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day weekend. that's a wherap for me. i wush you a great weekend and all the dads out there, happy father's day. thanks for joining us. see you next time. i'm bob massey, for 34 years i've been practicing law and living in las vegas. the center of the recent real estate crisis. lives were destroyed from coast to coast as the economy tanked. now, it's a different story. the american dream is back. and nowhere is that more clear than the sunshine state of florida. so we head from the strip to the beach to show you how to live the american dream. i'm going to meet real people who are facing serious problems, take you behind the gates of property, you have to see to believe. and give you the tips that everyone needs to navigate the new landscape because information is power and the property man has got you covered.
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thanks for joining us. i'm bob massi. new holou holtz can be summed u for one word, a legend. he's the coach of notre dame but he also brought six different college football programs to bowl games before being inducted into the college hall of fame. coach holtz wife for 54 years, lived in a section of orlando. one night in june coach holtz and beth came home late. >> went up to the same floor. very hot. i told my wife the air conditioning must be broken. he said, can't be but i'll call on monday. this is saturday night. so because it was so hot we went to bed downstairs where the air conditioning worked. >> at 2:30 in the morning out of the dead sleep they woke to smoke alarms sounding in their 11,000 square foot home. fully engulfed in flames. >> we go outside. i looked up and i see the flames shooting up. and you know you're in a state of shock. you can't believe it.
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you're there with your wife, 2:30 in the morning and just see everything happen. your mind starts going through everything you're going lose initially. it's something you never thought would happen. it happens to somebody else, i read it but it doesn't happen to me. >> the lightning strike had caused the fire which destroyed their home and many irreplaceable addreirreplace able items of memorabilia. >> we had two sections of house of cases and memorabilia. the house where we lived, 6,000 square foot was completely destroyed. >> when you see the damage this fire has done to this home, look at the extent of the devastation of this area. this was the kitchen area. see the roof is gone, burned. i can't even imagine what the inferno was like when they walked outside. >> first started upstairs, everything i had was in my office. my wallet, my money, my credit cards, my license. all financial records. all the family pictures are
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gone. pictures with five different presidents. these are things, everything you have, is gone. >> the coach and beth, thank god they made it out alive. >> i was grateful no firemen were injured because it was a big fire. but you're sitting there, you're just saying i can't believe this is happening. you're depressed. you made a decision that 8:00 monday morning we going to throw a party for myself. 8:00 monday morning, it's over. that's it. we're going to look and see what we have to do. what's important now? your house burned down, you lost everything, what's important now? >> they hired ray, a publish insurance adjuster. that is someone who works on behalf of the policyholder in appraising and negotiating the insurance settlement. >> we lost the entire second level above the kitchen. what we had upstairs were rooms
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that included lou's nest, as it was called, where he could be alone and just relax. we also lost a large family game room area up there that was actually collapsed into the kitchen. we get hired to work the insurance claim from the perspective of the policyholder, therefore, we become their advocate in the process and work with the insurance company's adjuster, representatives, to fine-tune the exact amount of damages and work towards an am mickable relationship for settlement. >> sadly coach holtz is not alone. there are about 370,000 house fires every year in the united states, which causes $7 billion in damage. many of those are due to lightning strikes. and in florida, they're a huge problem. the state has 1.2 million lightning strikes every year. that's 200,000 more than any other state. >> most people think certainly i wouldn't lose my entire building. i wouldn't lose my entire home.
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but as you can see, this happens every day. i've been doing this 35 years. and this is a very common occurrence unfortunately. >> i think how fortunate we are and how blessed my wife and i are to have as many friends we have to come to our aid, to have the resources to rebuild. people don't have any idea how difficult it is trying to replace everything and where to go, those are the people i feel sorry for. >> so, you need to protect yourself before a tragedy strikes. when we come back, i'll tell you what coach holtz wants you to learn from his tragedy and the critical things you need to know right now to protect your property and your family. closing the stage
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house was ravaged by fire. coach and beth, thank god they made it out alive. true lou hol everything in perspective. >> everything you have, and from living, clothes, toothbrushes, just everything is just gone. but we did not lose anything that could not be replaced. the only thing you can take to heaven with you are your children. so we didn't lose anything we can't take with us. >> so often people think this can't happen to them but it does happen. it happens to people like lou holtz and his wife. it happens to americans every single day, which is why it's so important to understand the type of insurance that you have to make sure you're covered for these type of devastating events. >> the insurance company, contrary to all the stories you hear about being negative, has been more than fair with us. but they have been very thorough. >> i will speak for myself, a
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lawyer, never sat down and read my policy the way i should. did you ever even look at your policy before? >> never looked at the policy. didn't know we had one. my wife handles all of that. >> they hired ray, a public insurance adjuster. >> one of the smartest things that we did. >> he was actually an advocate for you to make sure that whatever claims, that if the insurance company pushed back, he would assist in resolving that. >> i wanted to remove all the pressure on my wife that i probably could. >> of course. >> we had been married 54 years. she's just a great human being. and so because of that, we're in a position, as i say, because of resources, we could do that, and money buys you time and convenience. by paying this guy gives my wife the convenience to not have to deal with insurance. >> when you see this kind of devastation, the homeowner or business owner would be extremely devastated an overwhelmed. no question about it. and mentally, i find it very
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hard to believe they would be apt and capable to fully represent their own position in the matter. so hiring experts to come in who take an objective look at things, who come from a perspective that we want to make sure the insurance policy, that they bought, works for them. >> there are so many different things that he brought to our attention. i thought, wow, this is complicated. i went to school to eat my lunch. trying to read that was above my head. >> insurance is personal protection if a loss occurs. your insurance agent is your key to understanding what you're buying. look at the house you're buying, the contents that make your home what it is. >> people tend to look at their insurance policy from a cost perspective instead of a recovering perspective. what you really want to know is that you got an insurance company and an insurance policy that is going to help you fully recover should you have a fire, should you have a flood, should you have a hurricane or a tornado hit. >> the only time you discover generally the exclusion is when
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something happens. in other words, at every insurance policy it's important you understand before you buy that coverage what is excluded. >> it's very important that your agent understands the true values of what your home is or what your business is, the inventory that you may have inside your home or your business should be truly understood and the values calculated. >> the thing i truly regret that we didn't get a video camera when we lived in the house, video every room of what you had. we had about 11,000 square feet. we didn't video it. the biggest problem we have now and time consuming is trying to reconstruct what you had in what room, what you lost, everything else. and if we had a videotape, we would have been able to do that. but that is something i urge everybody to do. in case of a theft, in case of a fire. >> anything. >> anything. you have it.
