tv Shepard Smith Reporting FOX News September 20, 2016 12:00pm-1:01pm PDT
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take care of our own. look at this. a group of people delivering pizza's to police officers in manhattan and a starbucks employee brought down coffee and food for the officers as well. that's so nice. i'm melissa francis. the new york bombing suspect repeatedly traveled to afghanistan and pakistan before attacking america. but no red flags raised? how about when police accused him of stabbing somebody? nothing. how about years ago when his own father reportedly told the feds he was a terrorist? still nothing was told. on this tuesday the missed signals and what we have learned about that man who dropped explosives, thirsty to kill. a poll showing donald trump is making move in florida. we have the numbers. a government screwup. the feds were supposed to deport hundreds of illegal immigrants, instead they gave them
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citizenship. wait until you see the details. a hollywood mega star split. angelina jolie filing for divorce against brad pitt. is there more to the story? it's all ahead. first from the fox news desk at 3:00 in the east. the fbi opened a file on ahmed rami that his son may have been trying to obtain explosives but the officials never interviewed that son close to a law enforcement source close to the investigation. that dad said he warned the fbi two years ago. >> two years ago i called but they checked and -- [ inaudible ] he's not a terrorist, i said
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okay. i say okay. >> that's like a whole field of red flags. apparently just one of many that they missed over the months and years leading up to the terror attacks in new york and new jersey they say he launched. investigators say they're looking into how he went to a seemingly regular guy working at his family's chicken restaurant to a bomber and his travels to pakistan and afghanistan may provide the biggest clues. the suspect made several trips between 2005 and 2014. the newspaper reports he visited spots including the headquarters for exiled leaders of the afghan taliban. sources tell fox news u.s. officials were aware of all of those trips but they did not seem suspicious to them because of rami's family ties in the region. one source says officials stopped him on one trip but clear ds him. rami married a woman in
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pakistan, brought her back to the united states. the new york daily news reports she and his mother left the country days before the bombing this past weekend. we have team fox coverage rick levelen thaul is live. let's go to catherine live for us in washington. >> the suspect's father told reporters in new jersey that he warned the feds about his son two years ago. >> he went bad. my son. he stabbed my son. hit my wife and i put him to jail. >> what son did he send? >> nasser. >> what happened? >> there's more information about the prior contact between the fbi and the suspect before yesterday's dramatic arrest. the victim in that domestic dispute alleged that rahim me
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showed signs of radicalization and two fbi sources followed up but not enough to pursue and the original allegations were withdrawn. a law enforcement source said the frequency of those trips to afghanistan was not suspicious at the time because of his family ties and the number of trips did not suggest that he was getting outside help to pay for those flights. >> i'll tell you it's hard to follow all the red flags but it seems like there were many of them. some by his own hand. what about the suspect's writings? >> two sources confirmed to fox news writings were recovered at the scene including references to the al qaeda leader bin laden who was killed at his compound in pakistan as well as anwr, first american targeted for death and killed in yemen. this photo is where he was
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arrested for prostitution. iraqi has been a source of inspiration to terrorists including the terrorist who shot at the pulse nightclub in orlando. despite these statements, two sources said the view among rank and file investigators in new york and new jersey and at the federal level here at washington said the search is not over. the republican chairman said today the investigation has not ruled out others. >> we can't at this point in time -- now, remember the cell phones are being analyzed for what's called encrypted communications for any contact, computers are analyzed for any conversations he would have had with operatives, perhaps, in pakistan or afghanistan or iraq or syria. >> just want to circle back on the fbi issue to give you some context. remember the news conference yesterday the fbi said there had been a domestic dispute and an
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investigation some years ago. now we know some years ago is only two years ago and there seems to be dispute among law enforcement sources as to whether rahim my was interviewed by the fbi. i was told he was before they closed that preliminary investigation. >> boy, i tell you it's just the trips and everything. i wonder if we learn from this that the next time they're looking at these things that they maybe have talked to because their dad called if they don't treat it differently. it's a timeline of what the lessons are at this point. >> the bottom line, we have got really a bad trend line here. when you look at the successful domestic terror attacks in this country with home grown extremists, what you see in all these cases whether it's boston, whether it's orlando, san bernardino and now this case, at some point they hit the fbi's radar but it was simply not enough because they were american citizens to open a
