tv Shepard Smith Reporting FOX News April 10, 2017 12:00pm-1:01pm PDT
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reforced to get off. this doctor was forcibly removed. the airline tweeted an apology. i'm not sure that's going to be enough. here's shepard smith. >> shepard: it's 3:00 on the east coast. noon in san bernardino, california where police say a gunman walked into an elementary classroom, killed a teach and and shot two students before killing himself. we're live on scene with breaking news. the white house responding after president trump's team sends mixed messages about syria and bashar al-assad. secretary of state rex tillerson getting ready for a high stakes with al-assad's allies in russia. live with developing news from the pentagon. live in south korea, an aircraft carrier on the way. and u.s. war planes are training for combat missions.
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>> we're going to the same base, 30 miles north of us. >> next time you're sick, you might want two different doctors. a new study shows the second opinion is almost always different. let's get to it. >> the breaking news from san bernardino, california this hour where the police chief says this morning shooting at an elementary school appears to be a murder suicide and much more. he says two adults are dead, two students taken to the hospital. this happened in a classroom at north park elementary school. students were evacuated as parents searched for their children. >> you've been in contact with your child? >> i have not.
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>> investigators say the suspect is down and there's no further threat to that school. trace gallagher with more. he's monitoring breaking news this afternoon. a news conference coming this afternoon. >> the first call came in around 10:40 west coast time. there's conflicting reports from the sheriff's department and the school district. what they seem to agree on is that at around 10:40, somebody walked into a classroom at north park elementary school and opened fire. this is believed to be a murder suicide. we do know that two adults are inside the classroom. both are dead. one of them is believed to be the teacher, the other believed to be the shooter. two students were also wounded in that shooting. though we do not know what grade level these students are. but we know that one was taken by a ground ambulance to a local hospital. the other was taken by a helicopter to a local hospital.
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again, they're telling us the situation right now is stable. there's no more danger. that has not stopped, as you see, the entire procedure from going forward. they're checking classroom to classroom, a technique used in hurricane katrina. when they clear the classroom, they put a black x on the door and moved to the next one. as you can see there, the students are being loaded on to buses and taken to a middle school or taken to cal state university san bernardino where their parents will pick them up. the authorities won't tell us exactly what the motive is except that it appears to be some type of domestic dispute. in fact, the associated press is reporting that the teacher that was killed did not the suspect who came inside the classroom. one parent that was interviewed was very surprised this happened because they said the school is very safe. you have to go through a gate first off and then to actually
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get inside the school compound, you have to be let inside a door. the fact that somebody walked in with a gun, they say, is hard to believe. yet as we know, it did happen. we're talking about some 575 students at north park elementary school, shep, that is broken down 30% hispanic, 30% white, 30% white. most of them are students in need. we should point out police have not said anything about these two students who were taken away and believed to be in critical condition being shot. that has not come up. we believe they were shot, but nor the hospital, nor the police have confirmed that. we should also point out that this is about six miles -- everybody knows -- from the inland regional center where terror happened in 2015. san bernardino, since then, has had a rash of murders.
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in 2017, san bernardino had the most lethal year murder wise in 20-plus years. that was the year after the terror attacks. so the police there, a city that is in bankruptcy, the police have been very busy as of late. we're told the atf is involved in this, the local fbi is involved in this as well as pretty much every first responder and police department in and around the san bernardino area. when we get more information, we'll update you. >> shepard: trace, thanks. a teacher and a gunman is dead and two students taken to a nearby hospital. a news conference expected in about 25 minutes from now. we'll have it for you. in washington, the defense secretary mattis has just said that the u.s. missile strike in syria wiped out 20% of the country's air force. otherwise, we're getting mixed messages. the white house says there's two
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goals in syria. one to defeat isis and second to replace bashar al-assad. sean spicer has more. >> i think they go hand and hand. as you reduce isis' strength, as you deescalate the conflict, the political environment gets stronger and stronger. >> this comes after two-point top trump administrations send mixed signals. u.s. ambassador to the u.n. says getting rid of assad is a priority for the trump administration along with defeating isis. >> political solutions have to happen. we know that it is not going to be -- there's not any sort of option where political solutions will happen with assad at the head of the regime.
