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tv   Happening Now  FOX News  October 28, 2016 8:00am-9:01am PDT

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pictures that follow. [laughter] bill: i will be elvis presley 1973. martha: i'm going to dress up as one of your fans in vegas, baby. we will see you monday. ♪ ♪ ♪ jenna: governor mike pence is back on the campaign trail after terrifying scare at new york's laguardia airport. welcome to happening now. i'm jenna lee. john: a scare that the government handled very well. aviation officials saying no one on the chartered planed was injured last night after a rough landing. the front end finally stopped just feet of a nearby highway by a cron crete bed designed to do that very thing.
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>> we had about ten seconds of uncertainty at the end of the landing but just so thankful to pilots and frankly first responders. the plane had soon no come to a stop and i felt that we were surrounded by first responders. jenna: ten seconds is enough for me. laura. >> exactly, we've all had that feeling when we were coming in for a landing. it can be scary sometimes. last night scarier than it should have been for pence and everybody on board. we are happy to report that both of laguardia's runways are now operating and open. they had to shut down the airport for a short time. the plane has been removed out of the mud. we have a video to show how they moved this thing. in injuries to the 48 on board and officials say there's no damage to the boeing 737 plane despite the fact that
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130,000-pound aircraft slammed through a bunch of concrete barriers known as resting beds. the longer name is engineered material arresting system to slow its roland stop it from going off of the short runway. runway 7,000 feet, one of the shortest in the country and getting dangerously close to that nearby freeway. the weather last night in new york was terrible, there were hard rains, high winds, heavy fog, it was absolutely a mess and no doubt a contributing factor. the plane has been towed to a hanger. maintenance records, they are going to look at weather conditions and all-important resting beds. those are crushable cement blocks designed to slow down and stop an aircraft. they worked well last night. the plane went through 80 of those barriers. just to give you a sense of how
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fast the plane was going. they are installed on 103 runways at 61 airports across the united states. and we want to show you a quick picture that we got from inbed that has been traveling with the vice presidential nominee mike pence. dan, our friend has been traveling for months with the candidate and said because of the plane's size and landing on smaller airport during campaign, they've had a couple of rough landings before. the picture that you have seen, we just got it. this is the replacement plane and they are not taking off from laguardia today. they are actually at newark. jenna: laura, thank you. john: more on what we can expect on the terrifying ordeal of governor pence and crew members. let's bring in oliver mcgee, also former deputy assistant secretary of transportation for technology policy.
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you have a number of factors, you bad weather, you've got a very short runway and you've got a crew of pilot and co-pilot. where do you start looking in this investigation, oliver? >> thank you for having me today, john. this is a bumpy ride, they've been having number of bumpy rides on this airplane just like the presidential election we are in for a bumpy ride. [laughter] >> and we are finding landing at home base, john. essentially a plane that's landing on a long runway like at laguardia airport. it's like a mack truck landing on a very, very wet ponding highway and last night when you the -- when the people felt the braking to have airplane, that's the same thing when you are driving down the road. an airplane is landing at 150 miles per hour. you're pumping the brakes, pumping the brakes and
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hydroplaning and so it was very difficult to close the braking system of this aircraft and as you report said before, it is great that we have those stock, back up systems at the end of the runway particularly this building because it's right by the highway. so we don't want to have another crash like that, like we saw last week in new jersey, a train running into a building. this is all about infrastructure crashes and so we've got to basically start looking at how we are looking at all modernizing airports an getting much more longer runways so that we can start building new materials and basically build and get better engineering. john: for viewers' understanding, dan is fox producer that travels with the pence campaign and shot some of the video. everybody was okay. so any driver who has been
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flying down a highway at 50, 60 miles an hour in a rainstorm and has gone into a hydroplane knows what this feels like and you say it's very similar with the jet liner coming in on a wet and rainy night. >> absolutely. on the highway a car would tend to be pumped too fast it would spin or a tractor trailer would snap too. in an airplane what you see last night it has trouble stopping so what we have at the back-end of the airport, airport runways is braking systems, new materials basically designed to stop a tractor tailer going 150 miles an hour and particular in our airports in american city if we don't stop into the runway, we are going to run into the interstate highway system and that would be much more catastrophic disaster. john: wind is also a factor. at laguardia you have
