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tv   The Real Story  FOX News  September 22, 2016 11:00am-12:01pm PDT

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thank you for joining us, "america's election headquarters" starts now. the department of justice now sending personnel to charlotte, north carolina as a top prosecutor asks the state bureau of investigation looks into it. the federal government is sending in trained peace keepers after a second night of violent protests. look at this. attacks police with fire
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crackers and rocks. the attorney general speaking out about an hour ago. >> the recent death of keith lamont scott is under investigation in charlotte. the justice department and the fbi are monitoring that matter. what is the mood like there right now? right now owe see them standing guard. it is a store that was looted overnight. looters broke into the store, they smashed class windows, and the family owners of the store say most items of value were taken. this morning, they came out, they were trying to salvage what
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they could. officers came to interview them and they concluded that the police officers started helping these business owners to clean up their store. programs a glimmer of hope. the mood here very concerned. city officials are calling for peace, what do you think is going to happen tonight? >> anything is possible. last night during the day yesterday, they called for police and indeed it started out peacefully. protestors gathering for a rally in marshall park near the police department, near the local government building, and the peaceful demonstrators moved on to a church, they clash with
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police, they clash with each other, there was a shooting involving another civilian shooting. several protestors were injured. at least two journalists were injured when they were slammed by protestors last night. we saw a local video photographer taken away in an ambulance. so a very chaotic scene they're hoping not to see nont. and few details about what the body cam video shows. only that you can't see whether or not scott is pointing the gun or not and protestors are demanding accountability. >> the video does not give me
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absolute definitive visual evidence that would confirm a person is pointing a gun. i did not see that in the video that i reviewed. but when taken in the totally of the other evidence, it supports what we have heard and the version of the truth that we gave that led to the circumstances that lead to the led of mr. scott. we want peace. we want to be able to walk the streets of our own neighbors that we pay good tax dollars for, knowing our children will come home safe. knowing that we're going to come home safe. >> this is tough stuff.
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we have a former police officer who works on law enforcement accountability issues and is a board member of the north carolina civil liberties union. they're not releasing that body cam video. they showed it to the family but they're releasing it to the public. >> there is a saying in washington dc. because of the lack of accountability in so many cases of police violence in the united states, people don't have any real faith that there will be just procedures afterwards. when the government decides not to release any of the evidence, the people suspect a coverup, and that is what all people do when the government doesn't release as much evidence as it could release. >> they're going to show the
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video to the family any moment now. if they go out, i guess it depends on what they say, is it enough to satisfy the public? >> you have an accountability problem with the police. people want to know exactly what happened. and that press conference is one of the worst pr nightmares i have seen in recent history. he got on investigation and said we want full transparency, but that is not what we're going for. that wording was terrible in the situations that we're dealing with and the environment we're dealing with right now. >> how do you turn down the temperature on this situation right now. loretta lynch made a terrific point, when you come out and see this violence, it takes away from the legitimate protest, it obscures it, distracts from the
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real issue. isn't that the case if? >> yes, and when you get a situation in any community where control of normal control of community is lost, it creates an environment where anything could happen. a lot of people in the community afterwards were very upset at what happened. they recognize the impetus for this entire problem was a lack of accountability and transparency and that in the end there was not going to be any justice. >> what can be done from here? we're lumping together cases that are not the same. and there has to be more actability between the two.
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>> the cases are similar when you have police interactions and whether or not that person was rightfully stopped, if force was justified in the shootings, and it takes cameras and accountability. we need cameras to show exactly what happened in all of these incidents. we need body cameras where the officers cannot cut them on or off, delete the video, just so show investigators what happened like in this case. >> and one such person, cam newton, who is supposed to be playing the carolina panthers, let's listen to what he said. >> i'm a firm believer in jds. i'm a firm believer in holding people accountable. i'm a african-american.