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because that is the biggest headache we have right now. >> i cannot stress this enough. take pictures and video of all the contents in your home and get appraisals on those special items. >> here's the other thing. buy a fireproof safe. if i need money, i had a special place for it. >> sure. >> all that's gone. all that's burned. make sure your fire alarm is loud enough because the older you get your hearing isn't as good. >> finally, shop for coverage, guys. it's a competitive market. of course, probably the best advice anyone could get about anything, try to think like coach lou holtz. >> at age 78 this is not the challenge you want in life to rebuild but it's what it is. it's the situation that we have and these are the alternatives we have and the best ones. be positive about it and rebuild it. yes, it's a catastrophe but the attitude you have is so critical in how you handle it. how blessed we were that we
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weren't injured and the firemen wasn't injured. harvey maccay's good friend of mine told me many years ago, it isn't a loss unless you can't replace it. yeah, the memorabilia and the pictures with the popes and presidents and family, but we have our memories. i always say, you're going to have three crises if your life every year. there's going to be three. i don't know what they're going to be. but when i have a chrrisis, i'l say to my wife, good news, we only have two more to go. >> what an amazing man. we can all learn a lot from lou holtz. and i've got more tips on how to protect your property when the tragedy starts in the massi memo at the end of the show. when we come back, something completely different. imagine never hag r having to deal with check bag fees, security line, and airport hassles. for some people, well, their neighborhood is its own airport and their drive way is actually a runway. inside this unique community when we return.
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♪ >> when deciding where to live, many people want to be close to an airport. but what if your house deciding where to live many people want to live close to an airport. what is if your house is your airport. i want to take youen side a neighborhood that is truly unique. >> the air club was designed from development in the late '70s to be an aeronautical community. >> located in welllington, florida, a private air park community. the residents have planes in their garages, in their backyard, in their driveways. >> they have a helicopter, might have a float plane or a sea plane. it could have a next military aircraft. so you see a little bit of everything. parking your plane in the backyard is just the best thing i can think of. >> it really enables homeowners
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to capture what they're looking to do as aviators and that is to walk right out of their back door right into the hangar, throw the bags in and take off. >> those back yards and drive vas back up to 4,000 footlighted runway that sits in the middle of the community. >> many private is grass runway. they don't allow the type of aircraft that we are able to land here. >> the aero community are in special areas. it's not where you're in the middle of what we have here. >> many of them are one strip, often grass, surrounded by maybe 20 or 30 houses. this is 275 houses. >> having a runway in my house makes flying that much easier not having to drive 20, 30 minutes to an airport. >> very few people get to have a plane at all. but most people who have a plane have it at the airport which is kind of like having a boat at the marina. you have to get all your stuff together, drive to the airport, unload it, put it in the plane. >> no matter where the home is located in the community, well, the runway provides quick and
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easy access for all. >> this green grass strip here is a taxi way to accommodate just about any size airplane. all of the way down to the runway, literally in your your plane and go to the runway and leave, which is like getting in your car and driving to the supermarket. >> from here to tennessee it's about a four-hour flight. in the car, it's 14 hours. >> there are people in here who actually go to work every day by plane, by helicopter, instead of driving. >> i'll go a week without driving sometimes. this morning we call up at 7:00 a.m., took my kids, 15 minutes later i was flying. >> yesterday i brought my plane back and landed in my house yesterday at 5:00. put it awaynd went and had den we're the family. >> a trip to key west for three or four days is not a big deal. throw a couple of bags in front, two people, key west in less than an hour. 200 miles an hour, it's got about an 800 mile range.
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>> this is marqueti s-211, all weather aircraft. it can fly day or night, any kind of weather. it cruises at about 375 miles per hour at 28,000 feet. >> this is like a whisper jet. you can't hear it come or go. so it's really neighborhood friendly. climbs quickly. gets up away from the houses. >> the welllington aeroclub has over 96 pilots that lives here in the community. currently right now we have nearly 100 hangars, 00 construction. >> all homes in the community, while they're covered by homeowners association and those fees comp maintenance for the paved runway, private house and common areas. on-site aviation, facility is also available to all the residents. >> you will hear all that less expensive than at a commercial airport. fuel up here when we go and when we come back. ♪ >> it's a part of life that people don't even know exists.
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if you ask people in welllington some of them don't even know the aeroclub is here. >> one of the things that we love about here is we can go anywhere. i can grab one of my peeps and go to orlando, go to one of the parks. don't have to stop at the airport and check lug again. >> no security line at the airport. no getting in your car and showing up two hours early. you just get in your plane and you go. >> walk out the back door and fly, go to the bahamas, 45 minutes. fantastic. >> security means coffee and snacks for your kids. to be 20 minutes away from the keys to just have the flexibility and say, okay, we are having lunch today somewhere away from home. it is really amazing to have that opportunity. >> you're about to have lunch and you look at the plane, you look at the day and you say, hey, you know what, let's do this in key west. and you jump in the plane and you photo key west. >> out the kitchen door, i'm in key west in less than an hour. when the plane is 15 minutes
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away, you don't do it. >> pulling up in the plane with your family after a family vacation, your kids all pile out and you're in your backyard and your dog comes running up to you and everybody who comes out of the house and the bags go straight in the house. there's nothing like it. it's great. if you can do it, i can't think of a better way to live. >> it allows homeowners this extreme recreational use. and it also gives the community value. >> connectivity here that you don't get any most neighborhoods where you might not know your neighbor on the other side of the community but here we're all connected by airplanes and aviation. so you know a lot more people. very social neighborhood. >> when i moved here it was a grass runway, the jets were not permitted here. i spearheaded the change on the runway to pavement. >> that conversion has changed the entire community. property values have increased. this year alone built seven new
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homes. all of the new homes were all aviation folks. >> we love flying. we love our airplanes. and we love the socialize. it just is a combination of that makes this such a great mace to live. >> i don't think you can get any better. up next, the massi memo with information you can't afford to miss. so stick around. at tracfone, we believe that you should keep what you buy. that's why your unused talk, text and data never expires with active service. some major carriers say you can keep your data. but when you read the fine print, your data does expire. but tracfone has unlimited carryover, so you get to keep your unused talk, text and data. 90-day plans with unlimited carryover start as low as $20. unbeatable nationwide coverage. no contract. tracfone. do everything for less.
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>> time now for the massi memo. we saw the tragedy that struck coach lou holtz time now for the mags si memo. we saw the tragedy that struck coach lou holtz and his wife when their house burned to the ground. but always, the coach, well, he wants us to learn from this. other than critical things like always making sure you have working smoke detectors, what do you really need to know? let's take a hard look at your insurance policy. fires are generally covered but make sure you check the policy for at least what is called an ho2 or a brand form coverage. have your agent preview and review with you the policy to understand all coverage because we as homeowners, we generally never take the opportunity to read and understand the policy and find out about the exclusions in the policy, particularly of course when a claim is going to be made. now, make sure your property is maintained in a safe manner to avoid denial of your claim.
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why? because we as homeowners are supposed to maintain it so that the insurance company can't say we were negligent in the way that it was maintained, causing the loss. as we discussed earlier, please video all the things in your house and designate each room and the contents in that room for proof if there's ever a loss. it's very important. be sure to keep this footage somewhere else or locked in a fireproof and heat proof safe. any high-end item, jewelries, furs, antiques, and special heirlooms, you have to have special coverage or you're going to be limited to a certain amount, probably much less than its actual value. if you do have a loss, make a claim with your insurance company as soon as possible. don't wait because there's usually time limitation on when you make a claim. and, also, look at the possibly, if necessary, hiring a public insurance adjuster who works as your advocate if your loss is large. that's it for today. be sure to send me your
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questions or property stories@propertyman @foxnews.com . i'm bob massi. i'll see you next week. this week on "the journal journal editorial report" as new news, we'll talk to ray kelly about combating the homegrown terror threat. plus, president obama helps significant progress against fighting isis. while the cia director warns of more attacks. and has terror makes a return to the campaign trail a look at how the presidential candidates are responding. but first, these headlines. live from america's election headquarters i'm kelly wright. here's what's happening this afternoon. belgium police raiding dozen os of homes this morning as part of an anti-terror investigation.
