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tv   Shepard Smith Reporting  FOX News  June 1, 2016 12:00pm-1:01pm PDT

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it's noon in los angeles and the lock down at ucla continues. i'm shepard smith in new york and this is "shepard smith reportin reporting". here's what we know, two people are dead inside an engineering building on the campus of ucla. engineering building 4, surrounded by parking lot number 9. it's as clenicinical as that. here's what we believe happened from the reporting of authorities and otherwise. the police chief has indicated that the shooter may be among the dead. again, two men dead inside the engineering building there on campus. there is nothing to indicate at this moment there are other suspects. and at this moment there is nothing to indicate that there are other victims.
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that said, the lock down remains -- i should say the order to shelter in place at ucla is still in effect. we've just learned all final exams scheduled for today at ucla have been cancelled. they will be rescheduled no doubt. 43,177 students at ucla. plus staff and professors and all you need to make the plus run can top 70,000 people on that campus. and right now, all of it is in lock down as are two nearby elementary schools and other areas. police from lapd are still on tactical alert. but it appears that this is a murder/suicide. authorities say they will hold a news conference we believe in the next eight to nine minutes. to begin things let's get to trace gallagher in los angeles, trace? >> we have covered so many of these things. very important is the language police officers use. we were hearing active shooter
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active shooter. about an hour into this they were saying just because there's a big force doesn't mean there's something big going on. and then the news conference with the ucla campus police a short time ago. al the active shooter phrase was replaced with an active investigation. the best indication this is no longer an active shooter investigation is the fact a short time ago, they started walking students out of the science building which is right next to the engineering building where the double shooting actually happened. and we know from history you never walk students out of something you believe is an active shooter situation. so now we've also had several reports of the handgun found and the suicide note found. the police have not confirmed that to us. we expect when the lapd chief comes before the microphones he will get several questions about that. the finals you mentioned are
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cannel cancelled for the remainder of the day. graduation are next thursday and friday. you're talking about almost 50,000 students. it takes quite a while. the ceremony is next friday. it's unclear if that will be moved. you mentioned there is still lock down in place. as far as we know the students inside the class rooms and dormitories have not been told they are free to walk about the campus. because at last check they were still inside the classrooms. one student said he's been under a desk for the better part of two hours. if we're being notified that this is a murder/suicide, the students have not. westwood is still apparently on lockdown, we can tell you from people we know that barriers in the surrounding areas have been lifted. people are being allowed back towards the businesses which is a very good sign they do not believe an active shooter is
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there. although we just got off the phone with lapd and they're still phrasing this as looking for a suspect. charlie beck speaks in six or seven minutes. we'll get more information about what happened inside building engineering building number 4 on the campus of ucla. >> thanks so much. look here, these pictures tell a story. you can often get a sense for where you stand in a situation like this by watching the movement of authorities and you saw so many of them had their helmets off, their shields down, their guns down. there are indications now hopefully, hopefully it's true, that this is over. it's not over until the authorities say so. our jonathan hunt is on scene at ucla. jonathan, to you. >> we're just waiting now for lapd police chief charlie beck to address us at the microphones right behind me here.
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he, if anybody will be the person who tells us this is over. but from experience, i hesitate to get ahead of the police chief, this certainly has the feeling that it is over at this point. we have seen a lot of fbi agents leaving the scene, helmets off, weapons down. it is increasingly appearing to us that this was, indeed, a murder/suicide. we have the ucla police chief. they have their own police force here. we were addressed a short time ago, they confirmed there were two dead victims. it was possible that the shooter was among those two victims. it was possible that this was a murder/suicide. neither of those things have been confirmed at this point. we are expecting more information from the chief beck in the next few minutes. we've just been told here that he is on his way to the scene. we'll get a lot more information when he gets here. >> jonathan, a fascinating thing
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to see here. americans were first witnessed to anything like this on one of the darkest days in my reporting career. that was from columbine high school. unforgettable for anyone of an age to have watched it. when all of those young students came out of their after a day of chaos and carnage, which was just unimaginable. this is what happens now with columbine as the world's guide. everyone who comes out of a building where an active shooter situation has been underway, everyone's hands in the hair. everyone is frisked just to make sure that nobody else here wants to cause the kind of carnage that we witnessed at columbine high school. since then, the san bernardino shootings, many, many tactical arrangements have been changed as a result of that shooting. remember, they waited outside for a long time. now they've rushed this building, according to the reporting of the associated press. this is the police chief.