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crisscrossing runways and planes from opposite quarters of the compass and if you've got a rainstorm and swirl lg winds, the pilot may be landing with the tail end. >> cross winds but particularly you're not on the air so you're trying to brake the system at 150 miles an hour and you have a tail wind pushing you off the runway. that's why the reporters were feeling braking and so they were in a long little bumpy ride but i understand at the end they were relieved. they all laughed. i'm sure mike pence was very nervous for himself as well as his reporters in the back and the campaign, because the campaign is really saying something about how we need to look at -- build a new
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infrastructure, look at aerospace, new materials and then be able to -- the new materials in particular from the materials coming from the national science of technology council will help us build a stronger infrastructure and this was oman in the presidential election to talk about issues of infrastructure investments and that's a good take away from this dramatic runway event. john: mike pence was back in the passenger section within a minute after they came to a stop checking on everybody making sure they were okay and he was okay. oliver mcgee. >> absolutely. >> thanks. >> thank you, john. jenna: ahead of a rally there. hillary clinton leads in the granite state but the republican nominee has closed the gap in recent weeks. our senior national correspondent john roberts joins
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us live from manchester. john. john: jenna, good morning to you. must-win states for him and he's off to iowa this afternoon, another very important state with new abc poll that this race is tightening. let's put the numbers for you, 48 for hillary clinton and 44 for donald trump. he has gone down two points and donald trump started going up 2 points. donald trump with new line of attacks today when then president bill clinton gave clemency to 11 puerto rican terrorists who were affiliated in deadly bombing campaign in 1970's and 1980's, this all happened when hillary clinton was preparing to run for the senate and was under pressure from puerto rican leaders to ask her husband to grant clemency to these people and that's why donald trump yesterday said that hillary clinton would be dangerous for this country and
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that the country might as well cancel the election and declare him the winner. listen to what he said. >> we should just cancel the election and just give it to trump, right? [cheers and applause] >> what are we having? her policies are so bad. >> a trump campaign says that they're also very happy with what they are seeing in terms of early voting in states like iowa, north carolina and particularly in florida. kellyanne conway says there was a swath of undercover voters out there. here is what she told us. >> people don't want to tell people that they are voting for trump perhaps a voter for bill clinton twice or barack obama twice and they are tired with arguing with family and friends and colleagues about it but the other under cover voters, not
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people who have decided they will not vote for hillary clinton and they're just trying to get over to trump. >> there's no question when you look at the polls, jenna, that donald trump is starting to close some of the gaps, the problem for him is his path to the white house is very narrow. he needs to have combination of nevada, colorado and new hampshire and maine if he wants to win plus north carolina because it's beginning like pennsylvania maybe slip get away from him. if he doesn't get some combination of four states and north carolina, it's going to be pretty difficult to put together 210 electoral votes but he's trying hard, jenna. jenna: john, thank you. john: the search is still on, a man killed two families members and shot cops. we are learning more about the clinton foundation and the role of chelsea clinton there. what the illegally hacked documents from wikileaks tell us about her concerns regarding
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john: now for a look at crime stories we are following, an arizona car chase suspect apparently got too hungry to keep going so he stopped at an in and out burger. wanted for outstanding warrant apparently didn't get in and out fast enough. he backed into a backyard where police arrested him. oklahoma police still searching for michael van, wanted for the murders of two relatives and shooting and wounding of two police officers. the suspect has alluded a manhunt for five days has a history of child sex abuse allegations. police say he could be anywhere in this country. he is armed and dangerous and may have a hit list of other people he's targeting. in texas police say the boyfriend of a missing college student is a suspect in her disappearance.