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authorities arresting 12 people and saying they had to take immediate action. three of those suspects have now been charged with attempt to commit terrorist offenses. meantime, four top officials including the country's prime minister are now receiving special protection after unspecified threats. and nasa welcoming home three astronauts today. >> the soyuz is home. touchdown confirmed. >> nasa streaming the whole thing live. 186 days and 250 experiments in space later. american tim kopra and two colleagues made it back to earth. i'm kelly wright and i'll see you at the top of the hour with patti ann brown. welcome to "the journal editorial report." i'm paul gigot. as new details emerge about the events leading up to the orlando
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nightclub shooting questions are being raised about what if anything could have been done to prevent the deadliest terror attack on u.s. soil i understand is september 11th. 29-year-old omar mateen was twice the subject of fbi scrutiny. in both investigations agents concluded he did not pose a immediate threat. ray kelly is here, author of the book "vigilance." commissioner, welcome back. >> good to be with you, paul. >> you live this every day. how do you anticipate and stop a lone wolf terrorist like this? >> with great difficulty. no question about it. they're able to encrypt their messages, there's really no easy way of tracking these people. it used to be that we could get into a chat room and sort of identify people who were -- have a bent towards violence. very difficult now. there's one-on-one chat rooms. encryption is everywhere. so, as jim comey said, it's like finding a needle in a haystack
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and trying to determine what piece of hay is going to turn into a needle. >> in this case they had monitored him twice, on two occasions. he was in their sights and yet both times they decided, okay, h h he doesn't pose a tlaet tlet. if you're an fbi agent or nypd intelligence officer what do you look for to be able to say, you know what, i think he is going to go over the line? >> you're looking for manifest act. >> an action. >> action. you're looking for something you can point to as an action. now, it's important to note, i think, that this was a preliminary investigation. under the attorney general's guidelines these investigations have time limits. if it was a fulfilled investigation, there are no timelines. >> they had to end surveillance at a certain point? >> yes, i think they had to show every 90 days as to why the investigation remains open. now, i think jim comey is honorable guy. i certainly think he's terrific.
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he says he's going to take a look at this. i think perhaps there are lessons to be learned on how these preliminary investigations are conducted. >> so and maybe you have more of them that go beyond that. >> yeah. >> what is the next stage? >> the next stage is full field investigation or maybe there should be an interim stage or another category that allows them to go further. i think the justice department has to look at these guidelines as well. >> does the fbi have the resources to even track all of these people, the man pow per to be able to do it because there are a lot of people who will show perhaps tendencies on chat rooms or on their facebook account towards islamic state. but wouldn't act on it. >> you're right. i think they do need more resources to do it but it's -- you know, it's always an issue for government agencies. everyone always wants more resources. >> i know that but -- exactly. but it's a question of how do you make sure that people who are at least -- who have shown
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indications of radicalization. do they even have the manpower to track those people? >> well, i think they do. depends sort of what category you put them in. but, yeah, i think that it can be done. we don't know the details of this case. >> this case, that's true. >> you don't know precisely. they said they took confidential informants and put up against h him. what are the details of that? he said some pretty outrageous things to the agents. >> to the co-workers. >> when they interviewed him, he said he wanted to die a martyr. pretty strong stuff. >> you can't arrest somebody for saying something. you can only arrest something for taking action. >> it means you can surveil him in a variety of ways if there's suspicion there. hindsight is 20/20 but i think based on the statements that he made, i think he warranted more surveillance. >> what do you think of sting operations in which the fbi or the new york police department or somebody else basically somebody who is suspected of
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being radicalized the opportunity to take a step towards violent action? that's being criticized by a lot of people saying it's entrapment. it's unfair. they're not really threats. but yet that is a way for them to demonstrate action. >> right. no, i think it's absolutely necessary in this area. and no one is being arrested or taken into custody for just what they say. >> right. >> you have to have a manifest act. i think the fbi has done a good job. they've arrested over 100 people in the last two years for manifest act. attempting to go to iraq and syria or talking specifically about conducting a violent act and accumulating the material to do that or starting to do it. i think you have to act quickly and i think sting operations are absolutely essential in this area because it's sort of a femoral in terms of what people are saying. once they make that act, that motion, then i think it's
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appropriate to act. >> all right. step back, big picture. everything you know about the terrorist threat, islamic state, how big a threat does it remain? >> oh, it remains a significant threat. you just look at -- >> to the homeland. >> what john brennen said yesterday. john brennen, even though it's the cia, he was talking at the threats of the homeland. he's saying in essence almost irrespective of how much we reduce their footprint in t middle east their inspirational reach is significant and going to be significant for quite a while. so that's what we primarily are concerned about in this country. >> was it a mistake for your successors in new york to take down from the nypd website the radicalization of the west report that your administration did which identified that threat? >> i think it was a bad signal. they sort of capitulated this is the man that's been put forward by activists for a long time. i think he gave the wrong signal certainly in the environment that we're in. the report was very well done.
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it was an early effort done in 2007 to get their arms around. >> it anticipated what's happened. >> exactly. exactly. it was done by two outstanding nypd analyst, mitch silver andal van bott and it was heralded throughout the world, certainly by the counteder terrorism world, that it was a seminal document and they took it down in response to a lawsuit. i think it was the wrong move. >> commissioner kelly, thanks very much for being here. >> thank you, paul. when we come back, a grim warning from cia director john brennen about islamic state's growing flinfluence just days after president come claimed significant process in the fight against the terror group.