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>> by ucla management. this is what has occurred. at about 10:00 this morning, a homicide and a suicide occurred in the engineering facility, engineering part of the ucla campus on the south side. it appears it is entirely contained. we believe there are no suspects outstanding. and no continuing threat to ucla's campus. we're in the process of releasing students from lockdown. but we need to do so in an orderly fashion and in a way that allows us to make sure there are no other participants. at that point, this investigation will be handed over to the homicide decision of los angeles police department. the coroner will take the bodies and this will become an homicide investigation. [ inaudible question ] >> i can't hear you.
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>> suicide note? [ inaudible question ] >> the method of suicide is gun shot wound. i won't go any further. it's early in the investigation. many many questions are unanswered at this point. but i think the important thing for people to take away from this is that the campus is now safe. the issue that has occurred has been contained. we are in the process of releasing the campus back to the students. they're in their finals. this is a very stressful time for them. we are trying to alleviate that. we do not believe there are -- there is no evidence to support outstanding suspect at this point. we are out of an abundance of caution going to continue our search. several of the buildings adjacent to the crime scene [ inaudible question ] >> there is evidence there, that would be -- that could be a suicide note. we do not know that at this point. [ inaudible question ] >> i do not know that at that
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point. >> male female -- >> two male adults. >> was this a classroom, an office? >> small office in the engineering building. >> were they both students? >> i don't know that. >> did they know each other? >> we don't have the identities nor would i release them till the coroner has verified that. you can ask other questions you want about identity but you're not going to get anywhere. >> was the gun recovered? >> there was a gun at the scene. >> was it dead at the scene or dead at the hospital? >> deceased at the scene. >> how many shots fired? >> we responded today a report of three shots fired. thank you all very much. there will be continuing information and the school will go about its business of reopening, thanks very much. there you have it. what we had suspected is now confirmed. this was a murder/suicide. remember if you were with us an hour and a half ago, we realized a number of things. we realized there was no one in a campus of 43 students and
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another 25,000 others, nobody tweeting i saw this or that. no one tweeting i saw someone run. no one gave any information to indicate this was anything but a self-contained situation. now nine minutes past noon in los angeles. we have it confirmed this was a murder suicide. think of the chaos that has ensued as a result. law enforcement officers by the hundreds have gone into tactical alerts in the second largest city in all of america by population, for the broader metropolitan area, probably the largest. in addition an entire university with a flag ship university of the california education system has been brought to a halt right in the middle of finals. young students who have been there to get an education have been lined up, put on the sidewalk, had their arms behind their back and frisked as authorities obviously must do when you don't know what's happening. you have to treat everyone like
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a suspect unless and until he or she is cleared. because the results can be catastrophic. but now we know the shooting at ucla which brought about all of this chaos was a murder suicide. it is over and there is no danger. we'll get more information about whenlasses will be rescheduled, when exams were be rescheduled. when a motive might be. there's a suicide note on site. when we have all that we'll bring it to you. important news coming from the fox news deck. donald trump the nominee for president fought hard to keep the documents for trump university behind closed doors, he lost that fight. and now we know that people who worked for quote, trump university, unquote, have called it a fraud, a scam, and a total lie. how will this effect the race for the presidency? we'll get into that. donald trump's side of the story, we'll hear from hillary clinton as well. this is fox news channel, america's choice for news and
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you can get farxiga for free. to be taken care of. in good hands? like finding new ways home, car, life insurance obviously, ohhh... but with added touches you can't get everywhere else, like claim free rewards... or safe driving bonus checks. even a claim satisfaction guaranteeeeeeeeeee! in means protection plus unique extras only from an expert allstate agent. it's good to be in, good hands. 14 minutes past the hour. politics and the race for the white house. one of donald trump's trump university's own managers says the goal of trump university was to prey on the uneducated and the elderly. that's according to testimony that donald trump fought hard to keep us from ever seeing. it's just one of the claims in these court documents filled
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would former trump university staffers calling it a scheme and a fraud and a quote, total lie. the judge overseeing a fraud case against donald trump unsealed the documents after "the washington post" requested them. the likely gop nominee has called the judge unfair, a trump hater and a quote, mexican. the judge is an american. he was born in indiana. reporters asked donald trump yesterday why do you keep attacking the judge? >> because i don't care. because you know what? because i don't care. i have a judge who is very, very unfair. and -- you'll see it in court documents. >> releasing the documents is standard fair under freedom of information laws here in the united states. the documents do include some praise from former customers of trump university which claimed to teach people how to make money in real estate. one called it some of the best money he invested. some of trump university's workers slammed trump
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university. a handbook taught workers how to pressure people into for of mon $35,000 for seminars. it instructed sales reps to target customers with little money. telling them to pay for the lessons with credit cards. quoting here, we teach the technique of using opm, other people's money. the handbook taught sales reps to play to people's emotions, to let them know if you've found an answer to their problems, unquote. one former staffer says he finally resigned in disgust. that was after he said he got in trouble for not pushing hard enough for a couple to hand over tens of thousands dollars they did not have. the worker said the couple would have to use their disability pay to take out the loan. when he didn't have a sale he said another worker stepped in to close the deal. this case is set to go to trial in california but not until after the election in november.