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i'm not happy what or how, you know, justice has been kind of dealt with over the years. the state of oppression in our community, but we also, as black peop people, have to do right by ourselves. >> the problem i have with this is we keep saying accountability which is after the fact, we need to make sure that it doesn't happen in the first place, right? >> i was formally a director of training. how do we train people differently. they have to come in and be untrained. i think the reality is that a lot of people have a biens, a fear of black people. a out of aurss come in. they live in the same country. they watch the same news, the
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same movies, and i think what we have to do to solve it is that admit in america that people have certain bienss. and when they become police officers they have to be brought to justice. >> a chilling glimpse into the mind of a terrorist. the man who bombed judge and new york had a journal that promised death and destruction. and new video showing people running for their lives in the new york bombing that left dozens injured. brian, are investigators still looking for other suspects. >> nypd deputy commissioner john mider says they're trying to determine if ahmad rahami had
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any help. the journals show he was a follower of al qaeda and isis. the isis spokes man killed in august, who called on followers to attack in their ohm lands. s focussing on his family. and the father says he had no idea his son was planning an attack. his wife arrived last night on a flight from the united arab emirates. in the meantime, fbi agents are at the hospital bed of rahami who has been unconscious because
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they want to ask him some questions. >> what about the two men that that were shown with the bag with the pressure cooker. >> the police just want to ask them some questions after surveillance video caught these guys taking the second pressure cooker bomb out of the luggage, leaving the bomb, and taking the luggage. they say it could have exploded. >> it was a very shock sensitive device that we were very concerned about, we handled it a certain way out in the street and a certain way for the bomb squad. it would be speculative, but they're very, very lucky. >> authorities just want to ask them some questions and get that bag because it is evidence. >> breaking news about whether or not isis carried out a
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chemical attack against groups. the testing results are back and we have the details coming up. as we just told you, the new york bomber suspect's journal raising concerns about a new era in terrorism. >> we see the emergence of another individual and another attack underscores really what a morphing and changing threat picture since 9/11. at safelite, we know how busy life can be.
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a chemical attack in iraq. >> up in of our folks were injured, and it wasn't particularly effective, but it was concerning. >> peter king is chairman, thank you for joining us. >> thank you, melissa, thank you. >> what do you make of this move? >> it is very troubling. fortunately it was in powder form and it was less lethal than gas. we have to assume that isis will use these type of weapons as a last ditch effort. and it sows that this is where president obama's failure three years ago to enforce the red
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line -- i'm sure the chemical wh weapons were taken from assad's stockpiles, and the fact that the president did not enforce the redline for the chemical weapons in 2013, that is why they're still available today, and he did not cooperate with the russians, we have to assume there is a lot of them around the country that can be used against our troops, iraq troi ts and it's very concerning. >> what do they have to do differently, what do they take into consideration? >> at a minimum they have to take with them chemical weapons here. it's very heavy, it wearis you down and obstructs. but it definitely creates a new
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danger for them and it will require them to have weapons. the suspect accused of setting off bombs in new york city and new jersey getting inspiration from overseas terrorists but we're seeing the writing now in his personal journal. attack the unbelievers in their backyard. inshallah means the sounds of bombs will be heard in the streets, gunshots to your police. death to your oppression. this tells you what we will face here in the days coming up. even if it is not necessarily direct communication, in the way it is a way to do the -- there is no overseas connection. no doubt he was at least inspired by overseas, and these
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are the hardest type of threats to stop, there is no line of communication, no communications to intercept. that is why it is so port that i believe we have to have more surveillance on the ground. why we have to be able to pick up intelligence, and the only way you get that with these type of individual social security to have the people in the community as informatiers or having undercovers there. even that sometimes is not enough. he came up on the radar twice. also when he returned in march of 2014 after a year-long visit, he was flagged by the national targeting center. what do you do about it until he has committed a crime. >> i believe what should be done in those cases -- i don't expect the fbi to maintain super vision
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of these people, but i think it should be turned over to the local police to keep an eye on them. they don't want to call it surveillance, at least ask people on the ground to keep an eye on them. to have the police in lynn don or lisbon, and also again to monitor -- i can't believe he did this on his own. how do you transport them around. >> thank you for coming on the show, we always appreciate your time. another document dumped from the hackers, their first target? first lady michelle obama. what does it say about security at the highest levels of government? and the director of immigration and customs enforcement on the congressional hot seat as they look at detention and remove
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hackers who breached the e-mail of colin powell set their sights on the first lady. among the documents, a copy of what dc leaks claims is the first lady's passport. rich is life from the white house with more, what else could the e-mails have in them? >> it is largely logistical,
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stolen from the e-mail address of someone they say is a contract worker, someone who was hired to temporarily work here. the hackers posted the information online including an image of what appears to be the passport of michelle obama. the hacker also reportedly worked for the clinton campaign. it also included private scheduled of hillary clinton, hillary clinton, joe biden. there was also the staffers pay of $150 a day. they had to share hotel rooms web and take public transportation to the airport. what is the white house confirming about this? >> they are investigating hacke
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information of political operatives. >> we take any reports of a cyb cyber breach seriously. i can't speak to the authentication of what was released. some folks in political operatives were fired for the dna. russian hackers are suspected in all of this. the russian president denies they had any involvement. the administration dealing with government based attacks. the office of personnel management. the state department, the irs, so hack attacks are more pervasive now. >> seems like every day they are
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more prevalent now. >> and a bombshell report reveals hundreds of illegal immigrants that were supposed to be deported were made citizens instead. and the presidential nominees weighing in on the police shootings in oklahoma and charlotte. >> our country looks bad to the world, especially when we're supposed to be the world's leader. how can we lead when we can't even control our own cities?