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real is touching a ray. amazing is moving like one. real is making new friends. amazing is getting this close. real is an animal rescue. amazing is over twenty-seven thousand of them. there is only one place where real and amazing live. seaworld. real. amazing despite all our progress against isil on the battlefield and in the financial realm our efforts have not reduced the group's terrorist capability and
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global reach. we judge it will intensify its global terror campaign to maintain dominance of the global terrorism agenda. >> cia director john brennen on capitol hill thursday warn that isis is likely to step up its attacks on the west. brennan's remarks came just days after president obama claimed the terror group was on defense and under more pressure than ever thanks to the u.s.-led military campaign in syria and iraq. let's bring in "wall street journal" columnist and deputy editor dan, columnist bill and best of the web columnist james toronto. james, what do you make of this difference between the president and the cia director? >> i think the cia director is telling the truth and the president is -- i say something that one can't possibly believe. i mean, for him to come out -- for the president to come out right after this mass murder in orlando, the worst terrorist attack on american soil since 9/11 and say isis is on the defense, reminds me of -- remember baghdad bob, the saddam hussein press spokesman who said
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everything was going swimmingly just before the regime fell? >> everything the president said technically is true. those are some signs of progress. it's just 25% of the story. >> how much of the progress if they increased likelihood they're going to attack us here and they're expanding all over the world. look, it's not just john brennen. his own central had a central command three months ago basically saying we need more troops to defight isis. almost everyone who has a job responsible forgetting the job speaks contradicts the president. >> dan, this other dispute this week is over whether or not the president should say radical islamic terrorism as his critics like donald trump say. president said that's just semantic. just words. is that right? >> well, it is -- in the president's mind it is semantic but it's not just words. that's made clear, i think, by john brennen's testimony and the fact that you have this
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extraordinary dissent channel signed by over 50 mid level and high level state department officials objecting to the policy in syria. >> they want much more aggressive. >> let me quickly say when president obama spoke to the air force academy graduates this year he emphasized at great length how diplomacy works better than war. i think the president's head is totally in diplomacy, does not want to be george w. bush again in the middle east. what the bureaucracy is saying islamic state, no matter how much pressure we put on them unless the u.s. goes in and suppresses them militarily and politically will project terror outward for the long term. >> what is -- bill, you were in the white house. you know presidents don't want to lose credibility ultimately, it's the coin of the realm. >> right. >> why would the president risk going out and just giving you the sunny side of the story when brennan is -- >> i think he has to. it gets back to who he defined himself as. when he came in, he came in, he's not george w. bush. he's the man who gets us out of
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wars. so if he -- >> i'm afraid, bill, we're back in war. >> exactly. he can't say that. he sounded retreat. if he says, no, we need more troops it's basically a repudiation of the eight years of his own president. >> do you agree with that, james? is there something else going on here? could it be that he just wants to put the best face on it as his would be successor goes into an election campaign? >> let's look at this question of radical islam and the president's refusal to acknowledge that islamic terrorism is islamic. he now says thawords. but of course that's not -- that is everything he's said for the past several years because he insists on avoiding this connection. we land from jeff any goldberg of the atlanta that, in fact, obama privately knows full well that islamic terrorism is islamic. he doesn't use the term for political -- politically correct reasons because he thinks it would alienate peaceful tolerant
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muslims. >> do you agree with that? >> i think it's a reasonable concern. on the other hand, official lies have a tendency to corrode trust in government. and so it does not speak well of the president's rhetorical and analytical about that he can't come up with a way to discuss this that takes into account all of -- >> also uses and just making explicit who the enemy really is. that's not all muslims but it is a certain element of radical islam. thanks, everybody. still ahead, terror returns to the campaign trail. we'll have a look at how the presidential candidates responded to the orlando attack when we come back. ♪ if you have moderate to severe plaque psoriasis isn't it time to let the real you shine through? introducing otezla, apremilast. otezla is not an injection, or a cream. it's a pill that treats plaque psoriasis differently. some people who took otezla saw 75% clearer skin after 4 months.
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♪ no, you're not ♪ yogonna watch it! ♪tch it! ♪ ♪ we can't let you download on the goooooo! ♪ ♪ you'll just have to miss it! ♪ yeah, you'll just have to miss it! ♪ ♪ we can't let you download... uh, no thanks. i have x1 from xfinity so... don't fall for directv. xfinity lets you download your shows from anywhere. i used to like that song. hillary clinton for months and despite so many attacks
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repeatedly refused to even say the words radical islam. she supports so much of what is wrong and what is wrong with this country and what's going wrong with our country and our borders. >> a a ban on muslims would not have stopped this attack. neither would a wall. i don't know how one builds a wall to keep the internet out. not one of donald trump's reckless ideas would have saved a single life in orlando. >> terror made a return to the campaign trail this week with donald trump and hillary clinton both going on the attack in the wake of the orlando shootings. we're back with dan and bill and kim joins us. kim, how would you judge her response to orlando? >> to the extent she sounded much like president obama, it can't be very reassuring to most voerts out there. most of her response is she's talked a little bit about the
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need for dpraeter intelligence gathering, but she's been vague on how that would happen. she's had harsh words for countries that spread this ideology. but mostly, she's lambasted donald trump's ideas and seemed to want to take what's an urgent matter of national security and turn it into a domestic policy fight over gun control. >> so, changing the subject much like the president has done. >> absolutely. i don't think anyone believes that reinstateded president clinton's assault weapons ban is the answer to dealing with you know, radical islamic ideology. >> yet bill what she is doing, trying to contrast herself as a matter temperment. he's angry. he focuses on division. i'm a uniter. >> he fed her some lines with his overreach ban on all muslims rather than make it as paul ryan said, a national security test, so he's handing it.
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to me, i agree with kim. this is classic hillary. it sounded tougher than it was. it's more of the same. i'm not sure of the long-term. not sure it helped mrs. clinton to have ore policy so tied to president obama. >> so you don't think there's much difference. >> we're going to have an air war, three green bareas go in. it's not going cost us anymore, so i'm not sure in the long-term, he did force them to confront the radical islam issue. and we're going to see how this plays out. it's going to obviously be going on for months. >> all right. what about donald trump? how do you assess his response? >> it was interesting. controversial he said was to subject that something wells was going on with president obama here and maybe he was simp thet wick the terrorists, implying that look x james calls it pure innuendo. just let it hang. >> well, you know, it is not as
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though donald trump's the only person in america who has had those thoughts. granted. but he personalized post orlando response in a big way. which forced the president to respond in the same way. to crack back. joined by hillary clinton. and they started describing trump as reckless and so forth, then they got basically air cover from the mainstream media. he just got torched by the press and electronic media. it suggested to me this show with trump is is going to be up against going forward and he's got great skills, but to take on the entire media, the entire democratic party that's defining him is unstable is a dangerous situation politically to get into. >> kim, as i heard that speech, i thought about 80% of donald trump's speech was about the immigration ban. tough borders. particularly the muslim. he called it a temporary ban on all. it is ban on all muslims. coming in for a certain period
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of time. is that got rebuked not only by democrats, but criticized by some republicans, too. that can't help donald trump. >> yeah, he's reverting to what gave him some support back during the primary, but how that plays in the general public, we still don't know. and you just hit on one of the real problems he has this week. which was this one of donald trump's hugest challenges is still going into this republican convention, trying to unite the party and what some of these statements do and the way he makes them, continues to make it very hard for republican leaders to ko ales around him and that's a growing problem to this day. zpl who do you think has the advantage here? ly tell you, i think the donald trump can't win on the issue, probably can't win. >> i think he should have the net advantage because i think president obama showed the hollowness of his policy and trying to command facts to fit his world view and mrs. clinton says that's my game, too, but
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he's allowed all these distractions. on the momentum him ban, which i don't support, the public does. >> and in fact, that support is up, so we're going to, this i think this is going to play out for a long time. sfl all right. thanks, bill. we have to take one more grabre. when we come back, hits and misses of the week. 73% of americans try... ...to cook healthy meals. yet up to 90% fall short in getting key nutrients from food alone. let's do more... ...add one a day men's 50+. complete with key nutrients we may need. plus it helps support healthy blood pressure with vitamin d and magnesium.