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a trump campaign spokeswoman says trump university looks forward to using this evidence, along with much more, to win when the case is brought before a jury. it's fox top story on the race for the white house. james rosen has the news from washington. these documents reveal a hard sell approach that the trump university sales team was expected to use. also tucked away are critical statements. trump university adds promise that donald trump would hand pick the instructors, as a rule he did not. a set of play books for the sales team coached them to target customers. money instructed the play book is not a reason for enrolling. you're not doing any favor as someone using lack of money as an excuse. much of the unsealed evidence
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demonstrates the high level of satisfaction of trump u students. indeed the documents indicate that the plaintiff who brought the first lawsuit enrolled in six different trump university programs over a six month period and consistently rated her teachers and overall experiences as amazing and excellent. she even attended a new trump university program after she made her first demand for her money back citing financial difficulties. likewise, art cohen who brought the second major lawsuit had no complaints until he used trump did not hand select the instructors. prior to the lawsuit being filed in 2011 were you unhappy with your experience? no i was not he said. it was very good presentation. i gave a positive review. donald trump has vowed to take the cases to trial. that's not expected to occur as you mentioned before election day.
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>> james, we're also seeing new court documents from a lawsuit over hillary clinton's e-mails. sworn testimony from one of her closest aides. it's next. ♪ ♪ (singing) you wouldn't haul a load without checking your clearance. so why would you invest without checking brokercheck? check your broker with brokercheck.
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coverage of the race for the white house continues. hillary clinton's former chief of staff says officials did not think much about her use of a private e-mail server could cause problems. that's according to a transcript that a deposition that sheryl mills gave. it's the first time we've seen sworn testimony in this investigation. that's actually from a member of clinton's inner circle. the transcript shows sheryl mills claims she was not aware of anybody raising concerns about how officials might access clinton's e-mails if somebody
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requested them under open records laws. mills testified, certainly from my standpoint i wish that had been something we'd thought about, unquote. hillary clinton has said it was a mistake to use a personal account and private server and her campaign chairman recently said head she known of concerns about the e-mail server at the time she would have taken steps to address them. catherine herridge is live. >> lawyers objected more than 250 times and effectively blocked questions about brian pagliano. this video is from capitol hill last year or still picture rather where he took the fifth during congressional testimony. lawyers from judicial watch who brought this lawsuit pressed mills on whether pagliano was a state department employee or working for the clintons when he set up the server. mills also cited her role as clinton's private attorney to block questions.
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a judicial watch investigator said today they may go back to the judge to force complete answers. >> the details concerning mr. pagly ono's employment status whether he was an agent of the clinton's an employee of the state department, the details about what that shift was and how it was conducted. whom mr. pagliano reported to in the state department. those are all unanswered questions by ms. mills. >> for context, pagliano has emerged as a central player in the investigation he struck an immunity deal last year with the justice department as part of that probe into clinton's e-mail practices. >> what about the campaign memo from the clinton camp? >> we told you about the memo from john padesta that was sent over the weekend. they said two years ago she was not doing enough to preserve her e-mails.