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missing more than two weeks since she went out with the boyfriend. they have searched rugged tor rain -- terrain for any side of her. jenna: he was worried about potential ethical problems. a wall street journal editorial says the notes confirm many fears saying, quote, this excerpt and all the potential conflict it describes list chelsea's warnings about business hustling of foundation events would see more than ample cause to trigger audit. >> this is the editorial board writing, we don't condone stolen information but now that it's out there, we have to talk about it. what do you think it's the biggest headline to emerge? >> the one the editorial is talking about is the most
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significant that we have seen of all the wikileaks documents. this is doug band, when he was in the white house and stayed with him revealing in very detailed terms how he and his partners both raised money for the foundation as one of the major fundraising groups and also steered business to bill clinton over $100 million of business opportunities and how they were doing it with the same group of donors asking them to do both things? jenna: is it illegal? >> not quite. they were concerned about enough distance between the charitable contributions and whether charitable status of the foundation was put in jeopardy. jenna: you have to eastern that status to keep it. >> fore property and none for property activities. that's the big question. jenna: attorney general took a
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look at donald trump's charity and because of that the charity had to stop fund raising in this particular state. what do you think questions should be raised about the status of the clinton foundation and you expect to see any of those questions officially raised by the irs or otherwise? >> well, so far we haven't seen that happened. and in many cases with what you just mentioned with donald trump's foundation, that was initiated not by the irs but by the new york state attorney general and the other ones we saw were in florida where there were questions raised. you could expect the possibility that there are state attorney generals that might take a look at it but here we are talking about politics, right, and whether you're a democratic attorney general or republican attorney general and a democratic white house and irs, we've seen that there haven't been as much follow through on some of these things as we would have expected on the fbi side and other things. a lot of criticisms that the obama administration was assisting the clintons. jenna: what's your assessment of
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how much this hurts hillary clinton or her campaign? >> well, i think it is -- as i said before one of the most significant documents to come out and certainly plays into this narrative but it's not a new revelation. serious side of the information that we are getting. i don't think it changes the narrative in anyway but it does keep that question alive about the way the clintons behave and operate. jenna: it's interesting in the editorial board piece in the wall street journal it ends on this question, what emails or memos exist that these hackers, russian or not could be withholding for leverage for another president clinton. that question could be raised for any of the candidates that when -- what the russians have and the hackers have and how we might be in a new normal on that. >> the same might be said of donald trump and what kinds of interwoven activities, all of
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those relationships, big problems for the clintons, that's one of the big questions you look at for her as president and how can the foundation continue to exist with all of the donors and global leaders and all of that that have come into it, how do you maintain independence for both candidates. that's a big question. jenna: even though we were talking about going up to voting day, we realize that it will not be over on november 8th. thank you very much, good to see you, john. john: how would you like to find the fountain of youth? guess what? it could be in your fridge right now. scientists say turn back the clock for laboratory mice. would it work in people? we will tell you what to chow down just in case. donald trump lagging in the polls and now doubling down on blame game. we will tell you who he says is responsible
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jenna: do you love broccoli? john: yeah. jenna: after this a lot more, in fact. there's a reason that you should have more broccoli, an experiment on mice, scientists discover that broccoli contains natural compound that seems to turn back time. the study published by washington university reports that an enzyme boosted the mice mices' metabolism and those mice didn't act their age. more study needs to be done to determine the benefits for humans that might be enough for all of us at this point. john: i'm with it. donald trump trailing hillary clinton by more than 5 points in the real clear politics average of national polls and he's behind in many of the critical battleground states. so what does he need to do to brace his supporters for a potential lose on election
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night? well, he'll doing nothing. in fact, he's insisting the whole thing is a sham. >> the best evidence that the system is rigged is the fact that hillary clinton despite her many crimes was even allowed to run for president in the first place. you see these polls where they are polling democrats, how is trump doing, he's down. they are polling democrats. the system is corrupt and it's rigged and it's broken. folks, what's going on here? what's going on? our country is rigged, it's crooked and it's broken. job-killing obamacare is one more way the system is rigged. she lives the high life at your expense making money off the rigged system and it is a rigged system. are you start to go agree with me about the rigged system? [cheers and applause] john: let's bring in julie miller, author and fox news