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formal investigation. >> i'm writing it down. we'll cover this issue throughout the hour. you said bad timeline. it's so interesting because you got points on a timeline but then you have to step back. it's almost after something happens. but they have their suspect now. thank you very much. >> you're welcome. >> ahmed khan is hospitalized this hour. as federal prosecutors decide whether to go ahead with their own charges. investigators are digging into his background and piecing together the physical evidence. officials say they found his fingerprint on an unexploded bomb in new york city. remember, after the initial explosion on west 23rd street police say two people found a second device four blocks away and put it in a plastic bag described as a pressure cooker with wires and a phone attached. similar to the boston marathon bombers' device they used. rick picks up our team coverage
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life in new york city's chelsea neighborhood. now the street is open you're getting a much better look at exactly what the scene is. >> reporter: right. the location of that pressure cook urbom that detonated was right here in front of this tree. you can see bark blown off and you can see shrapnel holes on the scaffolding. businesses are starting to repair. the glass that was blown out, this one, the stained glass on the church next door was blown out. across the street on many of the homes and businesses here, windows destroyed. come back this way, rich. there's a bunch of dumpsters here. one was blown clear across the street by the force of the blast. there was also surveillance footage in this area. a lot of cameras. some shows the suspect carrying his bomb to here in a backpack
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and the second was in a duffle bag. a couple guys found that bag, pulled the pressure cooker apparently to steal the bag not realizing they had just handled a -- and possibly accidentally disarmed a weapon of mass destruction. law enforcement toured this area and had high praise for the city's response. >> i want to compliment the fine work of the new york city police department, federal law enforcement in the apprehension of the suspect literally hours after the event here on saturday night. >> so the cleanup continues here and so obviously does the investigation. >> they seem to have just from what we're reading quite a bit of evidence against this man. what are you learning? >> reporter: you mentioned the fingerprint they found on that unexploded pressure cooker four blocks north on 27th street.
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they say they have managed to trace the flip phones including the pipe bombs in new jersey to a dollar store in new jersey. they have been able to determine he bought those flip phones and there are toll records that confirm he drove his father's suv in and out of the city before and after the bomb went out. while some law enforcement believe he was likely acting alone, he also may have had help along the way. that's something officials are looking into and telling us today it's really fortunate more people weren't hurt. >> we were in some sense very lucky that we didn't have people on that side of the street more seriously hurt or killed. but you know, the people on the scene, the number of calls to 911, the amount of information they provided, people are great. >> not just fortunate that people weren't killed here but also that that device on 27th
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street did not detonate. that could have been worse. >> people are great. you see something, say something and in the instance of that off duty police officer, if you see something, do something. a lot of blessings along the way. thank you very much. a deep dive into the suspect's path including what happened when he was accused of stabbing somebody and why he never faced charges for it. stay close. but the rent is outrageous. good thing geico offers affordable renters insurance. with great coverage it protects my personal belongings should they get damaged, stolen or destroyed. [doorbell] uh, excuse me. delivery. hey. lo mein, szechwan chicken, chopsticks, soy sauce and you got some fortune cookies. have a good one. ah, these small new york apartments... protect your belongings. let geico help you with renters insurance.
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the accused new york bomber's past includes a domestic dispute. just reported moments ago here it was just two years ago, not a long time, according to the dailymail.com police arrested ahmad khan rahami for stabbing someone in the leg and possessing a gun. but a grand jury cleared him. even though the officer says the suspect was a danger to himself and others. his father said his son had stabbed one of his brothers. the senior news editor is scooping up this information and doing a deep dive. what are you finding? >> we are indeed. we did find that in 2014 he was arrested for stabbing his brother. his brother was stabbed in his left leg. he was arrested for that. he had possession of a weapon. he was arrested for that too.