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yet she said she was meeting the requirements under the federal records act. >> under the federal records act, records are defined as recorded information regardless of its form. and meeting the recordkeeping obligations it was my practice to e-mail government officials on their state or other dot gov accounts so the e-mails were captured and preserved. >> the inspector general's report that was published last week found that the rules were broken by mrs. clinton on the retention of all government records and just to be clear, at that un news conference she told reporters she was meeting the requirements but the new memo from her campaign manager is telling donors in fact six months before that news conference she was told she was not meeting the standards, shep. >> catherine herridge in washington, thank you. turn the senior politics writer
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for u.s. news and report. good to see you. this sheryl mills' testimony what do you make of it? >> the first problem is hillary clinton from the beginning has said, you know, i want all the e-mails out. i want to be as transparent in that possible. even in that reporting sheryl mills taking the fifth over and over again. we know that hillary clinton declined to be interviewed for this ig report. so there's a disconnect here between what the clinton campaign is saying publicly that they've been transparent, they've followed the rules and frankly the investigators who have been charged with going through the rules and trying to get accountability from the clinton campaign, the other problem here is that this is a drip drip story. this is now two years in the making and we're still talking about the clinton e-mail scandal. and this seems to be -- looks like it's going to follow her through the summer. >> i guess we now know why trump
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didn't want the trump university documents released. this testimony by members of the team of people who were working there, that this was a fraud and a scheme and a lie, it is certainly damming, you wonder how dangerous for the campaign. >> completely damaging when you've got people who worked for him, marketers saying they were uncomfortable with the tactics being used would the undereducated, elderly and people who were enrolled in the program saying they didn't get anything out of it. so i think the real people are definitely the problem here for trump. but given the way has been able to distract and sort of command the media cycle, i think the question for his opponents and democrats are going to be, can they roll these characters out, these real people and tell stories over a time period that allows them to get momentum behind this story. trump has been -- has had a keen ability to be able to change the
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subject by upping the ante with another outrageous remark. even yesterday we saw that. you know, talking about he was going to talk about veterans and distributing million dollars to veterans but the story that came out was how tough he was on the media. he's an ability to continually distract from the controversy at hand. i think democrats -- i would almost bet hillary clinton's campaign is calling up some of these people to put them in advertising down the road. >> do you wonder when the point of diminishing returns is reached on these attack? for instance, the judge whom he called a mexican, not unqualified and the rest. then against among other people, a reporter from abc news calling him a sleaze and reporters laying into him. you wonder how long the public will think that's okay? which by the way it's not. >> it's fascinating because, you know, in this interview he did with the hollywood reporter he's
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praising all the chiefs of all the broadcast networks, big titans in media. he said they're doing a great job. but go s into a room when the cameras are in him and blasts the media because he knows it's great performance and he knows there will be stories out of that and his supporters love t. it's definitely playing both sides. you've got to wonder which one is the act. i think the public persona he presents is the act. everyone who knows and has dealt with donald trump knows he loves reporters in private that he loves talking and the exchanges. but for his political purposes right now, when he's under fire, it serves him to come down hard on the media. >> like in a very bad marriage, use them and abuse them. nice to see you. donald trump says he's winning with women. now a brand-new poll puts that claim to test which we already knew was not true. plus, less than a week until the california primary and bernie sanders is still going hard after hillary clinton.
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what is this man's end game? when the math says he cannot win. so what does he want? it's the bottom of the hour, the top of the news next from fox news channel.
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elkhart indiana, live look as the president of the united states returned. the president has made four or five visits to elkhart. in 2009 the unemployment in elkhart, indiana was 20%. well above the national average. today it's at 4%, well below the national average. we're led to believe the president is about to enter the political fray. will he say donald trump's name? doubt it. will he point to the issues which surround him, wooerbl e b he will. we'll listen to the president. here we go. >> i'm here to talk about the economy. i don't know that if you've noticed, but this is an election
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year. and it's a more colorful election season than most. it's been a little unusual. and -- no, i can't do that. the constitution prohibits it, but more importantly michelle prohibits it. one of the reasons we're told this has been an unusual election year is because people are anxious and uncertain about the economy. and our politics are a natural place to channel that frustration. i wanted to come to the heartland, to the midwest, back to close to my hometown. to talk about that anxiety, that economic anxiety and what i think it means. and what i've got to say boils down to two points. but i'm going to take a long time making these two points.