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contributor, lynn, washington bureau chief for the chicago sun times. welcome to both of you. we have heard judy, that rigged system line quite a few times but it's coming more and more frequently now. what is the purpose, would you guess, from donald trump? >> well, i think the purpose is that it's simply more convenient for donald trump to blame the rigged system and the rigged polling system and the rigged polls than it is to face up to the facts that if those polls hold and they are accurate, then he will wind up being the presidential race's biggest loser. i mean, that is something that's -- of course, he wants to add pollsters to ever-growing list of enemies. i mean, donald trump's enemies list, hillary clinton, other career politicians, you have the elite media, that's us, perhaps,
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i'm not quite sure, you have bankers, finance people, you have rich donors, now you have pollsters, of course, blame people who are giving you the bad news. he did find time, however, even though he's no longer investing in his own campaign, he gave zero, zero money according to the last financial data that have been disclosed, he did find time to start up trump tower tv on facebook. so i think we see the future in donald trump. john: lynn, one of the criticisms of long-time political watchers is that if you tell people your own supporters that the system is rigged and the fix is in and there's corruption everywhere, maybe even your own supporters aren't going to go out and vote for you because they think it's a done deal that you're not going to win? >> see, that's the surprising lack of information that flows down to donald trump. when you talk about voter suppression which michelle obama
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did in campaigning with hillary clinton yesterday in north carolina, it cuts both ways. if you say the system is rigged, it could do two things, it could motivate the turnout of your opponent which is how the clinton force and michelle obama is a big one of those forces, is trying to use it. if you're a trump supporter and your guy keeps telling you the election is over, you're not helping your own turnout. so it's another self-inflicted wound, but i just wanting to back one quick point about the polls. trump lived by the polls during the primary. it was basically his trump speech saying how well he was doing. in primaries they only poll republicans. in a general election it's true, you poll democrats, you also poll republicans and independents. haven't the message gotten through to him? john: but judy, to be fair, the stories when you look at the media, analysis of the stories
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by far the reporting against -- about trump is negative. >> actually that's true and yet a study -- a new study that was done by the kennedy center actually at harvard suggested that donald trump's coverage specially in the beginning was far more positive than hillary clinton's and that clinton coverage was really very, very negative. look, at this point the issue is if independents are going to decide this race and clearly they are and you know that you to reach them, is talking about a rigged system the way to do that? having alienated women and particularly older women, having alienated hispanics, having not convinced black americans that you're going to make their lives better and that they're currently living in a hell hole as he says, you're only left with uneducated white men as your base and independents will
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not respond, i don't think, to the rigged system message, but we will see. john: is it possible, lynn, that there could be a surprise at tend of the election despite the polling, despite, you know, the battleground states and so forth and the projections that hillary clinton is going to win? >> well, we are in the midst of a surprise right now and every day there's a new batch of wikileaks that are coming out. it's day 21, so the clinton campaign has to deal with these emails that are damaging to the campaign because they lift up the curtain on the inner workings of the clinton foundation and bill clinton's paydays. if donald trump had big name surrogates who want to stay on message and swing states and local tv, that's usually what campaigns do. a lot of time throughout the campaign season in saying this isn't a typical campaign. so, yeah, there's still -- we
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are in the midst of october surprise. it's a multiday surprises. john: there's been a lot of surprises all the way through. we will see. lynn, judith miller, thank you both. >> thank you. jenna: election day just 11 days away, what it means for both candidates on the final sprint of this campaign this artoo unit must be delivered to the rebellion. come on artoo! ♪ artoo! welcome to the rebellion. ♪ this is for you. duracell and children's miracle network hospitals are powering imaginations everywhere.
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jenna: isis has reportedly
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carried out executions in an apparent attempt to keep the population from joining u.s.-led offenses. ben jad inwith -- benjamin with the latest. >> out west in the syrian border is very different. they continue to attack kurdish forces with dozens of troops and that is being called the forgotten front. we were up there and we met u.s. special forces david, 62 year's old from florida, he's been flying along kurdish forces and they've been under heavy fire almost daily and they are getting no support. >> we have received no support, actually. we have never seen an american officer or official come to this front line.
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the men say they can watch 500 isis cars resupplying the city and there's nothing they can do. their rules from engagement forbids them from going to those cars. we saw something out there today. that's the graves that isis left behind where they buried of the people they murdered. >> one of the many mass graves that have been found in the area. it's hard to emergency how hundreds of people at a time were rounded up and brought here into this landscape lined up and systemically shot. that is exactly what's happened. you can see the evidence, you can see the bullet holes in the skulls and remains of their clothes. this is where hundreds of people were executed by isis. >> now, those were babies, children, families, the big worry as the battle for mosul gets underway isis feeling pressurized might start to lash out and commit more atrocities like that.