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the policeman who arrested him told the grand jury that he was a danger not only to himself but to others. >> so was the arresting officer who said that? >> that's right. that's right. and in the end, the grand jury let him go. which was incredible. >> do we know why? >> we don't know why. we don't know why. probably to really put him away. >> in your reporting candace, are you able to talk with any of these people that are called a bad timeline of red flags? there were a lot of things but as you step back it seems like a lot. if you're up close, maybe not. what are people telling you close to it? >> our sources are saying there were all the signs that when he traveled to pakistan, when he traveled to afghanistan, that he was radicalized there and in fact dailymail.com has a photograph of him today from
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2013. he is sitting with his brother in pakistan wearing traditional robes. wearing a skull cap, a scarf around his neck. these were things that people might have noticed, people who were here. >> that traditional garb might not have over there triggered the mind but if you're looking at it through the prism of he left home in a t-shirt and jeans -- >> that's right. that was around 2012, 2013, 2014. these were the times that people were -- our sources were noticing changes in him and believed that it's when he was in pakistan that he was radicalized and influenced by his brother and his sister as well. >> one of the questions i've had all along as we continue to have to do these stories because it's happening over and over is when people see red flags we know with the orlando shooter people saw red flags as early as high
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school. do they feel like the infrastructure is there with authorities for them to have somebody to go to. the dad went to the fbi. are you hearing from your sources they felt like there was somebody to tell that could put it all together? >> right. i think that people were not noticing enough and really it's his father who noticed more than anybody. and went to the fbi. but there was really -- they found there was nothing that pointed to any kind of horrific act as what happened last weekend. >> a lot of times and we're seeing this too with the young man in minnesota and the shopping mall stabbings that police say he carried out that he was quote, such a nice, normal american kid. >> yes. >> what are they saying about him? >> they're saying the same thing, that he was at this chicken -- you know, america first fried chicken store. family owned. and that he was a very grow gags
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guys, he was into fast cars and some neighbors said he would come in and they would get free chicken. there was nothing about him overtly that he was -- that he had been radicalized or was going to do something so horrific. >> i would never want to suggest that even go down a road of your sources but i am curious to know outside the father, if there are other family members who have spoken on the record? >> no. no family members yet. >> all right. i understand that they are getting ready to bring in an fbi statement. you guys tell me when that's ready. you know, as you look down that bad timeline as catherine pointed out, you touched on some of those issues and one of them was that domestic dispute. >> yes. >> right? that stabbing? >> yes. >> and also, in his past though that i'm learning, you know, that he had problems, the family had problems with the police
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department. can you tell me about that? >> certainly. apparently the chicken restaurant or the chicken, you know, store had problems, people congregated there. they were noisy. the place was open very late, all night in fact. neighbors residential and commercial were unhappy about it. and they reported police. police gave them a hard time, came in. and then they were -- the family accused the police accused the town, elisabeth. >> elisabeth new jersey. >> of discrimination because they were muslims. they came to some agreement about it but there was a lot of contentious -- >> that's interesting. so you have that and the history of the family and a dad who goes to the fbi about his own son. there were just points of what i would call points of interest along that bad timeline.
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>> right. >> we are just getting in the statement by the fbi. it says in quote and this is about the 2014 rahami assessment and why they didn't interview. the fbi initiated an assessment based on comments made by his father after a domestic dispute that were subsequently reported to authorities. the fbi conducted internal database reviews, interagency checks and multiple interviews none of which reviewed ties to terrorism. not necessarily looking at it from the point of view am i putting these dots in a line and keeping track. but they're looking for the end result of terrorism that hadn't happened until this past weekend. >> that's right. at the same time, he was taking trips to afghanistan, taking trips to pakistan. >> as late as? >> as late as 2014 for sure. you know, they didn't go back. they didn't go back. and now they're doing a little
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damage control i would say. >> so for the familiarle t ll l familile ties they figured out the trip was okay. it's something the fbi will have to tell us. do they change that? >> no. >> wouldn't you think a lot of people would go back to their home country because they have family there? >> yes. >> or just happen to have family there. >> i think that's what they assumed. if they had looked into his siblings, there were signs there that his sister and brother had some, you know, very radical views. >> interesting. more to read with the daily mail. thank you, we'll be right back.
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fox news. live images showing the wreckage of an american spy plane that has crashed in california. look at your screen. we're told the two pilots onboar went down. that is quite a crash site. this happened in california's sutter county 45 north of sacramento. you're looking at the the wreckage and it has set fire to the ground there. the united states military confirming to fox news we do not know if the pilots are okay. they ejected. we'll watch for their conditions and pray they made it down safely. the u2 has been flying since the mid '50s and played a part in one of the most notorious incidents of the cold war. in 1960 the soviets shot one down and caught gary powers and freed him in a prisoner exchange two years later.
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american pieltds ejecting before their plane crashes in sutter county california. as we learn more we'll bring it to you. president obama gave his final address to the united nations as commander in chief and attempted to assure world leaders that issues are best resolved working together. this as he wraps up his final months in office in an era seeing the worst refugee crisis since world war ii and the terror attacks. president obama said the united states can't do this alone. >> i believe at this moment we all face a choice. we can choose to press forward with a better model of cooperation and integration or we can retreat into a world sharply divided. >> he also seemingly took shots at donald trump and the republican nominee's plan to build a wall along the southern border with mexico.