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>> we are awaiting a press conference from north carolina. governor path mccory. we're seeing very different responses from the presidential nominees. hillary clinton and donald trump both speaking out against it. here is trump earlier today. >> we all have to walk a mile in someone else's shoes, see things through their eyes, and then get to work fixing our very wounded country. >> there is no right to threaten the public safety and peace of others. every american is entitled to live in a safe community.
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>> gene is a fox news contributor, bill is a former bill clinton advisor. thank you for joins us. what did you think of what donald trump said there? >> i thought his comments were very measured. he was on point, talking about the importance of the safety and security of communities, especially black communities where violence, unfortunately, is through the roof, crime is through the roof, and i lay blame on the fact that progressive policies have not laid claim on these communities for years. >> bernard, he said walk a mile in someone else's shoes, putting himself in the shoes -- i guess it depends how you look at it, putting your feet in the shoes of the victim, but he could have
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been talking about what it is like for him as a police officer. >> this is after a year and a half of the most racially divisive -- >> you give him no yet? >> it is just different from his previous feelings. he incites violence. this is not square with the donald trump that we believe could not be president of the united states. >> listen, from from what i have seen in terms of trump running his campaign, he is an outsider, looking to turn his country around, and -- >> i have to step in for one second, i'm so sorry, but the north carolina governor is speaking on the situation in
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charlotte, let's listen in. good afternoon, i would like to welcome to my side, first of all, i'm the governor of north carolina, i would reich to welcome my chief of staff and secretary frank perry, secretary of public safety and the great police chief and also i would like to welcome mayor jennifer roberts. first of all, i want to commend in the last 48 hours, the incredible work of the team. they have been courageous, hard working, passionate, and they have done their job, and they still have more work to do and i would like to continue to ask our state and this community to support their efforts during this very, very difficult job.
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in addition to the chief's law enforcement officers, i also want to thank the fire department who helped with public safety, they weren't recognized in many of the reports, but they did a outstanding job. i would also like to thank jennifer roberts, and many of the leaders of the faith and business community who are doing everything they can to help resolve have very, very tough issue and make the community as peaceful and great as it has been. it is the greatest city in the united states of america, it is not only one of the great states of north carolina, but one of the greatest states in the united states of america. i want to do everything i can to asis the mayor, the chief, and the people of charlotte to get back to normal times of
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welcoming and peace and prosperity. i also want to thank fellow governors who have been calling me all during the past ten hours, governors from south carolina, missouri, california, they all offered help in any way they can. i had a nice conversation with president obama and i also spoke to his chief of staff three or four hours ago, and i want to thank him for his assistant and for listening to the challenges we're fating right now in charlotte. i'm here today to basically communicate to the people of north carolina and to the citizens in charlotte about the resources i'm going to transfer to the chief of police here. for the assets to continue to
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bring peace to the city of charlotte. i want to explain those assets, his role, responsibility, and our team that will be working with the chief and his continued coordination of not only the assets under his responsibility and the city of charlotte, but now the assets under my control as governor of north carolina. and it is extremely important that we continue the team work that we have had with ongoing communication in the last 48 hours with the mayor, the chief, and the officials among our team to make sure we have well coordinated activity. as governor, i firmly believe that we cannot tolerate any types of violence directed towards citizens or destruction of property. i will do anything i can to help our police force here to keep our citizens safe, and to also
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ensure that our police officers are treated with respect and to ensure there is no further destruction of property, and those that destroy property or hurt other people will be dealt with. he has a very, very big job. i knew him many years ago when i wrote with the police department as a city council member, and he understands community policing, the community, the neighbors of this great city, and he has also an incredible positive reputation for his fellow police officers and with police chiefs across the nation. so charlotte is very lucky to have such a great police chief. let me first talk about the assets that i'm transferring for the chief's coordination. first, the national guard has been possiblyized. general lusk has done a tremendous job. they have come from all over the