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jenna. jenna: very important reporting for us today. thank you very much. isis is one of the major foreign policy threats facing our next commander in chief who will lead a military bruise by years of war overseas while also undergoing a culture transformation here at home. airing tomorrow at 8:00 and 11:00 p.m. eastern time anchored by bret baier with defense secretary ash carter and many other counter and former military leader. right here on the fox news channel. john: new polls are shedding light on the state of play in the race for the white house as we get closer to election. according to latest pew national poll hillary clinton is holding 6-point. according to new quinnipiac university, swing state poll trump edges clinton in georgia, 44 to 43%.
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in iowa they are flat out tied. 44% each. in north carolina clinton leads trump by 4 points, 47 to 43% and in virginia clinton leads trump by 12 points, 50 to 38%. let's talk about the race with david webb fox news contributor and host of the web show. rick is also with us, democratic strategist and cohost on steel and under. of those individual state race that is we just talked about, any -- any one of them stand out to you as a big surprise? >> i will tell you the things that i'm looking at right now, north carolina is critical. there's no real path i don't think for mr. trump if he can't win that. i will tell you what they did not publish today. there's data of what's happening in the suburbs in philadelphia. i find that incredibly important. it appears that hillary clinton has a sizable lead in the early voting in those areas. pennsylvania to me without
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pennsylvania there is no road map for mr. trump. i think that is going to be the critical state this time. >> but you would expect the suburbs of philadelphia to be stronghold for hillary clinton. it's in the outlying areas of that very big state, the coal country where donald trump is preponderated to do well. >> as philadelphia goes, that matters for clinton but you go north, that's had increase in population, work your way out to harrisburg, town that went bankrupt and pittsburgh, so you're talking about a battle in pennsylvania but i will say this about georgia. georgia tends to come home in the closing days of a race. i'm not concerned about that. south carolina closes for trump. carolina, north carolina is a battle. iowa is a surprise. iowa is lean to go democrats and that's tu tight race, the polling on the national level that may trend 4 to 6 points in the range but the battleground states an changes in population in voters, i think that's where
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hillary clinton has serious concerns. john: but the race has actually been getting tighter in the last week. >> it has. the national numbers but there's some anomalies. i never believe she was ahead 12 points and i don't care what the abc poll said. what i find interesting is the ibd poll which has had close within a point or two, today for the first time it's showing a plus 3 for clinton. that's actually compelling because that's a ten-day rolling average of the same voters. i have to say, you know, taking off any political hat it's getting hard for me to see how trump pulls this off. john: there are, though, undecided voters out there which surprising me frankly because both candidates are so polarizing and so well known but there are people who still have -- have not decided how they're going to pull the lever or punch the button. >> and the fact that there is a
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hidden voting block out there that neither campaign can truly identify. that's where the energy comes into play and the voting, the elect rate -- electorate comes to play. they may see clinton as 1990 and trump as a potential change agent. those are factors that come in and those are the undetermined factors. >> i actually agree with that. there's definitely a hidden trump vote out there, the question is how large is it. i don't think it's as large as some might seem. [laughter] jenna: surprise verdict for bundy brothers. event the defense attorneys were stunned.
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details next on when legal pan weighs in. body cam footage that catches a moment a mobile home goes into fire. >> get this back, get back, getk
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john: ohio police officer's body cam captures an explosion outside of cincinnati.