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watch. >> today a nation ringed by walls will only imprisonen itself. extremisism will be exported overseas and the world is too small to build a wall. >> president obama calmed on world leaders to do more to help refugees coming from syria. let's bring in associate editor for the wall street journal. thanks for being here. at one point the president said we need to practice better democracy for the world. i'm paraphrasing him. how do you compare today's speech to those in the past? >> yeah. this was his victory. this was his leaving official office, his opportunity to talk to the world. that i don't think was a vailed shot at donald trump but a shot at donald trump and he was talking about the successes that the international community has had over the last eight years and the last many decades bringing democracy to more countries.
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he noted me and mars there with its first elected government resolving the international crisis without greater damage having to be done. and then he says look, you know, we have got to have a course correction here. because there's clear evidence that groups within all of our countries are unhappy with institutions. you're seeing that in europe. >> that was putting it mildly. >> and you're seeing it to some extent in the united states. it's a course correction should involve greater integration, more rule of law, more addressing of inequality. the 1% owning 99% of the world's wealth. >> i always wonder about this particularly at this late stage in a presidency. is that room ever warm enough for a real breakdown of events. did the president today have more latitude than he normally would to go farther and to call things what they are and to call out -- he didn't do any of that.
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he kept it positive. was there room for that? >> i think if you watch the totality of the speech, there was on the one hand a listing of the successes but there was quite a bit of that. there was -- >> you think there was? >> there was a calling to account not just of the developed nations about how jobs have disappeared, about unions having been undermined. that was his word. the worker having been undermined. but developing nations having the growth of wealth and the growth of opportunity be dominated by an elite that through corruption has skimmed off a vast amount of the wealth. there was a calling to account for both the developed and developing nations and a desire on his part to articulate a vision for the future. >> with regard to that, he talked about syria, he touched on that. they took a shot in the room from our coverage on fox news of the syrian arab group who was here. and you could never read too much from their faces.
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i'm curious to know if the president in your estimation addressed some of the issues there? i didn't hear him talk about that secease-fire. >> he didn't talk about the syrian cease-fire but talked about the russians and said you have got a russia that right now is seeking to rebuild a vision of the past. >> with regard to ukraine? >> exactly. he brought them to task. he did not speak to syria though -- >> was that a missed opportunity? >> i don't think so. i mean there was so much to cover from the mid east to asia. >> that's a big one, john. >> it is. but carey has already said the cease-fire is intact in his view despite the fact it looks like the syrian government attack -- >> you just saw -- we still don't know the exact numbers but
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it's on people's minds on what's going to go on that world and have us do a better job of vetting. it was cursory mentioned of a big war. >> his address addressed the key major pressure points around the world. that included the mid east. included the failure of institutions both in the mid east and in the west to address what's happening in the mid east. there was a calling to account for everybody. >> one other thing to note, both hillary clinton and donald trump have met with leaders from egypt and they are doing meetings on the side here as well at the u.n. don't know if you call it on the side. they're meeting with leaders there, too, because people around the world want to know what's it's going to be like after november in this country. that's an observation. >> yeah. >> thank you. we appreciate you coming in. controversy over candy. donald trump jr. sent a tweet about skittles causing a storm online.
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it takes ingenuity to make it in the big city. the fox report and more of today's headlines. a white police officer shot an unarmed black man in oklahoma after the suspect kept reaching for his pocket. police released video and i'm warning this is a bit graphic. the suspect walked to his car with his hands in the air. one of the officers uses a stun gun knocking him to the ground and a second officer fires her weapon killing him. the suspect's sister is calling for charges against police. north korea tested a rocket engine to launch satellites. they're a cover to test weapons. the dictatorship is trying to develop a program capable of threatening the united states. a volcano eruption forcing the
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okay! ...awkward. donald trump and his team claim the terror incidents over the weekend show political correctness run amuck. trump says the united states needs to do a better job screening people and trump's son donald jr. tried to use skittles to make a point. here's his tweet. a bowl of skittles with the message, if three would kill you, would you take a handful? a representative for wrigley, the company which makes skittles responded skittles are candy, refugees are people, we don't feel it's an appropriate analogy. we will refrain from further commentary as anything we say can be misinterpreted. trump jr. said immigration
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systems are to blame for attacks on u.s. soil. >> these attacks are made possible because of our extremely open immigration system which fails to properly vet and screen individuals coming into our country. attack after attack from 9/11 to san bernardino to orlando we have seen how failure to screen who is entering the united states puts all of our citizens in great danger. >> hillary clinton has accused donald trump of helping isis and other terror groups recruit new fighters with his anti-muslim rhetoric. john roberts live in north carolina, 80 miles southeast of raleigh and trump has a rally scheduled there later today. john. >> reporter: should be here between 5:00 and 6:00. good afternoon. donald trump putting terrorism front and center. today he did yesterday as well and really tried to lay the blame of what's happening in
