whatever it is, the fact of the matter is these people can get their hands on these deadly weapons and we are all vulnerable. i think we have to heed what the major was saying in the previous segment. run if you can. hide if you can. fight if you have to. i think that america is a much different place. we have to be vigilant. this is our future. they want to destroy whatever their cause and whatever their justification. they want blood and mayhem and disruption of civilization. >> judge, we thank you for
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joining us here. what's your assessment of your relationship that we're seeing in this terror twosome. this is a radicalized relationship. >> i think that what this tells us is that all of the ideas and preconceptions we have about the women are subservient and won't do anything like this is not accurate. there are jihadists out there that want to kill us and want to kill all of us because of our way of life. we can't excuse them. we can't let them in on these visas that are rubber stamps. we have to understand that we can no longer be politically correct. the neighbors said we saw these they looked like muslims bringing in boxes and we didn't want to say anything because we didn't want to be politically incorrect. that's hogwash. we're in a new time right now and time demands that we say something. everything that starts with this white house with we can't call a muslim terrorists is intimidating us to the point where we're afraid to say something because the white
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house is saying we shouldn't. that's where we're starting. that's the problem. >> it's very true. political correctness on top of this. you mentioned k-1 visas and how she got here. we have information we'll put up on the screen about these k-1 visas. if you marry your fiance within 90 days of entering the u.s., you can qualify and both parties are legally free to marry. if you met in person at least once within two years of filing your petition. in the world we live in today, we can have the kind of visa programs like this seem to be very wide open. >> they are. the only reason i hesitate is that i remember the movie with there's no doubt but fiance visas are used to defraud the immigration system. there are many marriages of convenience and have historically been. my only caution is if you are
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going to stop it from muslim world, you have to stop it for everybody. and again, i come back to the haunting fact that whether it was bolder or aurora or sandy hook or tucson, homegrown extremism is the issue. we want to choke it off wherever we can and we have to if we see something, say something but we have to understand that the peril does not come from this one segment. >> this woman should not have got a visa in the faiirst place. if you know someone will overstay the visa, you don't give it to them. now we have hundreds of thousands of people who are coming into this country every year including 10,000 syrian refugees and we heard don't worry, we're going to vet them. this woman was vetted. a real good possibility she came into this country and radicalized this guy. >> this is a perfect example of our government having the inability to monitor who is coming in. as i said before, there's no way
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to vet a syrian refugee. what are you going to do? call 1-800-assad. we have muhammad here. is he clean? if we do it for muslims, we have to do it for the rest of the world. i agree you. let's not be stupid. the people who are killing us and who are dead set on killing us to the point they are willing to die themselves are muslim jihadists. >> judge, you and i have been to so many events where we were hosted by lebanese and syrians. >> i am lebanese. i have no problem with that. >> couldn't we vet them? couldn't we with care vet them those people with whom we have broken bread? >> you are misconstruing what i'm saying. what we have are people coming here on rubber stamp visas. my family, your family came here legally. even if they came illegally, there was no reason to question them. right now we're at war. they are at war with us.
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they want to kill us. if i can't say -- >> we're at war with other kinds of extremists. like the community college where eight students were killed. that guy was not a muslim. that happened just weeks ago. >> i prosecuted people who weren't muslim for murder but right now it doesn't matter who you are or who i am. what's happening is the muslim jihadists want to kill us. >> i see it as a spectrum of danger. there's a spectrum of danger. >> this man served on the 101st airborne. he sees an enemy this time it's the iraqis perhaps. that time it was the afghans. >> who were people killing us? >> the anti-abortion planned parenthood guy, he killed a cop. he killed an iraqi veteran. he killed a mother with small children. >> there's a drug kingpen that killed somebody last night in america. >> why is it the gun store in america is open 24/7? >> because of the second
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amendment. >> with all due respect, you have alluded to the major. you have something to add here. is there a balance to be drawn here? is there a line to be drawn here? what's the middle ground and what do you see? >> you have to be smart about the fact that we deal with an ideology that leverages these weapons to terrorize our people. is it really all the same? whether it's mass shooters of other motivations are, radical islamists or head of the nra, they're all responsible. >> those parents of those 6 year olds in sandy hook, it was all the same to them. it was the same to gabby giffords in tucson, arizona. it was the same to james holmes' victims inside that aurora movie theater. >> that's a mental health issue as a gun issue. >> and as you know, the political society is at war with these anarchists.