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>> get everybody back. get this out of here. john: police officer arrived to find the home on fire and a badly burned woman on the ground just yards away. officer told everyone to get back and moments later the home exploded in a fire ball. the woman is hospitalized in critical condition. her husband was treated and released. authorities are investigating what caused the initial fire. jenna: new information in the long battle of public land use a federal injury handing the government a devastating defeat by including the bundy brothers and crew involved in the armed occupation of national wildlife refugee in oregon last winter. the 7 defendants have been facing federal conspiracy and weapons charges for the nearly six weeks standoff. former federal prosecutors joins us and doug burns. but we did learn that the lawyer
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for the -- he had to be restrained by marshals. why is it such a stunning defeat by the government? >> a couple of things. not only was he arrested but taized repeatedly. a defeat for the government for a couple of reasons. it was a evidence of jury nullification. part of what people forget out west it's all about guns. if you ever been to the museum in wyoming you realize how much of the part of the culture the firearm is. there are people who ancestors braved unbelievable elements to move out there and they take their ta -- guns and land very
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seriously and i think that's what you saw. jenna: they had on display more than 30 guns. an fbi agent testified that 16,000 plus live rounds in nearly 1700 space casings and they wouldn't win the case. the defense says it's the constitution, the constitution won. what do you think? >> right. the defense working off of fred's point. the right to protest, but he's making a different point which is regionalism. i have been in cases like this as a tax protestor cases even in the northeast region and the reality is that regionalism state rights, local rights versus the big bad oger, the federal government, a lot of people who make that jury poll are very much in tune and the critical issue about the second
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amendment and you get a verdict like this. it was a surprising but jurors are made up from citizens of that region. jenna: that's what the government said. the people made their ruling, there is another case, the reason we know about the bundy brothers there was a case in nevada and still facing charges there. now, according to the attorney for bundy, they got acquittal in oregon he will also be acquitted in nevada. what do you think? >> well, that's an interesting question. that's a legal question that the judge in nevada will make a determination before they go to trial as to whether or not the evidence of a separate crime in a different set of circumstances would be relevant in this case. and i don't -- i actually -- i'm not so sure that would come in as much if i were a prosecutor. the last thing all of this ties out west which is more problem than here is a distrust in government. doug is right. people don't like the government. i had a federal judge who didn't like the u.s. attorney's office.
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i had a case in front of him, trial started april 15. you know how that case went. [laughter] >> timing is everything, but again let me talk about the second case because i've seen a lot of situations where people mishandicap. if you take at face value that it was somewhat surprising and stunning my advice let's not get overconfident. somebody died in that matter. i wouldn't prejudge that case in nevada. jenna: one we will definitely watch. thank you. >> take care. john: as governor mike pence heads back to the campaign trail following last night's scare at laguardia, look at the politics surrounding new york city's aging airport. plus, we heard plenty from presidential canned taits but up
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next we will take of the men and women who live in the southern border about the best way forwad
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john: by now you've heard the talking points about immigration. donald trump says build a wall, hillary clinton says reform the system and welcome the next generation of americans u. but what do those words mean to people who live and work along the southern border, casey visited with some of them. he joins us live from our bureau. >> hey, john, i will tell you what they told me. this is not about rhetoric, this is not talking heads for the people who live and work down there. it's extremely personal. we met up with a farmer down in mcallen, texas, land up against the río grande river.
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his name is frank and he says drugs and illegal immigrants are constantly being smuggled in across his property and he's fed up. also told me about major safety concerns saying the smuggler traffic is not only increasing but the criminals are becoming more bracing. he's supporting donald trump not necessarily the wall or mass deportation plan but securing the border first and controlling who is coming in. >> if hillary's plan is to continue what -- what we have right now, i can't take that. i don't think that's good for our country. >> secretary hillary clinton says she would like to focus on creating a pathway to citizenship within her first one hundred days in office. many republicans have called it nothing more than amnesty but trump's plan would rip families
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apart and give tools to succeed in this country, people like marco who came to america illegally. >> i still can be a good citizen. i can be a great american citizen. you know, i can, you know, make businesses, i can educate my family, i can make sure that my family goes, you know, and contributes to society. >> now, there is one thing that it appears clinton and trump do agree on and that is background checks, criminal background checks for anyone coming in, refugees or people sneaking across the border and if they don't pass, if they have violent criminal histories, then they would be immediately deported. so we will have to see who wins the election and what happens with the contentious topic of immigration, john. john: one of the thorniest issues out there. thank you. jenna: next hour of happening now, demonstrators setting vehicles on fire sparking more
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>> we're back in an hour. "outnumbered" starts now. harris: begin with a fox news alert. we are awaiting a donald trump rally in the battleground state of new hampshire where he could have new reaction to the latest wikileaks revelations rocking hillary clinton's campaign. this is "outnumbered." i'm harris faulkner. here today sandra smith, co-host of "after the bell," melissa francis. radio talk show host meghan mccain and look who is here on a friday, people, today's #oneluckyguy, the co-host 6 "the five" and cashing in, eric bolling. >> great to be back. big political discussion. we have 11 days left? wow. harris: they get bigger.

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