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state. during the past 24 hours. there are still some arriving, and we're doing everything we can to support their efforts so they can support the chief of police and his team. you have to remember these are men and women. most of them are part-time members of the national guard. they also have other jobs and they're taking on this public responsibility and public service, and i would like to thank them for their service. their responsibility could be changed under the chief of police to protect the buildings and in addition they're going to help with some of the structures regarding the bridges and highways, and all of the people being moved to charlotte at this time have had necessary police
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training. the second thing is that we have allocated a farely extensive and large number of state kroopers, working hand in hand with the police chief in temperatures the numbers that the police chief thinks he needs to have the needed resources to keep the city safe. and we had those discussions in the past 24 hours. state troopers will be helping with traffic control and also, helping protect property and our highways. the third group i do also want to say that has been working very closely in the past 48 hours or so with the city is the fbi, also under my responsibility as governor. but the mbi is working on leading an independent
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investigation, and they are proceeding with that investigation as quickly as possible so we can resolve exactly what happened and then communicate that investigation to the general public. i also want to recognize our state teams headquartered in raleigh at the operation center right now. we're also having major floods. we're having 100 year rainfall right now in eastern north carolina. we had 60 water rescued around in the north earn part of our state. some very heroic things are occurri occurring. streams and major water rescues and we're real concerns about the crests at this time. so handling that possibility at this time in rally while also
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helping this team here in charlotte, so we have several situations going on at once in north carolina. our goal is to be a team, our goal is to provide peace and safety for our suicides, work with the community, and make sure the city continues to be great. charlotte, north carolina is a great city, great people, a great place to live, work, and raise a family, and we're not going to let a few hours give a negative impact, and this city is very resilient. i will have mayor roberts say just a few words. >> so, that was the governor of
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north carolina going some marketing there. saying schaar slet a beautiful city fit for visiting and that what you see in the last 24 hours is not what the city is normally like. telling people they brought in the national guard. they have plenty of assets in place to turn down the volume, the heat, on what we have been seeing in that city. a fox news contributor, whitman as well. a bill clinton pollster, what did you think of that. >> i think his message was very direct and needed. people need to understand that law and order and safety is of the utmost important, and they're bringing in additional resources. people cannot just take to the streets and be violent because of certain situations that
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happen in their communities. there are better ways to take care of these scents when they happen and violence is not the answer. safety, security, law enforcement, that's the right message that the governor delivered. >> this is never an excuse for additional violence and crime. but i think a few things were note able. what happened that night when the guy was killed? i think there is a lot of questions about why we have not seen the cape of that, but i think the public is clambering to know the different stories. they want to clarify for the audience, and i think you have to ask yourself, we had very, very difficult reactions in tulsa and charlotte and why is that. i think it underscores the need to have more training with the
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police, and institute plans that all officers should wear body cameras. >> with less than 50 days to the election, how likely is it that your voting booth could be hacked on election day? we have a new study that breaks it down state by state. gilman: go get it, marcus. go get it. ...coach gilman used his cash rewards credit card from bank of america to earn 1% cash back everywhere, every time. at places like the batting cages. ♪ [ crowd cheers ] 2% back at grocery stores and now at wholesale clubs. and 3% back on gas. which helped him give his players something extra. the cash rewards credit card from bank of america. more cash back for the things you buy most. the cash rewards credit card from bank of america. get a cash rebate of up to $2000 on selected models. or get the outlander l starting at $5,599.