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time now for our hits and misses of the week. kim, first to you. >> a hit to the house oversight committee for this week voting to sensor irs commissioner. he was confirmed after he vowed to get to the bottom of the irs, targeting outrage and clean up the agency. instead, he spent two and a half years stone walling congressional investigations and making excuses for the irs, so, this is finally about try iing hold somebody accountable. it's a good first step and maybe next up, impeachment. >> jane.
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>> this is a hit to president h.w. bush for being a class act. a letter he wrote and left in the oval office has been circulating this week and it's a model of grace and civility. among other things, the outstanding president, who had just been defeated sadly by mr. clinton wrote i wish you great happiness here. you will be our president when you read this note. your success now is our country's success. i'm rooting hard for you. it's hard to imagine leaving president obama such a gracious letter for trump. >> bill. a mid the senate for passing a bill that leaves afghan ininterpreters out in the cold. the general says this is vital to our cause and credibility in the war against the taliban, but because of gridlock and antiimmigrant feeling, they didn't extend these visas. i think donald trump would say these are the kinds of people --
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>> and they're taliban targets. >> bill, thank you and remember, if you have your own hit or miss, be sure to tweet it to us. that's it for this week's show. thanks to my panel, thanks to you for watching. hope to see you here next week. donald trump hitting up sin city today for a big rally at the treasure island casino. the nominee coming off a rough week where a series of verbal gaffes sent his poll numbers plunging. sliding down and fellow republicans further distancing themselves from the candidate. welcome to america's election headquarters. >> the pnominee batting away ru nmors of a rift. he is doubles down on his calls for r a ban on muslim immigration in the aftermath of the orlando terror attack.
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>> we're letting people pour into our country. we have no idea who the hell they are, where they come from. there's no documentation, no paper. they come from hostile countries and we're going to have big problems. if you think orlando was the enof it with this weak attitude and this pathetic president that we have, it wasn't, folks. this is just the beginning. >> we have team coverage right now from fox, kristen fisher is in washington, but let's start, get started with this hour with alicia, live from las vegas. where donald trump held an event earlier today. trump addressed the rumors of e revolt head on, didn't he? >> that's right they are blaming the media in part for this. we talked to kendall, a gop delegate from colorado. she told us she had 200 other delegates who want to deny truch
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his official nomination. what they're looking for is a change in the rule, specifically to allow for what they are calling a conscious clause. that would allow them to unbind themselves on the first round ballot, therefore freeing themselves to support another candidate. who that person would be, don't know, but today, mr. trump brushed it off and accused some of his former rivals of being we behind what he calls this quote little movement. >> have a couple of guys that were badly defeated. and they're trying to organize maybe like a little bit of a delegate revolt. maybe. now u, number one, you know reince priebus, rn krrk, he's a good guy and the republican national committee, put out a state, can't do it. it's not legal. you're not allowed to do it. >> now, today, kelly, in a statement, rnc spokesperson shane spicer said the discussion is quote silly. she said the simple fact the rnc
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is addressing this must mean they're gaining traction. >> so, there's also the problem with protesters who have been following trump on his campaign. any problems with them today? >> not so much. on this stop here in las vegas. and the security here at the treasure island casino told us this is private property and therefore, they weren't going to allow protesters or give them a place to do it. however, our crew did count 11 people who did show up. but those folks told us they were being asked to leave by security and officials here did tell us they would remove anyone who tried to protest. two did make it inside the venue. they were promptly taken out and the culinary union, which in contract negotiations nal hotel workers, instead of attempting to save the protest, decided to hold a news conference yesterday. >> thank you. >> on the democrat side, hillary clinton taking some time off from the campaign trail this weekend after meeting with nart
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bernie sanders earlier this week. clinton's camp is now reportedly vetting vp options. it does not appear that sanders is on the short list. kristen fisher is live from our bureau with more. >> well, sanders said he is not being considered, but one of his close colleagues is. senator elizabeth warren. yesterday, she fueled the rumor mill even more by stopping by clinton's campaign headquarters in brooklyn. she reportedly talked with staff about the dangers of losing the election to trump. she even told them, quote, don't screw this up. some of the other folks mentioned, new jersey senator, cory booker, virginia senator, tim kaine, sherrod brown and castro from texas. just yesterday, he said he is not being rhetted, so clinton's pressing had as the presumptive nominee even though sanders said she's still an active candidate.
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listen to what he said on thursday just two days after his private meeting with clinton here in washington. >> we must continue our grass roots effort to create the america that we know we can become. and we must take that energy into the democratic national convention on 25th in philadelphia. zpl doesn't sound like he's conceding anytime soon. clinton is taking a break to spend time with her family. just a few hours ago, her daughter announced she had given birth to her second child, a baby boy. the clintons released a statement saying quote, we are all over the moon as chelsea and mark welcome charlotte's little brother to the world and are grateful for our blessings. this comes less than three months after trump's daughter had a son. quite thecongratulations to the. >> new information on the deadly nightclub shooting in orlando.
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five more victims who survived have now been released from the hospital. and according to a new report, investigators are viewing surveillance video from that night. the video reportedly shows omar mateen shooting people and repeatedly reloading. authorities have confirmed to fox news, mateen and his wife texted during that shooting. all of this as we await votes from the senate on monday on four gun control measures. garrett has more from washington. >> the issue of gun control has divided republicans and democrats for years, but this week, this were some signs of a compromise in congress. this monday, the senate will vote on four different proposals to enhance gun safety. two from republicans and two from democrats. each varied required background check, what government listed would be used and how a person could appeal a ban, but none are expected to pass. similar to proposals that failed
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in 2013 and this past december after the attacks in san bernardino. today, president obama again made his case for gun reform in his weekly address by pressing for a ban on assault weapons. >> being tough on terrorism, particularly the source of home grown terrorism, that we've seen now in orlando and san bernardino. means maging it harder for people who want to kill americans to get their hands on assault weapons that are capable of killing dozens of innocents as quickly as possible. >> republican senator susan collins is one of the senate's most modern republicans and she's hopinging to lead a bipartisan proposal next week. yet, despite that effort, many republicans in congress are still frustrated with the white house and leading democrats and say the real problem is radical terrorism. >> i think the american people find it ridiculous that in response to an isis terror attack, the democrats go on high dunge
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dungeon, that we've got restrict the second amendment right to law-abiding citizens. this is not a gun control issue ft this is a terrorism ib. >> we saw another sign of change in the debate this week when donald trump announced he plans to meet with the nra to discuss gun control legislation as well. >> thank you for that. the city of oakland, california, has lost its third police chief in just over a week. the acting chief stepped down yesterday, the department is grappling with allegations that officers had sex with a teenage prostitute and sent racist text messages. lauren is live in los angeles with the latest. hi, lauren. >> good afternoon. the oakland police department is now under civilian control. it was already reeling from a growing sex scandal involving a teenage prostitute and more than a dozen officers. now, news of racist texes and e-mails sent between officers
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has three police chiefs out in just nine days an the mayor of oakland says the department has a toxic and macho culture. zpl i am here to run a police department. not a fratto house. i want to assure the citizens of oakland that we are hell bent on rooting out this disgusting culture. >> on june 9th, when sean went abruptly designed, a new police chief was pinted, but he was removed wednesday after just six days. the latest police chief lasted only two days on the job before he resigned. at a news conference, the visibly angry mayor said the behavior she has seen in the police department is not acce acceptable for anyone who wears the badge, although city council members are angry, they stress that not all officers in the department are part of the problem. >> my thoughts and prayers are really for the men women who need to serve honor bly in high
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stress conditions, that they know we're here to support them and making this a strong department they can serve in. >> now, the mayor says there will be no new chiefs while they search for a replacement. department will operate you should the control of the city administrator and this is just the latest scandal. this particular pd has been under federal oversight for more than a decade. >> all right. lauren live in l.a. thank you. boy, disturbing. >> kdisturbing, indeed. the deadly attack had cemented the narrative of the 2016 presidential campaign now. both nominees seizesing on the tranon the tragedy. is it policy or politics? our panel will debate. >> and iraqi forces making process in the critical mission to retake fallujah from isis. lose the city would deal the group a devastating blow. we'll have a live update. next. >> iraqi federal police are
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the orlando terror attack now playing a central role in
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the presidential campaign. both parties presumptive nominees vowing to take on terrorism with two different messages. hillary clinton pushing for tighter restrictions on guns to prevent lone wolf atalks while trump downs down on his call for muslim immigration, pushing for fewer gun laws. >> i saw the president talk immediately about guns. not guns. it's terrorism. it's not guns. it's terrorism and i watched him the other day, he was more angry at donald trump than he was at the shooter , the main yan who killed all of those young people. >> a ban on muslims would not have stopped this attack. neither would a wall. i don't know how one builds a wall to keep the internet out. so not one of donald trump's reckless ideas would have saved a single life in orlando. >> let's talk about this.