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number one, america's economy is not just better than it was eight years ago, it's the strongest, most durable economy in the world. that's point number one. [ applause ] point two. we can make it even stronger and expand opportunity for even more people. but to do that, we have to be honest about what our real challenges are and we've got to make some smart decisions going forward. now, elkhart is a good place to have this conversation. some of you remember this was the first city i visited as president. [ applause ] i had been in office three weeks when i came here. we were just a few months in the -- what turned out to be the worst economic crisis of our
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lifetimes. our businesses were losing 800,000 jobs a month. our auto industry was about to go under. our families were losing their savings and their health insurance. as kelly pointed out, they were in danger of losing their homes. and elkhart was hit harder than most. unemployment here would peak at 19.6%. that means nearly one in five people here were out of work. and i told you then that i was going to have your back. and we were going to work hard to bring this economy back. [ applause ] so what's happened since then? unemployment in elkhart has fallen to around 4%. at the peak of the crisis nearly one in ten homeowners in the state of indiana were either
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behind on their mortgages or in foreclosure. today it's one in 30. back then 70% of your kids graduated from high school. tomorrow 90% of them will. [ applause ] the auto industry had it's best year ever. and the rv couple of the world is doing its part. the industry set to ship nearly 400,000 rv's this year which will be an all time record. [ applause ] that's progress. and it's thanks to you. to the hard work you put in and the sacrifices you made for your families and the way that you looked out for each other. but we also wouldn't have come this far, elkhart would not have come this far if we hadn't made a series of smart decisions.
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my administration, a cooperative congress, decisions we made together early on in my administration. we decided to help the auto industry, to restructure. we helped families refinance their homes. we decided to invest in job training so folks who lost their jobs could retool. we decided to invest in things like high tech energy so entrepreneurs wouldn't just bring back the job weez had lost but create new and better jobs. and folks who had lost work from the construction industry because the housing market it collapsed could go back to work rebuilding america. we can see the results not just
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here, but across america. in almost every measure america is better off than when i came here at the beginning of the presidency, that's the truth. that's true. >> that is true should he get into politics which had been promised to us we'll bring you those remarks as we promised. the latest numbers call that what pollsters call a titanic clash of the sexes, there a new poll that shows hillary clinton with a slight lead over donald trump nationally. 45% to 41%. take a look at how men and women are split. look at this. the survey shows 54% of women support hillary clinton. 51% of men back donald trump.
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donald trump is set to hold a rally in california with less than a week to go to the primary. what are we learning for the survey, john? >> shep, if you look deeper into the numbers it's mostly good news for donald trump. hillary clinton has a pretty clear lead on who best to handle international crisis and who trust most to handle immigration. the all important question of who would you rather have over to a back yard barbecue. donald trump beats hillary clinton by eight points. the last people would want to have over for back yard barbecue would be the collective media. continuing to go off on them today holding him to account for how long it took to get the money out to veterans. tweeting out, so i raised $5.6 million for the veterans and the media makes me look bad. they do anything to belittle, totally biassed. to a lot of people it looks like a bit of overreaction. most people who know him and know the polling would say he's
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on solid ground with his supporters every time he takes on the media. >> the thing was, he made a claim that he made a donation to veterans. it's reporters' jobs to find out if those in power are telling the truth. when you ask him about the particulars, he refuses to answer it. why is he going to california when the republican race is over, just an attack opportunity? >> people often have different perspectives on what the media's job is. we believe it's to ask questions, to question those in power. those in power sometimes don't see it that way. he's coming to california for three reasons, he wants to make sure he wins big on tuesday and makes sure hillary clinton and bernie sanders don't suck the oxygen out of the room. he wants to meet with big money donors, he's going to need america's largest piggy bank, california, if he wants to make it to the general election in november. >> needs that money.
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thanks. how hillary clinton is looking for a win even before hillary clinton closes its polls. what that might be? our politics coverage continues next.
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hillary clinton is campaigning in the state of new jersey ahead of that state's primary which is also this coming tuesday. california the biggest democratic prize. new jersey is next more than 100 delegates are at stake. secretary clinton could win there. she needs 71 delegates to shut out bernie sanders. team fox coverage mike emanuel live in california for primary day there. first, let's get to jennifer griffin who is live in newark new jersey. hillary clinton came out swinging at donald trump.
