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tv   Happening Now  FOX News  June 30, 2016 8:00am-9:01am PDT

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stories, some of which we were able to tie up with a bow and thankfully there was nothing that happened to anybody, it was an exercise going on at the airbase andrews this morning. eric: you have a great july 4 weekend. martha: thank you very much. eric: see you here tomorrow morning. martha: "happening now" starts now. jon: fox news alert and new information on the three suicide bombers behind those deadly terror attacks at the istanbul airport. a turkish official now saying they came from russia and two of the former republics. come to "happening now", i'm jon scott. heather: and i'm heather childers in for jenna lee. this good news coming as police arrest 13 suspects in a series of raids across the city, almost rounded up as john mentioned threeforeign nationals . jon: john is following the latest developments in istanbul. reporter: new details emerging about the three attackers as we are also
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seeing new pictures and video, dramatic and graphic pictures and video of them launching the attack here at ataturk airport tuesday night. turkish officials said the three were from russia, whose pakistan and curtis dan. we don't have any more specific details than that. we don't have their names, ids, don't know exactly if they were living here in the country in turkey, istanbul or if they all traveled here together or separately from another country or countries. that said, as mentioned, turkish police conducted a number of raids overnight, detaining 13 people and collecting firearms, other weapons and documentation they say is linked to isis and again, that backs up what turkish officials including the prime minister have maintained adamantly that isis was behind tuesday's attack even though no specific group has claimed responsibility.
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funerals were held today for many of the victims. 43 people killed, who lost their lives andmore than 230 others wounded . the funerals are held throughout the day here in istanbul and here at ataturk airport on the second floor, the departures hall, a memorial has been set up for some of the victims. you see all the victims but some of their pictures there and the table covered with flowers. this is again, the airport has been reopened. we've been seeing travelers all day flowing in and out amid heightened security as you can imagine but 's are starting to get back to normal as they possibly can be after that horrific attack tuesday night here. john. jon: disturbing video to be sure. john honey in istanbul. heather: now to america's election headquarters where trade is set to top the agenda for donald trump again today as we await his
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comments in manchester new hampshire, after the presumptive nomineesat down with our very own peter ducey on a wide-ranging interview and peter joins us live from manchester with more . reporter: heather, trump says that no matter what you hear about his campaign struggling, thanks having the largest, most enthusiastic crowds has been a big advantage. that is reflected somewhat in the way this fox news poll. you look at voters were extremely or very interested in the election, they put trump as two points behind hillary. she's got 45, he's got 43. the clinton lead gross to six points when all registered voters polled are considered so, trying to keep things quote, trump is focusing heavily on two things. trade which he is going to talk about today at a recently closed lightbulb factory in manchester and terror, something he told me yesterday he thinks hillary clinton should have stopped from spiraling out of control. >> isis was formed during her
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regime, okay? she's done nothing about it, she never will, she doesn't have the ability to do anything about it if she never will, she would like to but probably doesn't have the ability or strength to do anything about it and everybody knows that. reporter: so trade and terror are the two big focuses and to that point i had a chance to ask trump yesterday if he thinks terror attacks like the one in istanbul early this week make him look stronger to voters and he said he doesn't think of it like that because it was such an awful tragedy. i also talk to trump about why he's in new hampshire today since this is such a small state, it normally doesn't get a ton of attention during national elections and he said he really likes to come back to the state that gave him his first victory back in primary season in february and he must really like it in new hampshire because his second trip here to the granite state this month.