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>> they're islamists. >> some are anti-abortionists, some are racists like in charleston, south carolina. he killed poor black people praying. >> muslim jihadists took down -- >> how about stalin? >> we're talking about america. let's talk about america. they're coming here to kill us. don't use guns and the nra or anything else to stop me from protecting myself. >> 350 million guns in this country. 10 million more manufactured every year. it's easier to get a gun license than a car license. guns are not registered. >> the reason we have guns is to protect ourselves. >> while people are on political left -- >> i'm not a left -- i want to keep my kids safe. >> they're saying we need more gun laws. gun laws would not have stopped
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pipe bombs. this house was an ied factory. if they weren't going to kill people with guns, they were going to blow them up. >> yesterday we talked to a witness standing outside of this attack when he heard 12 pops of a gun go off. this is a debate for a reason. it's a legitimate debate. this is a smart debate that we have here. we thank you for your time. glad you're back safely and that your family is safe. judge, we loved having you here as well. >> this is a hot couch this morning for sure. >> wouldn't be geraldo if we weren't arguing with him. >> are police any closer to finding a motive.ive rod wheele through the couple's house next. all military combat jobs are open to women. is that a good idea? lea has a percespective you may not expect. she joins us live coming up. e qd from capital one
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jeb bufrom our president:h you will not hear we are at war with radical islamic terrorism. it is the struggle that will determine the fate of the free world. the united states should not delay in leading a global coalition to take out isis with overwhelming force. their aim is our total destruction. we can't withdraw from this threat or negotiate with it. we have but one choice: to defeat it. vo: right to rise usa is responsible for the content of this message.
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point? >> reporter: there was a whole lot found here at the home. yesterday when i was here, this actual spot where i'm standing now is the actual fbi's crime scene search units headquarters right here. actually right now i'm standing in front of the door of the suspects' home. as you can see, the suspects' home is up the street. that's the bay window that leads to the inside of the home of the suspects. they had to go through that window and they went through other areas but before they went in, they had to make sure that there were no explosives or other devices that were set to go off to cause them injury. this is a community where all of the homes pretty much look the
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same. if you can look back beyond this fence here, they all have this overhead part like a roof. once they secured the actual home, i want to point something else out, the actual garage. what you notice is this garage as all in this area are detached. for a criminal that's an ideal situation. why is that? because what happens is by it being detached, they can go inside the garage as you can closely see here, close the door, continue to do what they were doing and according to authorities in this case they were building pipe bombs and other devices inside the garage. and then the door by it being closed was their shield. so as you can possibly see, you know, this area here was really under a lot of activity yesterday and i tell you, in that garage, the amount of artillery that the fbi were able to find and to take in as evidence, it was unbelievable, guys. i couldn't even believe it myself. they were bringing out boxes and bags of all kinds of devices and
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artillery. it was remarkable. >> it looks like they probably had enough for a second attack. yesterday when you joined us, you told us about how some neighbors there in that redlands, california, neighborhood had seen a number of strange men in and out of the garage along with a guy who lived there. >> reporter: that's right. some of the neighbors here did report to the police that they saw a lot of strange guys coming and going out of that garage. let me tell you, this is terrorism. you don't have to be a rocket scientists. from what i have a seen real quickly since i've been here, guys, this is the real deal. we have to address it for what it is otherwise we're destined to repeat it. >> you're right. >> thanks for reporting there today and this morning. >> thank you. now coming up, shocking news overnight. the former front man for the stone temple pilots is dead. what police are saying. and all military combat jobs now open to women. before she was on fox news, lea
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gabrielle was a navy fighter pilot amongst other things. she says there are still more questions we need to answer. wee talk with her next. opinions. there's no shortage in this world. who do you trust? whose analysis is accurate? how do you make sense of it all? a simple, unbiased stock score consolidated from the opinions of independent analysts... is that too much to ask? nope. equity summary score, powered by starmine, will help you execute your ideas with speed and conviction. and it's only on fidelity.com. open an account and find more of the expertise you need to be a better investor.
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good morning. we're back now with a fox news alert. some major stories making headlines this morning. a maryland police officer shot in the face by a 21-year-old man. that officer is now in stable condition. a massive manhunt is now under way for that man. police say he shot a ten-year veteran of the force when the officer was called to investigate suspicious activity. he is believed to be armed and dangerous. some schools in that area are delayed today. a tragedy in rock 'n' roll.