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this country, what happened in new york city, san bernardino and orlando, at the feet of hillary clinton and barack obama for pursuing immigration policies that donald trump claims don't adequately vet people at a rally earlier today just about two hours away from where we are donald trump reiterating his call to stop issuing visas in countries where we cannot adequately vet people. reiterating his call where he says extreme vetting. it's curious that hillary clinton has started to adopt a little bit of that language talking yesterday about the need to adequately vet people. suggesting that the 9/11 highjackers were people who should have been vetted more closely. donald trump not in his public events but several times over the last couple of days reiterating his call for police to use profiling in order to root out terrorists before they attack. his campaign very careful to say
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that donald trump is not talking about quote, racial profiling, taking aim at a couple of news networks for suggesting he said that. when you look at it, a person's race, a person's ethnicity, their background, even their clothing are all part of the idea of profiling. so whether you say the word racial or not it's a component of what donald trump would have in mind. >> all right. i want to get back to something i had said to the viewers that hillary clinton is claiming trump is helping terrorist recruit by his language. what is the latest? >> reporter: she said this yesterday. donald trump is giving aid and comfort to the enemy. now aid and comfort to the enemy really doesn't fit the definition of treason. here's how donald trump responded a little while ago. >> because i'm tough. it's a recruiting tool. it demonstrates a level of ignorance about the terror
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threat that really is disqualifying for a person seeking the presidency. when she says my opposition to radical islamic terror provides aid and comfort to the enemy, we know that hillary clinton has once again demonstrated that she's really unfit for office. >> reporter: now i think it bears pointing out that a recent fox news pom when it asked the question of which candidate is better equipped to handle terrorism came out equal. if donald trump wants to win the oval office, the race is dead even. the average has got it literally within the same .010 of 1%. they're going to be battling pretty hard. >> i would have to think her camp is taking a good look at what you just said because they have to be looking at it separately and that is on terrorism they're even.
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she's a former secretary of state. he's a man who has never been a politician. i wonder -- >> reporter: well, there's nerves about a lot of things. that's the basket of nerves hillary clinton is dealing with. early on in the campaign donald trump was leading on the issue of terrorism and she gained the lead. now donald trump seems to be pulling it back in his column as well. he tends to do well when there is a terror attack particularly when he makes this point, that doing things the way the united states has been doing them is not preventing these terror attacks. so the ball may be moving toward his court. we'll see how hillary clinton responds when she gets back out on the campaign trail after her debate prep. >> all right. we'll cover the news as it happens. and you just mentioned those debate preps going on behind the scenes for hillary clinton. what that looks like and the new polling. stay with us.
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. boy, we just heard from john roberts that hillary clinton is taking a break from the campaign trail getting ready for her first face-off with donald trump less than a week away. taking a look at the fox news decision desk, it shows the eleg troll college is shifting and not in clinton's favor. clinton has the advantage over trump but the republican nominee is gaining ground in the key battle ground states of new hampshire, colorado, iowa and typically a blue state, minnesota. the real clear politics average of national polls has the two candidates tied. jennifer griffin live in westchester county, new york. jennifer, some new polls show the race getting tighter in the battle ground states and some interesting. that would be following the national trend. what's happening? >> reporter: well, it's very interesting and very tight harris but a new poll shows in florida, a key battle ground
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state, that clinton is leading by five points. leading donald trump 46% to 41% among likely voters with 5% undecided. in august almost gave clinton a nine point lead. but a new poll trump leads clinton by one point, 44% to 43% of likely voters. clinton has been to both charlotte and greensboro. president obama in 2008 was the first democrat to win north carolina since jimmy carter in 1976 but mitt romney flipped it back to red in 2012. all of these battle grounds very close right now. >> clinton also had a conference call with her national security team. >> reporter: it was a 45 minute conference call this morning from her home here . she spoke with members of her national security team talking about how to put together this intelligence surge and how to get more resources to police
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departments who face the kind of terror threat we saw in new york and new jersey. those on the call likely to be in her future cabinet. clinton relies heavily on deputy cia director and also on the telephone call michelle floir noy. clinton described the new york attacks aster richl undermining her opponent donald trump's criticism that she is too worried about being politically correct. >> i appreciate greatly your words of support after the terrorist attack that is we have experienced here. this is a threat that faces all of our country and we must redouble our efforts to meet this challenge together. >> reporter: clinton also met with the prime ministers of
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japan and ukraine in effort to show that she unlike her opponent is a statesman. trump also met with the egyptian president on the sidelines at the u.n. >> a full gymnastics move to get to this next story. brad pitt, angelina jolie are getting divorced. this afternoon what we're hearing about why they're splitting up and by the way, brad pitt is now talking. sfloo (vo) pro plan bright mind adult 7+ promotes alertness and mental sharpness in dogs 7 and older. (ray) the difference has been incredible. she is much more aware. she wants to learn things. (vo) purina pro plan bright mind. nutrition that performs. at safelite, we know how busy life can be. these kids were headed to their first dance recital... ...when their windshield got cracked... ...but they couldn't miss the show. so dad went to the new safelite-dot-com. and in just a few clicks, he scheduled a replacement...