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>> she wants to change the conversation away from the fbi investigation into her private e-mail server. and so in the last 24 hours we've seen her pivot to donald trump away from bernie sanders. she feels like she's within reach of getting the democratic nomination. so she called in to those two cable news shows yesterday to take donald trump on about veterans. and today she actually came out and called donald trump a fraud. here's what she said. >> this is just more evidence that donald trump himself is a fraud. he is trying to scam america the way he scammed all those people at trump u. >> she spent much of the speech behind us here at rutgers university talking about the trump university lawsuit. donald trump, of course, says
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that he helped a lot of people at that university and that the case against him is biassed. right now hillary clinton is in downtown newark where she's gone to a cuban cafe. >> clinton headed out to california tonight is that right? >> that's right. after she goes up to boston with another fundraiser she had two last night. she raised $3.5 million here in new york and new jersey. she's going to california because as we said, even though that poll shows she's 13 points ahead of bernie sanders, that poll out today nationally. in california it's much closer than the campaign would like. she'll spend the next five days out there campaigning and trying to regain momentum to her campaign. what's very interesting in the last 24 hours is that she's really turning towards the general election by taking on donald trump directly. you see tweets from her campaign talking about trump and using
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really strong words in terms of him being a fraud with relation to this trump university. >> jennifer griffin on the campaign trail. it's great to see you out there, thank you. bernie sanders campaigning in california ahead of next tuesday's primary. he says he will not drop out of the race. new polls show he may have good reason. in a head to head match with trump, sanders would win 49% to 39%. if the race were held today. mike emanuel is live for us in california. what's the name of the town, is it sprinkles? >> spreckles. bernie sanders held a news conference here a short time ago talking about a environmental issue that's big here in california. sanders going after hillary clinton on a method of oil and gr gas production called fracking. al. >> secretary clinton as the secretary of state as many
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people know actively pushed the fracking technology on countries throughout the planet. >> sanders says if elected he would ban fracking in all 50 states. he said there is no good way of containing what he calls a toxic cocktail of chemicals. >> what about reaction from sanders on clinton returning to california to campaign? >> sanders seemed today enjoy as he's been crisscrossing this large state. sanders says he has an excellent chance of winning here and joke would reporters >> they told me the campaign was over. i wonder why secretary clinton and her husband bill are back in california. i thought we had lost, that it was all over, but i guess, secretary clinton maybe is looking at some polling. >> sanders says he believes he has a lot of momentum in california. we'll certainly find out next
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tuesday night. >> mike emanuel, officially population 673 in the heart of artichoke country. coming up you'll meet an iraqi war veteran who teaches refugees in the united states. this is my favorite story in the day. among his students, some who escaped the violence he witnessed first hand. >> you're able to have real conversationwis with some of the students and share experiences. >> coming up, how that teacher is going the extra mile. in fact, 25 of them to help his students succeed. it's a feel good story and we need one. it's next. what's it like to be in good hands? man, it's like pure power at your finger tips. like the power to earn allstate reward points, every time i drive. ...want my number? and cash back for driving safe. and the power to automatically find your car... i see you car! and i got the power to know who's coming and when if i break down. ...you must be gerry. hey... in means getting more from your car insurance
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eight minutes before the hour and the story of a military veteran who served our nation in iraq and is now serving iraqis back here in the united states. he's a high school english
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teacher who works with refugee students. he's going out of his way to help them get into college. >> when i was in iraq, we saw plenty of people get killed on both sides, and in the middle, and you realize how fragile life is. >> reporter: that realization during his 2004 deployment with the national guard helped brian determine what to do once he arrived back home. >> i decided i'm teaching. i really decided on helping people. that's what i wanted to do. >> everything happens for a reason. >> reporter: it just so happened efrl several refugees wound up in his classroom at albany high school in new york, some of them escaped with their families from the very war zone in which he once fought. >> sometimes i would come to him crying about things happening at home. he would tell me it's going to be okay. he would help me. he helped me so much. >> reporter: they say brian connects with them in a way others can't. because he knows the sort of conditions they had to endure.