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tammy is a radio talk show host an doug is a former adviser to president clinton. both are fox news contributors and they're here to weigh in. we are saying quou. after a terrorist attack, we have seen both sides come outd and they're going after each other. and many people are saying, wait a minute, isn't it time to bring the american people together? >> couldn't be more correct. we are americans. we're not republicans. and democrats. liberals, and conservatives. we are one nation and isis has said and they are in fact attacking us. they are trying to kill us. we need a united response. i think we need to make sure those on the terror watch list are not able to get beguns as both hillary clinton and donald trump have said. at the same time, i think more restrigtive immigration control would also help, but that's bipartisan, that's collegiatal and that's not what we'ring from anyone and a that's pretty sad to me. >> we are in the middle of of course one of the most important
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seasons. whether it's this year or any other presidential election year, so it's automatically there's partisanship. we also have two different points of view as we saw, between mr. trump and mrs. clinton. her remarks were interesting. she said his ideas wouldn't have saved one life in orlando and that makes him unfit to be president, yet that did occur and people did die under a president who's had power for seven years and mrs. clinton, who embraces most of that president's policies. so, she's effectively indicting herself and mr. obama as well as who have had power and influence during this time. but in the meantime, you're looking also at two distinlgt choices. about gun control or looking starkly at the nature of the choices that have been made about immigration and about the due process and the second amend lt. >> i have to to go to what my colleague and you know her, dana
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parrino. she said it has to be a measure of both. what you just said. that is very important right now. although i know there are two different camps out there. the trump and clinton camp. and both of those are so far apart on this issue. we're talking about an issue, we have to call it what it is. this is a terrorist attack on american soil. >> the point about the terrorist watch list. i want on the matters if the right people on on those lists. that kind of idea wouldn't apply to mr. mateen. the no fly list has a million people on it. limiting it to the fbi's list, but we've got to make sure that terrorists are actually on those lists and we're aggressive by calling it what it is and not being too afraid or politically incorrect to put the people who
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are terrorists on those lists. >> there is some bipartisan movement on capitol hill where they're talking about conducting a vote. as early as monday. now, those votes may not go anywhere in terms of pasing some sort of tougher gun law. the president today saying he wants a tough gun ban policy on assault weapons. he's staying in this real m of gun control. but many people like to see him move forward and saying something about radical islamic terrorism and come ut and call it what it is, but the president maintains that's not really the issue. >> look, i would adpree. i would like to see him to it. hillary clinton did it. but to me, just returning to the senate, i would like to see bipartisan action. some action on the collins bill, which you were talking about the collins. >> susan collins. >> yes and if we could come up with some way to improve the terror watch list, the fbi list and most of all, something else i don't think has been talked about. the fbi failing to see that
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somebody they'd interviewed at least twice was a real risk. we saw that in the boston bombing case that the fbi had not followed the lead from russian intelligence. clearly, we're not doing our job. >> good point because a lot of politicians are now saying where was the fbi, could they have done more in terms of sharing, intelligence gathering with the local law enforcement there in orlando. who could have perhaps stepped in and intervened way before this tragic situation, this terrorist attack took place there at the pulse nightclub in orlando. >> the story is we want this to never have happened. we're looking for ways to do it yet right at the core of the people in charge of stopping this, the president said this is very difficult. finding these people. the fact is, we knew -- we saw the san bernardino shooters, the orlando shooter. all had been interviewed and watched and dismissed. so, as the president is distracting and disconnecting with his gun control arguments,
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the real discussion has to be about a bureaucracy that can't function proper will i. >> got to end it there. but that's where we're look iin at things now. getting our bureaucracy and gears back in order. >> and bipartisanship. >> thank you very much. >> thanks, guys. an iraqi military official says government troops have recaptured the main hospital in fallujah. the fighting there rages on as iraqi forces try to wrestle control of that key city away from isis. some quick numbers on the battle to recapture fallujah. 42,000 iraqis have fled from there since last month, but 50,000 civilians remain trapped inside. the operation to retake the city is is now on its 27th day. the u.s.-led coalition has contributed more than 70 air strikes. conor powell is live i
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mideast news room with more on this. >> yesterday, iraq's prime minister declared vickry. now, commanders in fallujah stopped short of that declaration, saying there's still fighting left to be done, but they now control more than two-thirds of the city of fallujah, inclug all of the southern part and more of thety center. they raised their flag yesterday over a key government building. they now control the main hospital. there's parts of the northern city still under isis' control, but increasingly, iraqi commanders say they're seeing isis check points simply being abandoned. that niese nighters are trying to melt away into the large civilian population there. there are still a lot of booby traps that have been set up. iraqi forces are moving slowly, trying to take their time. also the concern about iraqi civilians still desperately trying to flee the city. we've seen video of desperate
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civilians there jumping into the river trying to cross. some have lost their lives tryinging to flee the area. overall, the picture seems hindered fwi international coalition and support and the iraqi forces on the ground is that isis is being driven out of fallujah. that they are on their last legs there and it's similar to what we saw in ramadi and ta krit. in the next operation that's likely to take place after fallujah is this larger operation on mosul. it's iraq's second largest city. isis' main hub there. it's a key spot in term of the connections to isis stronghold in ra kai. these are the two main areas and what we're seeing there is that isis is under a lot of pressure both from the u.s., the russians and asaid forces in syria and also now, gaining a lot more pressure and under a lot more pressure if mosul and fallujah from the iraqi forces in these
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u.s.-backed coalitions. >> live in our mideast bureau, thank you. we all know dads are instrumental figures in the lives of their kids. this father's day weekend, how a super bowl champion hopes to make a difference for dads everywhere in a special edition of beyond the dream. >> and the investigation into the orlando nightclub shooting turns to the suspect's family. could some of them be facing charges as authorities learn more veginformation? >> i don't know if they're implicated, but they are certainly suspects in the shooting. an investigation like this, you don't cut short any corners and when you have a situation like we've learned, that the wife knew about the incident, knew about his terrorist plans, whether she knew it was that night or not, certainly need to look at everybody in the family.