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scott weiland is dead this morning. ♪ the singer known for that sound was found on his tour bus just before his band was set to perform in minnesota. the cause of his death is not yet known. the iconic grunge rocker has struggled with drugs for years and is now dead at 48 years old. germany's parliament approving plans to send reconnaissance planes and 1,200 support personnel to the middle east but will not actively engage in combat. those are your headlines. see you back here in just a bit. >> defense secretary ash carter announcing all combat jobs including infantry units will be open to women beginning next year. >> so is this really the right move? >> fox news correspondent lea gabrielle joins us now with unique insight. she served as a fighter pilot pictured there. she was also an intel operations
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officer in the u.s. navy working with the navy s.e.a.l.s. what do you think? >> you know, i understand the defense department basically pushing the belly button of the services saying if combat roles can't be open to women, explain why. come up with a really good argument. the reason i say that is because it does help with career progression if you are someone that served in combat. so to say we'll close all of the combat roles to women, when women have been finding themselves in combat roles over the last decade, it's good to ask that question and put pressure on services. at this point places like special operations like navy s.e.a.l.s and army green berets need to be given the room and space to say no if they need to. if this will not work for them, they need to be respected because they're dedicating their lives to doing our nation's bidding in the harshest, most horrible areas of the world. they need to be able to do their job and do it well. if we can't show that we're going to make those areas of the
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military stronger by having women, then the answer is we're not making it stronger and we're making it weaker and that's the question that needs to be answered and need the space to answer it. >> you make that argument as someone that's informed on this topic and wants to give elite units the latitude. that's not what ash carter did. he did a top down women open in all roles. they want to keep the same standards and do you trust that this pentagon that has been known for social engineering is really going to maintain those standards as opposed to find ways to let people in that may lower that standard? >> that's always the question that's asked when you open different parts of the services to women is are the standards going to change. we really don't know the answer to that. i know the people who are serving right now would say we can't do it. this is not an equal opportunity employer. we're not talking about getting a job at the bank or getting a job at a law firm or at a shop on main street. we're talking about the people who do our nation's bidding, they have to be able to protect our country. >> the marine corps study found this in research that all male units are more effective
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outperforming gender integrated units on 69% of the tasks. they perform better in two machine gun related tasks. women have a 40.5% rate of injury compared to 18.8% for men but you say women can play a specific and strong role in the military that some may be overlooking. >> i'm glad you brought that up. we do add things in the military that men don't add and there are things that women are doing in support of special operation rights now that we're not going to talk about and people don't need to know about but they are doing things that are special and so there are roles for women. let's not try to act like we're all the same. we're not. we physically are different. there are some things that are going to be better for men than women. i think that that's okay. >> we asked folks what they thought and we have an e-mail from amber who is a national guard vet. i fully believe that females should if they have the ability mentally and physically to fight and train next to our brothers in arms. >> and dennis vietnam veteran says i have no problem with
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women in the military but they should not be in combat. i know today women feel they can do it. i don't disagree. on the front lines, no. that's the tough question. i was infantry officer on the ground in iraq. having all men in the unit minimizes variables. do you think it could complicate things in combat? >> there are so many intangibles. i served with an elite s.e.a.l. team on the inside and there are things that i saw and it changed my perspective. i was a fighter pilot. one of the first females doing that. that was a social experiment. but then i also served with the s.e.a.l. team and things i saw changed my perspective. there are intangibles that unless you've been in that environment, you don't understand. >> meaning you went into it thinking yes and came out of it feeling not always? >> i felt a lot more towards the idea that women could be s.e.a.l.s but then after serving with them i saw what their life is like and what they're doing. i saw the dynamics of what they're doing. even when going through s.e.a.l.
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training, sometimes those guys put together a list of who does not fit in with them and pass it to the instructors. i know this from guys who have gone through b.u.d.s. they say maybe the person can pass the test but they're not a good fit. we have to be a team. there's that cohesion that's so important. i just have such a respect for women who have served. so many women have put their lives on the line and fought and died for our country over the past decade of war. i don't want to underestimate how important their service is. i just think we should recognize we're different. >> your point of view is very important. that's why we had you on. thank you. coming up, kids get fire drills all the time. they have them in schools. should they get active shooter training in addition to that we'll show you some who believe that they should and are. president obama said the san bernardino shooters may or may not be terrorists. >> it is possible that this was terrorist related.