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>> the terrible things he saw there make him want to help us even more and more and more. >> iraqi kids, i understand what they went through the most but the other kids all have similar stories, too. i understand. >> reporter: understanding is one thing. but what he did over memorial day weekend is something more. walking 25 miles as part of a fund-raising effort. he's working to set up a scholarship fund for refugees at his school to give them the opportunity to attend the university at albany down the road. >> it's a great idea. the immigrants can't go to college because of financial aid. >> reporter: he says he found inspiration to help other families by thinking about his own. >> i can't imagine how it would feel to have to have -- just by the luck of the draw to have kids in a war zone. >> it's difficult, going to another country, different culture, language and people. you don't know how people will
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react at you. you have a lot of fears. >> reporter: by easing those fears and encouraging these kids, it seems he's teaching valuable lessons about the country they now call home. >> because if you want to live a good life, if you really appreciate the opportunity life has given you in bringing you here, you have to take every chance they give you, every opportunity. you have to just take it and hold on to it and go for it. >> they are getting a little help. brian tells us he's raised about $12,000 so far for this refugee scholarship fund. he's looking to double that by the fall. right now we are tweeting about his -- a link to his facebook page. we'll be right back with a look at one of the most important days ever for anybody who has ever raised a cocktail glass and it happened on this day in history. i use what's already inside me to reach my goals. so i liked when my doctor told me
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that i may reach my blood sugar and a1c goals by activating what's within me with once-weekly trulicity. trulicity is not insulin. it helps activate my body to do what it's supposed to do release its own insulin. trulicity responds when my blood sugar rises. i take it once a week, and it works 24/7. it comes in an easy-to-use pen and i may even lose a little weight. trulicity is a once-weekly injectable prescription medicine to improve blood sugar in adults with type 2 diabetes. it should be used along with diet and exercise. trulicity is not recommended as the first medicine to treat diabetes and should not be used by people with severe stomach or intestinal problems or people with type i diabetes or diabetic ketoacidosis. trulicity is not insulin and has not been studied with long-acting insulin. do not take trulicity if you or anyone in your family has had medullary thyroid cancer or multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 2 or if you are allergic to trulicity or its ingredients.
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stop using trulicity and call your doctor right away if you have symptoms of an allergic reaction, such as itching, rash, or difficulty breathing; if you have signs of pancreatitis such as severe stomach pain that will not go away and may move to your back, with or without vomiting or if you have symptoms of thyroid cancer, which may include a lump or swelling in your neck, hoarseness, trouble swallowing, or shortness of breath. medicines like trulicity may cause stomach problems, which could be severe. tell your doctor about all your medical conditions and any medicines you take. taking trulicity with a sulfonylurea or insulin may increase your risk for low blood sugar. common side effects include nausea, diarrhea, vomiting, decreased appetite, and indigestion. some side effects can lead to dehydration, which may cause kidney failure. with trulicity, i click to activate what's within me. if you want help improving your a1c and blood sugar numbers with a non-insulin option, click to activate your within. ask your doctor about once-weekly trulicity.
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when they thought they should westart saving for retirement.le then we asked some older people when they actually did start saving. this gap between when we should start saving and when we actually do is one of the reasons why too many of us aren't prepared for retirement. just start as early as you can. it's going to pay off in the future. if we all start saving a little more today, we'll all be better prepared tomorrow. prudential. bring your challenges. it's a big day for all the
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grammar nerds out there. after years of debate, internet and web are no longer proper nouns which means you shouldn't capitalize them anymore. the associated press style book made that change and it goes into effect today. this manual is a go-to guide for a lot of journalists. an editor with the a.p. says internet and web have become so generic there's no reason to capitalize there. this may be as big of a deal as when the a.p. decided to remove the hyphen from e-mail. on this day in 1495, the world first learned of a little drink called scotch whiskey. the scottish government ordered a monk to produce the so-called water of life. it's the first mention of scotch on record. for hundreds of years, distillers used malted barley to make the elixir. in the late 18th century they added the wheat and rye varieties. now you can order it all sorts of ways. either way, raise a glass in
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honor of scotch making it into the history books, 521 years ago. should news break out we will break in. breaking news changes everything on fox news channel. i'm shepard smith in new york. "your world with cavuto" starts now. there was a deliberate request that this wasn't a technical glitch. >> that shocking admission from the state department just moments ago, a deliberate request was made to delete james rosen's exchange with an official over the iran nuclear negotiations. hi, everybody. this is "your world." to bret baier on what this is all about and why this is a very big deal. what's going on? >> this all stems from an original question that james asked in february of 2013 to then state department spokesperson victoria newland. he was asking about direct talks with iran outside the