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heather? heather: it looks like a nice day there for all of you. thank you peter. jon: more now on the brand-new fox news polls on this presidential election. this one focusing on the gender issue. men prefer donald trump to hillary clinton 46 to 36 percent but back the former secretary of state over mister trump 51 to 32 percent area let's take a little deeper into the numbers with kyle condit, political analyst at the university of virginia's center for politics, also managing editor of larry sollecito's crystal ball. thanks very much kyle for being with us. it's a six-point race now according to these fox news polls. hillary clinton 44 to 38, that's just inside the margin of error but earlier this month it was ready to 39, it was a three-point race. the numbers for donald trump seem to be going in the wrong direction. >> yeah, that fox news bowl is actually pretty reflective of all the national polls going on right now if you
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average them altogether, you get a clinton lead up somewhere around five or six points so trump got a little bit closer after he became the presumptive nominee in may and clinton was fighting bernie sanders. sanders was still technically in the race but over time, clinton has built a lead back up to again about where that fox news poll shows. what i think is important to know about these polls is that they are not necessarily predictive this early in the election cycle. i think particularly after the conventions and both candidates might get out of their convention, we will have a better sense of where things are but certainly that's to say clinton is the favorite right now but we got a long way togo . jon: you mentioned when trump firmed up the nomination he seemed to get above but since then,since may he has lost eight points among republican voters . again, not a goodsign . >> in order to win a presidential election, a democrat has to get 90 percent from self identified democrats, republican have to
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get 90 percent plus of self identified republicans area and trump is only getting 80, 85 percent of republicans. he's probably going to lose so that's a big issue for trump and it leads one to wonder if there could be some at the republican convention although it doesn't actually look like that's all that plausible at this point. jon: there's been talk about that, republican arty leadership says not going to happen. mitt romney had the support of 93 percent of republicans and a lot of people felt like the evangelical community and people who were suspicious of his record as governor of a democratic state were not necessarily onboard the romney campaign but as i said, 93 percent support among republicans. donald trump at 74 percent right now according to these latest fox news polls erie it doesn't bode well for trump unless he can turn those numbers around. >> the romney point is a good
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one because romney had a divisive primary to and there were a lot of republican party members who as you suggested didn't think he was conservative enough and at the end of the day got almost all self identified republicans to vote for him erie it trump may have an issue with that, particularly among some of the kinds of republican voters who are more resistant to him during the primary, particularly those with higher income , maybe people with higher levels of education who weren't quite as enthusiastic about trump as others were in the primary. jon: what about the voters who say they are very interested and paying very close attention to this election? hillary clinton is at 45 percent, donald trump at 33 percent so for the people who are very focused on this, it's a virtual dead heat. what does that tell you? >> i think enthusiasm is important particularly in an election where you have two candidates who are unpopular nationally.
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there's been some other polls where you take universe of registered voters and narrow it down to the likely voters and typically, republicans do a little bit better when that change happens in polls but there have been some holes that have been taken this year that indicate clinton actually does better when you narrow down to those likely voters which might indicate a lack of enthusiasm on the republican side so certainly the foxhole shows maybe the trump voters a little more enthusiastic but that's not a finding that is universally held across all these polls. jon: you're telling us we should wait till after the conventions to start really focusing in on what the polls say. >> i think that's right and probably after the first debate we will have a sense of things although in 2012, mitt romney got a out of the first debate but then he couldn't sustain it. i think let's look at the polls in august and see where they're at the one we need to ask the photo. what they think. kyle condit, thank you. check out kyle's new book the
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bellwether. while i'll picks the president. if you're interested in politics, check it out. heather: new information on the turmoil in the wake of the uk's brexit vote as london mayor boris johnson abruptly announces he will not run to succeed prime minister david cameron less than a week after leaving the campaign to pull britain out of the eu. senior coronet foreign affairs correspondent greg powell cut is in london. he's not going to run, greg? >> more surprises today and a little bit more clarity in the wake of that dramatic vote i the uk to leave the eu. boris johnson was widely touted as taking over as prime minister after cameron announced his resignation post referendum but in recent days, he was losing support. he was seen as disorganized or maybe backtracking on what you uk outside the eu would look like so today, he backed