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but we don't know. >> presidential candidate marco rubio here with reaction to that next. >> this should be good. on my long-term control medicine, i talked to my doctor and found a missing piece in my asthma treatment. once-daily breo prevents asthma symptoms. breo is for adults with asthma not well controlled on a long-term asthma control medicine, like an inhaled corticosteroid. breo won't replace a rescue inhaler for sudden breathing problems. breo opens up airways to help improve breathing for a full 24 hours. breo contains a type of medicine that increases the risk of death from asthma problems and may increase the risk of hospitalization in children and adolescents. breo is not for people whose asthma is well controlled on a long-term asthma control medicine, like an inhaled corticosteroid. once your asthma is well controlled, your doctor will decide if you can stop breo and prescribe a different asthma control medicine, like an inhaled corticosteroid. do not take breo more than prescribed. see your doctor if your asthma does not improve or gets worse.o could be a missing piece for you. see if you're eligible for
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most common side effect is nausea. i can't believe i did it. i quit smoking. ask your doctor if chantix is right for you. >> rick, say good morning to marco rubio who is joining us here on the couch. >> good morning. what an honor to talk to you right now. >> good morning. >> so last year, rick, you had terrible conditions. this year looks great. what's the plan? >> i tell you what, i may be able to take off the coat. it's warm right now, which is unheard of. it's beautiful. the plan is i'm going to go over this building. fool me once, shame on you. this is like fool me six times i
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think at this point. i'm not quite sure it's a good idea. senator, i had planned a trip to miami. i'm going straight to miami after this. i wanted a reward to go to warm florida. >> do you need a ride to the airport? you can't repel there? >> we'll keep an eye on you. you'll have me holding my breath again. >> we'll see you in a minute. >> down 350-foot face of that in just a moment. right now, senator, we have a bunch of stuff to talk about. heather is going to start off with the economy. >> yes. new jobs numbers just released for the month of november. the report just came out a few moments ago from the bureau of labor statistics. u.s. economy adding 211,000 jobs last month. that's more than expected less than 271,000 added in october. the nation's unemployment rate remaining at 5.0%, the same as
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october. why should you avoid road rage? that's a question we're asking this morning. in miami, could you get shot. take a look at the shocking video coming out of that state of florida. a driver gets out of his rolls-royce at a red light. he throws a punch before the other driver shoots him in the chest and then speeds away. that man now hospitalized in stable condition. the gunman is on the loose. that shooting stemmed from an earlier argument between those two drivers. they are just in fifth grade but they were ready to take revenge on their school with a plot to blow it up. parents in new jersey at an elementary school say they are outraged officials delayed telling them about this deadly plan. police detained the students on a field trip after school and staff found suspicious letters detailing the attack. listen to this. >> text messages, everything but for something like this i get no phone call and i got four kids in this school. how is that even possible? >> the kids were released to
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their parents. no charges have been filed but all five were suspended. and she's a suspected drug kingpin and her smiling mug shot went viral. now we know that this 19-year-old's dad is a veteran dea agent. she was picked up last month in texas for hoarding and then selling a huge amount of pot, cocaine and also meth and other drugs out of her college apartment. she was let loose on a bond of $38,000. she faces several drug felony charges and those are your headlines. i'll see you back here soon. >> thank you very much. president obama still refusing to call the san bernardino shootings a terror attack. take a listen. >> it is possible that this was terrorist related, but we don't know. it's also possible that this was workplace related. >> senator marco rubio who is running for president joins us right now. what do you make of that? >> i understand why he wants to
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be cautious. this was not workplace related other than the fact the person returned to their workplace and killed people there. they possessed dozens of pipe bombs. my sense is that these people were clearly planning a broader attack. he went back and said let's start it now because i'm upset. it may have been their original target. irrespective the evidence will show these were clearly people that had been radicalized and planning something broader. >> they wiped their digital footprint clean days earlier. they broke their phones. days in advance. they dropped their baby off with grandma an hour or so earlier. clearly this was in the making. >> they were clearly planning something. you don't build pipe bombs and set up booby traps unless you're planning something. i think the evidence is pointing in that direction. >> don't you think that someone saying a measured approach by
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the president is symptomatic of a state of denial he's in? >> when this first came out first thing they started talking about was gun control and gun control. i don't hear anybody talking about bomb control. they put bombs and left bombs behind on the scene of attack intending to kill even more people than they did with guns. it's symptomatic of the broader issue an hope that none of this is terror related because he wants this argument to be we have this under control. we do not have this under control. it is not contained. every time one of these incidents occurs, it proves that. you can see in the original reaction they were hoping this was just another one of these incidents and instead it's turned into increasingly likely a terrorist attack. >> it leads to uncertainty among americans. a poll came out recently saying that homegrown jihadists feel like those are a greater threat than foreign born when asked about that they feel that homegrown 58% were a greater threat than radicalized visitors
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or refugees. how do you quell this concern that we have an enemy of radical islamist among us. >> the homegrown violent extremists is the biggest danger we face. it's the likeliest way isis or al qaeda will attack our country and hardest to disrupt because these are not individuals that would have wound up on any data base. these two people, these monsters that conducted this terrorist attack, are not people who would have known anything about until they did this. >> you know what? as we're learning more about the woman and some suggestion she may have actually radicalized him, they haven't released it yet, she was here initially on a visa. as we talk about what to do with the up to 10,000 syrian refugees who we're going to let into this country and we're being assured that we're doing all sorts of background checks, they did a background check into this woman. she wound up with a visa, one of those fiance visas. it's a rubber stamp.