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this but what matters most is the well being of our kids. i kindly ask the press to give them the space they deserve during this challenging time. trace gallagher is on the story live for us in los angeles. trace? >> corporate cousin at "the new york post" is reporting that angelina jolie learned that brad pitt was involved with an actress the co-star in the upcoming movie "allied" and "the post" says that jolie hired an investigator and the atmosphere was full of drugs and russian hookers that pitt apparently got caught up in and tmz which broke the divorce stair says it was, in fact, about brad and six kids saying, angelina reached her breaking point last week over brad's consumption of weed and alcohol combined with what she says are brad's anger issues and also seeking physical custody of the kids meaning pitt gets visitation rights. he is reportedly seeking joint
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custody and we know the split rocked hollywood and turns out it rocked los angeles. 13 minutes after jolie filed for divorce, we had a 3.2 earthquake here in the southland. >> trace, we love your sense of humor. thank you for the facts on that. very much. especially the earthquake. glad no one was hurt. thank you. the feds say they accidentally granted citizenship to more than 800 illegal immigrants facing deportation. the inspector general says thousands of fingerprint records never put into government data bases where workers check if the names are on a list. the internal investigation uncovered that some -- some of the immigrants slipped through the cracks using fake names and birth dates. kennedy's here, host of "kennedy" on the fox business network. i was on your show with you. >> yes, you were. >> kennedy, the biggest problem
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i see with this, there are a couple. but the biggest is it looks like some of the people were breaking the law. >> yes. >> to try to stay here and it worked. >> absolutely did. you have to wonder whether or not they knew because their files were lacking and didn't have the fingerprints in them. privy to that kind of information, did they go ahead, accept the citizenship and then apply for things like aviation licenses and one became a law enforcement officer. but these weren't just 858 perhaps illegal immigrants or people who were here under the us a passes of perhaps overstaying a visa. they were set for deportation. >> right. >> had done something wrong in this country and whoopsie, granted citizenship. no matter how you feel about immigration, i tend to feel it's a net benefit for american culture, you can't grant citizenship willie nilly. that's a special thing. >> especially with a national conversation about who deserves to be in line and who doesn't.
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>> yeah. >> that's where we are in this country because -- >> and the vetting process. >> the process for illegal immigration has not worked yet. >> yeah. >> so it's been a big point obviously between the two presidential candidates. if we get this right for the people in the country, so basically, we're talking about intracountry vetting. >> yeah. >> then how can people successfully feel good about bringing others in from war zones? if we can't get it right in our own house? >> you have so much bureaucracy, if these federal agencies are so overwrought and doing such a bad job of talking to each other and modernizing the files and these digital fingerprints, they must be encapsulated in all of this and still using paper records. >> yeah. i know we have talked about how citizenship is special. advanced citizenship is what we have in this country. >> yes. >> we'll talk more with this issue. great to see you. >> thank you. >> we are coming right back. stay with us. before taking his team to state for the first time...
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we learn that the new york bombing suspect according to the fbi did get assessed by them in 2014. they deemed he had no ties to terrorism even with all the trips to afghanistan and more. here's neil. glad he's back. all right. thank you, very much. we are learning a lot more about about ahmad khan rahami from his father that is unsettling. how the fbi now and when they knew it and president obama taking part in the u.n. refugee summit in very hour and occurs on the same week that we are learning despite the president's saying we are extra vigilant and very cautious, the way we go about accepting refugees, we learn that 800 brought into this country by the standard immigration procedure shouldn't have been
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