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out. now in the lead, conservative lissa made. she is the home secretary here, attorney general . in comments today she slammed the door on what a lot of people seem to be wishing for since the referendum, that is a do over. take a listen area. >> brexit means brexit. the campaign was fought, the vote was held, and the public gave their verdict. there must be no attempts to remain inside the eu, no attempt to rejoin it through the back door and no second referendum. the country voted to leave the european union and it's incumbent on parliament to make sure we do just that. >> she also said there would be no election if possible to call for that and negotiations to leave the eu, they would start in the early
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part of next year. those could go on two years so there is still a little bit of wiggle room for the future. as for scotland, the leader there nicholas surgeon again saying she is committed to keeping scotland in the eu in whatever way possible. it's not looking like that would mean a scotland that would have to break away from the uk and one final note heather, the leave the eu thing could be contagious over here in europe. there are new polls out of france that say more people than not want a referendum on the matter, over 30 percent want to leave the eu, over 20 percent undecided. watch this space, back to you . heather: from rex it to possibly fix it. thanks for joining us. jon: vicious, depraved and evil. that's what the judge called sean custis after his sentencing after a nanny cam caught him beating a mother
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in a home invasion. the latest on the sentence he's received area now for the first time in history, members of the fdc voting to punish a network over a presidential debate. that network is the one you are watching, fox news channel. we tell you why just ahead. and we want to hear from you. donald trump says we need to take a tougher stance against terrorists including waterboarding and more. what you think about that? do you agree? our live chat is up and running. go to foxnews.com/happeningnow, get your thoughts into the conversation.
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be on crime stories where following. a 29-year-old san diego woman pleading not guilty to felony dui and vehicular manslaughter charges. stacy sanchez accused of hitting an elderly man with her car and driving half a mile with his body which went through the windshield in her passenger seat. the da says the defendants is a great danger to the public and is being held on 1 and a half million dollars bail. she also was placed on immigration hold which means
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that if released, sanchez could be deported. and sean custis sentenced to life in prison +5 years. convicted of being a woman in a brutal home invasion caught on a nanny cam in 2013. a woman survived and testified against him. and an emergency court hearing this morning in connecticut. we discussed the whereabouts of michael boheme, the contractor involved in a 2011 christmas day fire that killed the three young daughters and parents of an advertising executive he was dating. the attorneys in the case saying michael is nowhere to be found. he's facing a lawsuit from the children's father claiming his renovations to their home made it a fire trap. heather: democrat on the election commission secretly voting to punish fox news .
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for the sponsorship of this past august 6 debate and for changing the format to include two debates instead of one. media buzz host howard kurtz joins us from washington with the details. what's going on here? >> good morning. it began as an effort by fox news to include more presidential candidates in a televised debate. it wound up with democrats on the fdc accusing them of violating federal election law that that charge was blocked when the republican members of the commission in a series of secret votes a month ago that just became public today. after limiting those first primetime presidential debate last august as you will recall through the top gop candidates as determined by certain national polls, fox decided to add a certain undercard debate for the other seven major candidates. that the democratic commissioner said it amounted to an illegal corporate contribution to those candidates . republican commissioner lee goodman told fox news today it was asked astonishing regulatory overreach. how expanding the debate format from 10 to 17 candidates could be considered a legal violation.
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the case is quite unusual in part because the fdc law as a notion to protect journalistic independence and raises the notion of whether the commissions democratic members were trying to target fox news. cnn after all later changed its own debate criteria to include carly fiorini as the 11th candidate in a primetime debate. fox case a complaint from a little-known presidential candidate, irs commissioner mark everson who wanted to be on that stage in cleveland. the commission has the power to impose a civil fund which could potentially amount to hundreds of thousands of dollars of production costs and the value of the airtime had been considered instead. that 33 deadlock blocks any further action. heather: very interesting. howard kurtz le for us, thank you. jon: a suspected marijuana trafficker busted along with his sister but we until you hear what else police found in the home area the biggest cash seizure ever for miami
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police. plus, the wreckage of egypt air flight 804 slowly giving up its egrets. what the recovered flight data recorder tells investigators about what was going on in the cabin moments before that jet plunged into the sea. i'm terrible at golf.