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they knew she would overstay. >> she wouldn't have wound up on a data base. the biggest challenge is she came in on a visa but her husband was a u.s. citizen even born in the united states, raised here. the point is think about what a threat that poses. individuals that lived among us, grown up here, never been radical and suddenly within a number of months become not just r radicalized but turn that into action. >> the focus is on gun control. does gun control in your mind solve this problem? >> it doesn't. first of all, criminals will always have access to weapons. that's why it's important that law abiding citizens have access to the ability to protect themselves. california, for example, has strict gun laws. france has very strict gun laws. so the existing gun laws and even all of the proposals that the left are putting out, they were in place and none of them would have disrupted not just the attack in san bernardino but none of the other major attacks we've seen over the last three
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years in this country. these laws have never been proven to do anything to reduce gun violence. >> senator, what's the president need to do opposed to pointing to guns right now at this time of great uncertainty with paris and now california, to not just quell the fears but really address this threat. >> we need to rebuild our intelligence capabilities substantially diminished over the last few years because of a bill that passed a few months ago including some republicans voted for including people running for president. beyond it, you must destroy isis. you have to be clear that we're at war with isis. we're going to destroy their ability to spew propaganda and put out their online publication and to inspire people to attack us. we're at war with jihadists. we need to put an end to their ability to conduct operations or to inspire people to conduct operations. that's why ultimately we must defeat them. they must be defeated in syria, irk a iraq and libya where they put this propaganda out from. >> yesterday a headline in "the
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daily news" that said god isn't fixing this. today there's a headline that shows the killer. it said "he's a terrorist." if we can put it up for another second longer. it shows a number of mass murderers and then the guy who runs the nra. he's a terrorist, too. >> well, again, this is typical of what you see in left wing media. they all jump to this conclusion and criticized and mocked republicans that talked about prayers and thoughts with the family. you saw that in the headline yesterday. they identify someone involved in an organization that i happen to be a member of and have been a member of for a long time as equivalent to terrorists. this is outrage you see from the left. look at within seconds, within minutes of this attack, you had multiple left wing democrats whether senators or hillary clinton out there talking about gun control as if somehow it would have done anything to prevent this attack. no consequences for having been
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wrong on it. this is a terror attack. these individuals were plotting to kill as many people as possible not just with guns but with pipe bombs and we need to understand this crisis for what it is. we're at war with radical jihadists. >> all right. senator marco rubio, we know you are really busy these days. thank you for stopping by. >> thank you for your time today, senator. coming up next on this friday, kids get fire drills all the time. should they get active shooter drills, too? we'll show you some who are coming up. you're late for work. you grab your 10-gallon jug of coffee, and back out of the garage.