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cyber security becoming a real concern this election cycle after a number of voting systems being hacked leaving some worried that those longing for the security of paper ballots according to verified voting, 90 million americans, 71% of all
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voters, are expected to use paper ballots this november, but some counties rely entirely on technology. and that leaves them vulnerable. took a look, the green counties use paper, the yellow use electronic but they also have back up that can be double-checked if necessary, the red are entirely electronic and prime for hackers. how likely do you think it is when you show the runs in red that are all electronic that they could get hacked. we're not talking about systems connected to the internet even though they are electronic. that's right, thank you for having me on. the thing about the red counties and jurisdictions you're seeing there, we think every voter has the right to know if their vote was captured the way they wanted
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it to. if you have an all electronic system and you don't have the back up paper trail to check, or a physical ballot they're marking, that's the concern. it seems like there is an argument for taking the human out of it, so to speak. i took my son to vote with me recently and we went in, they could not find my name, hthey handed me a paper ballot. they tossed it had in a cardboard box, and i thought there is no way anyone is going to count that ballot. it seems like a lot of the errors are human error and this would be better, no? >> there are procedural errors like that that don't have anything to do with the technology. and humans are the ones that do
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the programming in the technology. they can make mistakes there, too. the ideal thing about having that physical ballot as a back up is you can count, get a speedy total, but use the paper b ballots to make sure that the speedy number is correct. >> why is it like this? >> traditionally, elections have been run at the local just diction level. a county a township, those are all local jurisdiction and they're the ones that get to decide what is the best decision for their local area. dealing with voters somewhere like los angeles county is very different from dealing with voters in a rural county where there is maybe only 1,000
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voters. it may be different. the main thing is that should there be a baseline beneath which all jurisdictions want verifyability for everyone. and the highest concentration of vulnerable states, i have to say back to my own experience, i was in florida for the last election. there was a voting captain for the area, he said i'm bringing in my results and he says my district is voting for this candidate no matter what, wink wink. he may have been taunting me, because i was a reporter there, but it calls into question the humans involved. is it locked, does it go back to the humans again after that? >> from each local jurisdiction,
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each precinct, they do a local total. usually they print out the total at that time and you can see how many voted for your candidate in that precinct. then they get taken to the county and their aggregated there. so that's how we end up hearing about the results on election night. they're aggregated at a local level. when you think about the human element, los angeles county is recruiting 22,000 poll workers for their county alone for this election. there is really a huge number of people that participate, almost as fol servolunteers, they care much. >> thank you so much, very interesting stuff, important, thank you. >> my pleasure. serious new allegations about what is driving hollywood's hottest couple apart. why los angeles police are weighing in on brad pid and
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angelina jolie and whether or not there was child abuse there. ♪ so nice, so nice. ♪ sweet, sweet st. thomas nice. the warehouse leadership suggests -- >> if you don't get consensus, i would at least like to be able to have some specificity from the point of view of -- and i know you're saying it's been a while since you looked at it, it is penny money and where did the other money come from and the questions like councilman newton
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asked, that the money is being taken from some other place and used for those. those are fundamental questions and concerns that need to be addressed with specificity and not with, well, we haven't looked at it for a few months and i'm not really sure. >> that i can do. >> that i can do. i can do that attention! >> that i can do. i can do that did you or anyone in your household work around asbestos-containing gaskets, packing, or equipment? if you or a loved one have an asbestos-related disease, you may have a right to vote on a plan to reorganize and pay claims in the garlock/coltec bankruptcy. garlock's and coltec's products were used in industrial and maritime settings, including where steam, hot liquid or acid moved in pipes. votes must be filed by december 9, 2016 call 844-garlock
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new details now on the brad pitt and angelina jolie separation, as the supposed other woman speaks out and one report alleging abuse. but the l.a. police department is saying, not so fast. trace gallagher is live with more on all of this. >> reporter: we're starting to getmer clarity on what happened and where. initially people magazine and tmz report evidence that brad pitt was being investigated by the police and children and family services. the allegation being thatpit and angelina jolie and some of the kids were on a private plane last week andpit got drunk and began verbally and abusing one of his children. pit --pit's tirade continued on the tarmac and someone called child protective services but
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the l.a.p.d. told the hold reporter and new york post the story was made up, saying, quote, it's not true. there is no criminal investigation or any investigation of any kind against brad pitt. so now tmz has updated its reporting saying the indent happened in minnesota and the fbi just told fox news correspond adam housely, the case was referred to them put no action has been taken. the alleged plane try raid is being cited as a reason jolie filed for divorce, and then remember the reporting that said jolie caught brad pitt having an affair withhis costar. now she says, many years ago i met the man of my life, father of my son, he is my love my bess friend, the one one i -- need.
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she wishespit and jolie all the best. >> very good and important report this trace gallagher. harris faulk in the is next in for shep. >> city leaders in charlotte, north carolina, calling for calm. after two nights of protesting all of it after a police shooting that left a man dead. now with the national guard coming to help we'll see whether the troops can keep the peace. new foment polling showing donald trump leading hillary clinton in several key swing states now and we'll show you the numbers and get to all the day's news this hour. after last night's violent demonstrations in charlotte the police chief is still refusing to release the video widely which shows

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