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heather: in miami, police sitting on the biggest cash seizure in department history. 24 million in the home of a suspected marijuana trafficker. the brother and sister in the process, lisa hernandez gonzalez and selma hernandez were both arrested after police found the cash. they say the money was stuffed in five gallon, look at all that ... five gallon buckets hidden in a secret
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attic compartment. the brother runs regarding business in miami which was also rated. they see what he was involved in trafficking marijuana overseas along with two other suspects and his sister worked at the gardening store . jon: we are getting new information on the crash of that egypt air just in the mediterranean last month period in which 66 people died. the flight data recorder revealing what investigators already suspected, there was smoke in the cabin. if there's smoke, there could be fired. officials say the records recovered from the front of the plane shows signs of high temperatures in the scorching. let's bring in veteran international commercial pilot dj cross. i know you're qualified on the airbus 320, that's the craft in question here. smoke on board, there's nothing worse for a pilot. >> absolutely not, john. it's a terrible thing to have on an aircraft and generally you have between 13 and 17 minutes to find a suitable place to land and that probably explains the rapid
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dissent that they did with the aircraft and then the terms trying to figure out where to land. they'll find more once they are able to examine the voice recorder. jon: i'm reminded of the swiss aircraft back in 1999. that was a mystery when it occurred. turned out there was smoke in the cabin and in the cockpit and the pilots couldn't even see their instruments because there had been a spark in the entertainment system, ironically. the wiring malfunction set a very smoky fire and the pilots simply couldn't see and probably couldn't read. that's the kind of thing that brought down that flight in 99, are we looking at the same kind of thing here? >> possibly. a lot of these signals they got in the 80 cars that were sent to the ground and that's where people were clinging to in the preliminary investigation, those are all connected with the dc electrical buses. now, if there was some kind of short fire within the
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avionics which is under the pilots , explain those signals. now if there was something in the laboratory, that's where i'm a little bit confused area they are saying they got signals that made her was a fire in the laboratory. going to have to examine the wreckage and see exactly what those remarks are from and then they will have abetter idea where to go investigation . jon: the communications addressing system, kind of a secret signal that the engine actually transmits to ground crews so they will know what kind of shape the plane is and when it lands so that was also featured in the malaysian airlines flight 370 mystery, that's where they got some idea of where that plane ended up.a fire in the laboratory, there are people who still try to go into lavatories to smoke but if you are a terrorist and you wanted to build a bomb on board, the laboratory might be the place to do that. this does not rule out terrorism.
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>> absolutely not and it doesn't rule it out and it doesn't make it exact that was that. people have to keep that in mind as they're going to travel this busy holiday season that you know, it's nothing definite on what this was and what people have to also remember is that this is still preliminary, they still have to listen to that voice recorder to get a better idea what exactly the pilots are doing at that point. now for me, if i was on the flight deck i'm looking for a place to land. they are looking at messages on the screen of what the emergencies are and running checklists so there was a lot going on in the flight deck. curious that that voice recorder and really get a good idea of what exactly is going on. jon: alarms in the avionics area. that's right under the cockpit, correct? >> that's right john. there's a slew of instruments. there's all the computers and they also got some flight control computer warnings
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within the signal so that's what i'm wondering also was there a degradation of aircraft control due to the loss of these computers. the airplane can still fly if the less comfortable to fly as you lose the slight computers, you lose certain protections so that's how things can snowball and it could be a whole chain of events that eventually led to this catastrophe. >> because if there was a fire that, a hot enough fire that burns through those wiring bundles in the avionics bay, then you got an uncontrollable airplane. >> exactly and that's why i'm curious now. i have not seen anything on what was exactly in the forward cargo compartment. was there some kind of flammable cargo in there perhaps? maybe even lithium batteries? we're all aware now of the problems with lithium batteries so i still would like to see more on that coming forth and i'm sure more will be brought tous . jon: is some tantalizing information but as you say it