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...cleasee ya!ake off. when you're living with diabetes. steady is exciting. oh this is living baby! only glucerna has carbsteady, to help minimize blood sugar spikes. and try new glucerna hunger smart to help you feel full. investigators are now reportedly viewing video from inside the pulse nightclub which shows omar mateen carrying out his vicious attack. fox news also confirms heing texted his wife in the middle of the massacre. the grand jury is now weighing the option to file charges against mateen's wife. meanwhile, investigators have placed mateen's wife and father on a no fly list for now. joining us now is rob heeler, a former d.c. homicide detective and fox news contributor. thanks for being with us.
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>> so, survivor jeanette mccoy said he's shot at least 100 rounds, at least 100 people are dead, go in there. she's critical of the decision to wait almost three hours before storming the place. >> in situations like this, they could be very chaotic and the first officers on the scene did not know a number of things. one, they didn't know how many shooters they were dealinging with. they didn't know what type of weaponry this guy had. they didn't know if there were any bombs planted. so i think they made a critical decision at that time. i appreciate the victim's response and the things that the victim said, however, as law enforcement officers, as you know, we train for these situations day in and literally day out. every day. we train for these situations, so i think the officers probably did the best they could with the time that they had. and the information that they had at that time. >> and one of the piece of information that they had at the
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time, mateen was telling the police on the phone that he was going to strap explosive vests on four hostages and place them in separate corners of the building. he also said he was going to put on a bomb himself and the hostages were relaying that information to the police through texting. how much did that play into the decision not to go in? >> oh, absolutely. that's an excellent question. that played significantly into the police decision not to go in. you know, i don't know if the viewers now, but this terrorist, omar mateen, he actually made 11 telephone calls that night during the period of the shooting. so, you know, the officers could have went in at any given point if they wanted to, but you have to keep in mind if they were to go in, he was probably going to be putting their own lives on the line because of a bomb or something that could have harmed many of them, so they strategically and methodically came up with a plan and then decided to go in through the rear of the building, taking down one of the walls.
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it appeared just from looking at this 20/20 vision, it looks like they made the proper decision. >> let's hook at the red flags beforehand. the wife fifrt, she said she drove into the club, tried to talk him out of doing anything, but also went with him to buy ammo. investigators aren't giving more details now, but charges are being considered. how difficult to charge her? >> you know, it's not going to be overly difficult. but let me say this. the way that they're going to be able to charge her is if they have definitive information she had prior knowledge that this guy was about to commit a crime and she conspired, aid with him committing that crime. that means taking him to the location with the knowledge she knew what he was going to do. it means purposes weapons, ammunition, so, the government is going to have to consider all of these things. it's one thing to charge a
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person, but as you know better than anyone, it's another thing to get a conviction. >> the thing is is, she did tell investigators she tried to talk him out of it, but then claimed she didn't really know what it was. we have a lot more to learn about what she's saying. but for mateen himself, we're hearing more and more about red flags there. hired by florida corrections as a prison guard trainee nine years ago, but then expelled because he was talking about bringing a gun to the training academy. more recently, he pledged allegiance to isis in a facebook post. he said real muslims will never accept the filthy ways of the west. investigators for the fbi say repo reported reportedly, he watched islamic state terror video, discussed the videos with co-workers. his profile is is similar to others who are alarmingly interested in isis, but haven't broken any laws. could this have been stopped? >> the easy answer and all of us
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in america are asking that same question. could this have been stopped? the answer is yes. it really should have been stoppeded. and i can tell you firsthand, being here if washington, being involved in law enforcement, we have solutions, analytical solutions that would have identified that qui gueye, but for om reason or another, our obama administration, the obama administration, and i'm not blaming this on obama, but they haven't released the resources so we in law enforcement can make these an litz cal relationships that we need to do. we should have been able to identify this guy and anyone else around him. did we do that in as you can see, no, we did not. i'm not blaming obama again, but what i'm saying is, the bottom line stops at the white house. this shouldn't be happening. >> and his fbi looked at this guy and said, he's okay. all right. thank you so much. >> thank you, patty.
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tomorrow, we'll be celebrating father's day and the times in which we pose some difficulties for dads. men are working hard to make a living, which can make it difficult to make a life. pulled in so many direction, a man can often be distracted to his primary role of being a husband and a father. many studies show that a child's life is better if dad actively involved in that child's life. armed with those facts and faith in god, a group known as legacy minded men is reaching out brother to brother to help men help their children live beyond the dream. >> men, let's face it. being a dad is probably the most challenging thing a man can do. the gift of fatherhood brings many responsibilities and concerns for men who care about improving the lives of their children. and preparing for them a world that can be very tough and challenging, but a father's
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presence, instead of his absence, can truly make a positive impact on a child. three men who believe that are lee, a former running back and super bowl champion with the new york giants. juan garcia, a certified personal coach and joe, author and founder of legacy minded men. together, they're working to help men understand their significance as fathers. >> men are so weak out there. we've lost our identity. >> in all the life struggle, just like playing football. you got to run that play. over and over again, you want to move those chains. when you decide who you are, now, you can become who you are. you can move the chains of your life. from your mind, from your heart. you can move forward. >> and helping men find their identity, joe wrote the book, that's my dad. which celebrates the role of fathers. he also created a movement called fathers say, which challenges men to understand
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their influence in the power of their words and actions in front of their children. >> father say is a three step process. step one is to engage men, teach them the power of their words, team them the power of the blessing. two is to encourage them. that is a minister to blessing -- courted. make it a video so that it's for all time. so that kid goes down the wayward path, he's got your word. and then number three, equip them. this is where the mentoring comes. this is where we need to cross the goal lineful we can carry, move those chains. if we don't mentor them, we have failed. >> what has worked which is what we're trying to instill is affirmation. it takes another man. >> why is that so important because a lot of young men lack that. >> it gives meaning and purpose. it takes another man to affirm another manful. to give it significance. when i played football in high
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school, i would always look at the stands and not see my father and now, i play an 18-year-old son who prays basketbalaying ba high school and he looks in the stands and sees me there and the comparison is unbelievable. i know that what i lacked, he has. >> these legacy minded men are encouraging fathers to mentor their sons to give them affirmation so they can develop into men who are destined to do great things. >> dysfunction is is not okay. to function in dysfunction is not okay. just say i'm better than this. i'm greater than this and i will achieve that dream. >> i realized and i experienced when i was a super bowl champion, that i reached that goal but even more than that, i realized because i never gaich up, if i had forgiveness in my heart for my father, who i had anger issues with, life is god's gift to you, the legacy you leave is your gift to him.