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after what happened in paris three weeks ago today, a lot of parents have talked to their children about if you're in a situation where you're in a group of people and somebody starts shooting, what do you do? >> you wonder how this can translate when it happens with god forbid kids, at a concert, school, there are a bunch of
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organizations and people getting this training right to kids and doing it. mike brown of peach tree city police department says it's time in fact to do live and active shooter drills all over the place. >> we do fire drills all the time. it's time to do some active shooter violence drill. no kid has been killed in a school in a fire in 50 years but they do fire drills every month. we need to make sure we do that in our businesses, our churches, our community. >> so here's the thing. when our kids ask us, you know, they see a terror attack and they go would that happen at my school, we say no, that's never going to happen at your school. at the same time if we teach them about active shooter drills where it's, like, if this happens or when it happens, do that, it might be troubling to kids but then again it could save their lives. >> key is language. for younger kids simplifying language. bad guy. they look like this. what do you do. i remember take fire drills for example. if in a fire, you stop, drop and
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roll. if it's practical and you're prepared and not scared and that's what you're teaching in mindset of kids. what steps do they need to know? >> i know my kids' school they do have a protocol for active shooter that's quite simple. it's not complex. it's shutting doors. shutting off lights. signals to hallway if room is full or empty. kids depending on grade limit have different understandings. my 5 year old doesn't understand the nature of that active shooter drill but as they get older, they'll drill in those three basic things. you hide, run or fight. >> having gone through training yourself, what does it do when you are trained or not trained? you say it could lead to chaos if you're not trained. this could lead to some sort of organized or effective response and eventually we hope would save lives. >> getting out of there is what people are going to try to do.
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if you do have some level of training or you have a plan in your workplace, then your escape route might be effective and you may be able to bring other people with you and your ability to hide could be effective out of sight and detract from a shooter. your ability to fight may be strong enough to stop this person. they have a weapon. you probably don't unless you're armed. by the way, that's the best way to protect yourself in a workplace is if you have the ability to carry and conceal, you do. you bring a gun and not a knife to a gun fight. violence of action and having a plan is what you need to do if you don't have any other option. >> that's why a lot of parents have kids take karate lessons. >> before santa comes down the roof, he'll repel down a building. >> let's check in with bill for what's coming up at the top of the hour. >> great braver every year, doesn't he? >> he does.
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good friday to you. new information this morning on attacks in california. what we're learning about the wife and did a pc society overlook the plot? we'll tell you what we know on that. brand new polling numbers. guess where donald trump is this morning and no republican wins the white house without winning ohio and ohio governor john kasich is here to make his case. we'll see you in ten minutes. when a moment turns romantic why pause to take a pill? or stop to find a bathroom? cialis for daily use is approved to treat both erectile dysfunction and the urinary symptoms of bph, like needing to go frequently, day or night. tell your doctor about all your medical conditions and medicines, and ask if your heart is healthy enough for sex. do not take cialis if you take nitrates for chest pain,
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the toughest. are you ready to do it? who are you with? >> does anyone else have any traditions at the holidays that they wish weren't traditions? this has become one of mine. somehow, yeah, i have the general manager of the yankees already down on the other side of the wall. and yogi berra's granddaughter, her first time doing this. she did a practice run this morning. she didn't love it. >> first step is the most scary. >> all right. we're watching, rick. be careful. i don't know that that's true. i feel like all of them are scary. okay. here we are. who is talking? who is that? >> that's pete. >> here we go.
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>> i always like to see if we get yankees news while he's dangling here. what are you doing. it has to be the season. you're making trades. give us some information. i always end up finding out the afternoon that we've done this that you did a huge trade that makes the news and i can't believe we couldn't get it out of you now. >> thanks to channel 5 in new york for the helicopter shot. you guys are in a helicopter shot this year. >> we're so close together. i don't know you that well. >> we're getting to know each other quite well. >> rick, does the adrenaline ever stop. this is your fifth year. do you feel it every time? >> yeah. i feel it. >> i'm watching lindsey berra there. >> i feel like i'm stuck. >> you see lindsey. what a month for your family. your grandfather, yogi berra,
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was just honored with presidential medal of freedom. and you're continuing a most incredible family tradition now. >> i don't know there's a berra family tradition of jumping off buildings. >> it is now. >> it is now maybe. yeah. >> once you get roped into this, roped in, you're in. >> i'm scared. we're getting through it. >> rick, we're going to take a break. we'll be back in a moment. before we do that, how about a jump out live from stamford. >> all right. one jump out. >> not bad. all right. more with rick from connecticut in two minutes.
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>> that's a good one. >> is that scary? >> i heard grunting. that's impressive. >> repelling down 22 stories. a big tradition here as we come to know it. >> that will continue in the after show. bill: good morning, everybody. they took 14 insen -- innocent s but it appeared they were hell bent on so much more. they had 6,000 round of ammunition and multiple weapons. martha: good morning, everybody. i'm martha maccallum. the investigators digging into
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