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doesn't put an end to the speculation about what might have happened. was it an aircraft malfunction, was it terrorism, was it a bit of cargo that caught fire, we don't know. dj frost, thanks for sharing your expertise. >> welcome john, anytime. heather: coming up, donald trump making waves this week, renewing his calls for waterboarding for suspects following the distended terror attacks. on a new foxhole just out on what voters are saying about his plan. plus, mother nature changing some fourth of july celebrations for millions of americans out west. we got the latest from the fox extreme weather center. tou. now i'm on the path to better blood sugar control. toujeo® is a long-acting insulin from the makers of lantus®. it releases slowly, providing consistent insulin levels for a full 24 hours, proven full 24-hour blood sugar control, and significant a1c reduction. and along with toujeo®,
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toujeo® helps me stay on track with my blood sugar. ask your doctor about toujeo®. heather: a quick look at what
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is to come this hour of "happening now". new concerned ahead of the summer olympics in rio as officials make a gruesome discovery at the site of a major venue and a major break in the investigation following the istanbul terror attacks. what investigators now say about the suspects they picked up in overnight raids across the city and what it means for airport security worldwide. plus, cookie dough lovers beware. the fda's new warning about a serious concern. john? jon: fourth of july celebrations will not be quite as sparkling on the west coast this holiday weekend as dry weather conditions wildfire fears and fireworks band. major cities in washington state and california say no
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explosives allowed. origami is taking a step further, banning fireworks along all-state beaches and national parks. meteorologist maria molina live in fox extreme weather center with a look at conditions. >> i have bad news for anyone hoping there was rain on the way in a couple of days on the west coast and flute including california, oregon or washington state and through the weekend are not expecting to see rainfall there so that's going to be bad news. we expect dry conditions to continue there again even through 4 july. there are areas that are going to be seen too much rainfall and even some storms as we head into this weekend and right now we already have activity out there. showers and storms across parts of the gulf coast, portions of the midwest and out here, the american monsoon season across parts of the southwest, we typically see activity picking up this time of year and that has started now. we have rain across portions of arizona, very hot
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temperatures we've been talking about over the past couple of weeks. there are also concerns about isolated severe weather across parts of the carolinas, virginia and also further west across portions of the plains andmidwest. primary concern will be damaging winds and large hail . weather warnings will be in place but the biggest threat here over the next few days and into the weekend will be the flood concerns across portions of the central plains because we're not only going to be seeing that risk for storms that could bring severe weather but also very heavy rainfall and locally some areas could be picking up more than four inches, potentially more than six inches of rain so a flood threat will be in place here across portions of kansas, also missouri and even across eastern parts of colorado. temperatures over the next couple of days are going to be relatively hot, not so unusual this time of year across the southern plains, close to 100 degrees in dallas and as we head into the weekend, many people will be off work and enjoying the
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long holiday weekend. you can see in dallas on saturday, a lot cooler as we head into portions of the northeast with temperatures there in the 80s but they will be climbing by sunday. look at dallas, by sunday 101. 97 degrees over in corpus christi so it's going to be hotter in texas than in some parts of the southwest and by monday, the heat continues out there.it continues across portions of florida, orlando could be at 95 degrees fourth of july. john? jon: get out the sunblock. maria, thank you. heather: donald trumprenewing his call for waterboarding terror suspects in the wake of the istanbul attacks . >> you remember when i got in some trouble where i talked about waterboarding? they asked me a question. they asked ted cruz a question and he rightfully didn't want to get into it. he was a little bit like, don't ask me about waterboarding. well, they asked me the question. i said i'll answer that question. i said what you think about waterboarding?