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>> powerful. the legacy you live is your gift to god and in all full disclosure, those men are remarkable men. i grew up without a father figure. my mother had to do it all, so it also works in a single parent situation. and what a power story they have. >> yeah. and what a difference whoever the father figures were in your life, obviously -- >> it makes a difference. >> great father's day message. thank you for that. so, is the u.s. making progress in the fight against isis? president obama says yes, but one of the top officials appears to offer a starkly different assessment. gl isil is training and attempting to deploy operatives. isil has a large kad ray of fighters who could ser as attacks in the west and the group is probably explore iing lot of means for infiltrating operatives into the west. the right things working together can give you an advantage. like trubiotics with immune support advantage.
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in the wake of the orlando terror attack, president obama and cia director, john brennan, offering seemingly conflicting assessments on the battle against isis. gl the flow of foreign fighters including from america to syria an iraq has plumeted. in fact, our intelligence community now assesses that the ranks of isil fighters has been reduced to the lowest levels in two and a half years. >> resources needed for terrorism is modest and the group would have tho suffer heavier losses on territory, man pour and money to decline significantly. >> let's bring if captain chuck nash, a fox news military analyst and captain, when you listen to those two different statements, one from the president, one from his cia director, i'm not making light of this, but wall street one of those things that make you go, hmm, what's going on here? >> who's on first.
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i think the bottom line here is both are right to a certain extent. what the president's saying is that isis is losing some pieces of turf, but what we have to understand is that the whole isis thing, the whole militant islamic thing is not necessarily on a piece of turf. it's in the mind. it's in the ideology that is islam and so, it's on the internet. it's out there. it's being taught in mosques and so, just because ta lose a battle say in fallujah, does not mean by a long shot this is over and shown to be very adaptive. that's what i think brennan was saying. >> sorry, but that's what's so disconcerting about this. is that the enemy of isis has me tas sized into this kind of high dra, that's gone out with all kinds of tentacles to reach in every part of the globe. how do you dial that back?
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>> well, it's very difficult to dial it back, especially when you won't even acknowledge what the ultimate thing you're dealing with, which is the ideology. isis, al-qaeda those are all systems of the overall problem, which is the militant ideology and until we're willing to address that, we'll treat the cough, the tiredness, but in fact, it's cancer. the longer you delay in admitting the understood lying disease, the r many you have its ability to take over your body and kill you. what we have to do -- >> you already answered my next question. bah what do we have to do so stop that ideology. isis that is not the way. >> number one on a tactical level, which is out on the battlefield today where we're dropping bombs and the weapons are firing, you have to continue
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to press there. to have them lose there. on the idea logical side of this, we have to realize that we are fighting an ideology where in the united states today, just go over a few numbers. by the time this administration leaves office, they will have brought in 1.1 million people. mostly from muslim countries, 97% or greater were muslim. of those muslims, in a recent poll, 60% of muslim males under age 30 said they had greater loyalty to islam than to the united states. if they're under 30 years old, they were probably born here or brought here as young children. my point being that when you have an ideology that has more a allegiance to is way of life, this is antithet cal. that's the strategic battle that must be won or we'll just keep swapping flies. >> we thank you for that.
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with wish we had more time. >> you bet. >> lack of sleep? not just bad for adults. it's bad for kids, too. not getting enough sleep can can lead to health and behavioral problems in kids and teens. up next, new guidelines to help kids get enough sleep to parents can rest easier. ooh... >>psst. hey... where you going? we've got that thing! you know...diarrhea? abdominal pain? but we said we'd be there... woap, who makes the decisions around here? it's me. don't think i'll make it. stomach again...send! if you're living with frequent, unpredictable diarrhea and abdominal pain, you may have irritable bowel syndrome with diarrhea or ibs-d - a condition that can be really frustrating. talk to your doctor about viberzi. a different way to treat ibs-d. viberzi is a prescription medication you take every day that helps proactively manage both diarrhea and abdominal pain at the same time. so you stay ahead of your symptoms.
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only with xfinity. telling deputies her son was playing outside with his older brother when she heard a scream. she ran outside and found the mountain lion attacking her son. the mother was able to fight the big cat off. both mom and son were injured but are expected to be okay. well, new guidelines are being issued regarding the amount of sleep children should be getting. according to doctors, a significant number of children and teens are not getting enough sleep, and that can lead to serious health problems. dr. nina radcliffe is a practiced anesthesiologist. thank you for joining us. >> thank you.
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>> we're going to look at those new guidelines. they differ starting with babies 4 to 12 months old, they should be getting 12 to 16 hours. that includes naps, and 1 to 2-year-olds 13-14, 6-12 year olds 9 to 12 and 13 to 18 year-olds 9 to 12. what happens when they don't get this amount of sleep? >> they can be grouchy, they can have headaches, they can have difficulty concentrating. and later on we see obesity. they may eat two or three cookies instead of the one they might have. our immune system is weaker. they may become sicker more frequently. when we're sick, we need time to regroup to fight off those germs. >> they even mention emotional problems. suicide, depression and anxiety
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from sleep deprivation. >> for teens having suicidal thoughts, these are things that can be prevented if we set up rules and guidelines for our kids, and that's important for us to do. >> even with rules and guidelines, yes, children are going to bed too late and waking up too early. in some cases they're in bed long enough but they have insomnia. going to some of the causes of insomnia, dietary, et cetera. >> insomnia means difficulty initiating sleep, maintaining sleep or having the proper quality or duration of sleep. our kids are busy. many times they may get into bed, but they're difficult with their iphones or watching television. that's when we as parents need to help them establish guidelines. we need to help them with their schedules. they have extracurricular activities, they may be on their phone. we need to help them see that sleep is important. we need to help them get their homework done earlier so they
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can get to bed on time. >> then there's things like caffeine, sugar drinks, whatnot? >> we need to make sure our children are not consuming a lot of caffeine. even as kids, they can be harmful to their heart. they should not be consuming caffeine at all. and the phones and tablets and things, the light keeps us awake. they should be shut off one to two hours before bedtime. >> this was from the american clinic of sleep medicine and supported by the american academy of pediatrics. these credible recommendations, this is it? we go with these? >> they took 10 months to develop this. they looked at over 800 different studies. that's important. these weren't just put out there. these are things that looked at studies, and they looked at what we need to be doing for our kids. the important thing is our kids are not getting enough sleep. it is important to their health,
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it's important to their mental and physical health, it's vital for their well-being. getting enough sleep can help these guys out. the three-man crew at the international space station, they're back on solid ground, but it wasn't exactly smooth sailing. why the trio was looking a little green. that'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!
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international space station. but the trip home was more like a cosmic roller coaster ride. the module landed on its side after doing sommelie somersault the way home. they landed safely. we're glad their back on terra firma. hannity is next. welcome to the special edition of "hannity, jihad in america." for the entire hour, we're going to examine the growing threat of jihad in the u.s. the latest is only an example of how the jihadists want to destroy your way of life. let's take a look. >> and we've just gotten word of not one, but two, explosions near the finish line of the boston

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