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i said i like it a lot and i don't think it's tough enough . heather: let's bring in angela mclennan, a political analyst and santina jackson, radio talkshow host and a fox news contributor. hello to both of you. two very different responses to the attacks in istanbul, hillary clinton advocating for diplomacy and donald trump saying fight fire with fire, waterboarding and more. angela, who's right? >> i'm for stopping the terrorists by any means necessary. i think they're both right. you need diplomacy dealing with our allies and with some of our allies, america right now is being weak because of the failed policy of the obama administration but again, i do not have any sympathy for terrorists because they don't have before the infidel so both are right and i'm with donald, you should waterboarding them. heather: sent you? >>wow, invoking malcom x x, v going to do ?
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your frightening me girl. this is fear mongering at its best. 90 percent of all terrorists acts are carried forth on our soul are carried forth by non-muslims.our terrorists are homegrown. sandy hook, charleston, south carolina. i mean, columbine. you can keep on going. look, we don't need to lock people out. we need to look within and find out not what's going on with immigrants but what's going on with the issues that are driving them to commit these horrible acts. there's a north carolina study that shows that after february of this year, 33 americans had been killed by terrorists acts in america but 180,000 americans have been murdered. what are we going to do about that. >> you're right, were talking about international terrorism, not just in the town of chicago and you're right, we do have homegrown terrorism. we have black on black crime, white on white crime. we have a problem in america but i'm not talking about the problem within america, i'm
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talking about people who want to take us out because we're the infidel. by any means necessary. >> angela, in all 50 states right now regarding potential terrorist attacks, they are being planned out by people who are supporting isis specifically but i want to go back to something you are saying santina, we did do this poll and asked people what would make the country safer? and it's interesting because 59 percent think that using profiling techniques to increase government surveillance on certain types of individuals with increased safety. 52 percent say passing stricter gun laws, 41 percent say encouraging more citizens to carry weapons to defend themselves would make us safer and yes, almost as many, 37 percent say less safe and 53 percent support a temporary ban on muslims entering the us which we all know is what donald trump supports. it santina? >> there are a couple of things here. let's go back. in prohibition, we didn't
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profile people. we tried to stop the transportation of product and we got to go back to that but this is not about people. this is aboutproduct , okay? when we're looking at assault rifles, look, there are no good guys. there are no bad guys. there's just dead guys. we need to get the assault rifles off our streets, number one. we need to stop demonizing people, number two because guess what? that's not a good look internationally. that doesnot work for us and i repeat, 90 percent , 90 percent of these terrorists acts that have been carried out on oursoil , they're not carried out by people who are from our side of the united states, they are here. come on. [overlapping conversation] >> as for profiling, before 9/11 i would have agreed with
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santina because when you do profile, you go down a slippery slope however, i'm pretty sure before 9/11 if we did more profiling of folks, maybe we could havestopped those terrorist attacks so i don't know how we can balance it out . heather: many agree with you as well. i want to take a look at one other poll, this is overall in terms of how people feel in america right now, they say it was the second terrorist attack in only three weeks area people are nervous, 84 percent of them, 84 percent, only 11 percent feel confident so when it comes to the presidential election, who will benefit from polls like these? santina? >> the fear mongering certainly donald trump will benefit from fear mongering but the american people will benefit from no fear. the fact is, we are strongest when we look at our problems
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in the eye and decide we're going to resolve them. there are a lot of international conflicts that are driving terrorism. with deal with that. let's look at our policies. our policies and policies all around the world that are driving people to commit these acts and then we can admit them. heather: what you think people will say hillary clinton had her chance with these policies and look where we are? >> hillary clinton as commander-in-chief is going to surprise you. she istoxic so what is going on in america right now , whoever has the best message on national security and how you are going to protect me because donald trump throwing the bombs, that's one thing. but americans don't feel safe so i think it's going to change thependulum , whoever's best on national security and protecting the homeland. heather: the bottom line is we have dozens of people and hundreds injured in the orlando terror attack directly linked to isis and his allegiance to isis and obviously the latest situation going on in turkey, possibly believed to have
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been related to isis. >> these were not hillary clinton's policies, remember that. she served at the pleasure of the president p7 thank you. jon: new information about the istanbul terror attack read what police are learning about those three men behind it and what it means for the investigation. so when i found out medicare doesn't pay all my medical expenses, i looked at my options. then i got a medicare supplement insurance plan. [ male announcer ] if you're eligible for medicare, you may know it only covers about 80% of your part b medical expenses. the rest is up to you. call now and find out about an aarp medicare suppinsurance company.lan,d bye like all standardized medicare supplement insurance plans, it helps pick up some of what medicare doesn't pay. and could save you in out-of-pocket medical costs.
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istanbul terror attack. our turkish official saying that three terrorists came from russia and two former soviet republics. this is police conduct overnight raids and arrest 13 suspects linked to the deadly airport attack. as the death toll rises, 244 and more than 90 people are still hospitalized with injuries they suffered that night. welsh is a freelance journalist in his sandals, standing by, thank you. >> thanks for having me. heather: tell us what we know about the latest arrests.
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>> well, there are 13 that have been arrested in istanbul and nine in the city of is mail on the agn. 22 in total. turkish security officials have been detaining hundreds of isis suspects over the past year but most of them have been released . they been prosecuted and even fewer that are in prison at this point including the alleged head of isis, a man named holly by a jew or how gonzalez so i think the turkish trade officials are taking a much more seriously now. there's been at least six isis bombings on turkish soil last year, told about 200 people. also the interior minister, he spoke today. he said now there are 43 dead , that toll has actually risen since he has spoken earlier today 244. 19 of those are foreign nationals and we know that 94 people are still in the hospital.
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heather: before we talk about the victims, a little more on the bombers themselves because we mentioned russia and two former soviet republics read. >> we are waiting get more information. these countries, they are so many that have joined isis, chickens as they usually call them so we will have to see, we are eagerly awaiting their identities. what officials have told the media is they were renting an apartment. this is a very old neighborhood, very conservative but also one of the main neighborhoods that most syrian refugees go to. there's lots of foreign people there so they might have been undiscovered. >> interesting when we talk about who's pakistan and curtis stand, which two of the bombers were allegedly from because curtis dan here in america, we know that the soraya brothers, maybe that sounds familiar. their family actually lived in curtis stand for a period oftime and those go back to
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the victims. were beginning to hear some stories about some of the people who died . >> there absolutely heart wrenching. we know there was a 25-year-old airline worker, he had just gotten a job and he was excited because he was going to pay for his two younger sisters education. another one is a 24-year-old, he had rushed to the scene to help the victims of the first bomb and was killed in the second one. also, a young man who was about to be married in the next 10 days. another one whose wife is pregnant, a tunisian medical doctor with military, he convinced his son who had gone to join isis in syria and married there to leave isis and he worked with turkish authorities and was going to pick him up and retrieve a couple and bring them back to tunisia area so tragic and ironic area. heather: our prayers go out to all those families impacted. laura allows joining us, live
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from istanbul, thank you. be on a new fda warning about cookie dough and it's not the raw eggs that are causing concern this time. what's the danger here? plus, one key voting block could swing the presidential election. what that is and why donald trump seems to be having trouble winning those voters over. live with that.>>
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jon: "outnumbered" is coming up at the top of the hour. sandra and harris, what do you have?>> the istanbul terror bombers are identified, new concerned here about the obama administrations mixed messages on isis. are we beating them or not? and conflict of interest questions about the hillary clinton email investigation after her husband , remember,
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former president, at a private meeting with the attorney general loretta lynch. is that allowed? and marines removing the word man from a bunch of job titles. is our military going pc on us or will gender neutrality be good for our female troops? all that plus are asked one lucky guy, outnumbered on this friday, back to you. jon: love the excitement, harris. keep it up. andrea: love friday. a new challenge for donald trump in america's election headquarters to talk about as the presumptive gop nominee seems to be struggling to win over an important group of swing voters, people who live in the suburbs.
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