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look at a government that is peaceful and stable with assad. >> that's nikki haley on cnn over the weekend. rex tillerson kept the focus on the islamic state. >> we believe the first priority is the defeat of isis. by defeating isis and removing them from control, we have eliminated or minimized a particular threat, not just the united states, but to the whole stability of the region. once the isis threat has been reduced or eliminated, i think we can turn our attention directly to stabilizing the situation in syria. >> shepard: secretary tillerson on "face the nation." he also said that russia has been incompetent in its failure to make sure syria doesn't have chemical weapons. but questions remain. did russia know all along that bashar al-assad had chemical weapons and did they know that the syrians would use them? the syrians may have out
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-maneuvered the russians. rex tillerson is scheduled to arrive in russia top for talks. but we've learned that the secretary of state will not be talking with vladimir putin. the topics would have been cooperation on isis and the russian invasion of crimea. now syria is obviously front and center. secretary tillerson is a former exxon mobil ceo. he has close ties with russia. vladimir putin gave him an award, called the order of friendship in 2014. but now president but right now putin will not be meeting with tillerson. he's in italy for g-8 meetings. >> we rededicate ourselves to holding to account any and all that commit crimes against the
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innocence anywhere in the world. >> russian and iranian officials have warned the united states that they crossed red lines by striking in syria and they will respond with force should it happen again. jennifer griffin live. what is the pentagon saying about the damage to the syrian air base there, jen? >> a conference call was just held with reporters here at the pentagon to talk about the pentagon's strategy in the wake of the tomahawk missile strike. he would not say why the runway was not cratered or the chemical weapon stores were not bombed. sean spicer said the president leaves open the possibility or more strikes. >> i think from what you're hearing, you've taken two planes and taken them off at the p.r. site. the bottom line, their fuelling capabilities have been taken out, radar capabilities have been taken out and 20% of their fixed wing from the entire air
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force has been taken out. their ability to operate out of that air base is gone. >> we've been told privately the u.s. military didn't want to be accused of hitting sarin gas agents and creating a cloud and affects agents or russian troops at the base. we're told tomahawks are not the right weapon to crater an airstrip. colonel thomas added this is a one-off strike designed to send a message to the al-assad regime about using chemical weapons. the united states does not want to be pulled into syria's civil war. >> shepard: thanks, jen. do we have another report of what they were trying to
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accomplish with this strike? >> it was meant to send a message. >> shepard: what was that? >> don't use chemical weapons. the broader message is about our policy in syria is a muddle. you saw that from the conflicting statements that we had. obviously president trump had an emotional response. we all did to the use of chemical weapons. he found that that is something that couldn't be tolerated. the military presented him with a strike. did not involve human pilots. involved cruise missiles. where we go from there is no clearer than before that strike began. >> shepard: it doesn't keep them from being able to attack -- make such attacks. they were using that air base just hours later. there's five other air bases. 20% of the air force is destroyed. if they want to use more chemical weapons, they can. what does this say about other types of murdering children. have the united states said we
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will respond under those matters? if see, are we drawn into their civil war? >> we have not seen that. we've seen critics coming out saying what about the hundreds of thousands of people that have been killed with conventional munitions, buried alive in their homes, forced from their homes, millions of people. this does nothing to address that either. seems like the administration was trying to draw a distinction between its policy and the obama administration's policy when president obama drew a red line about chemical weapons. so the broader question of the horror in syria and how to solve that, nobody has any solutions. we didn't have any good ones in the previous administration either. >> practicely speaking, did this strike do anything? >> didn't do much from a practical stands point. al-assad's air force is still intact. i've heard reports of 20%. there's other bases he can use.
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he clearly retains the ability to use chemical weapons he had stockpiled or may be producing. the question is, will he be backing off conventional attacks? seems not. he attacked the same time that they attacked with chemical weaponses. not much as changed. >> shepard: breaking news just coming in. i mentioned not two minutes ago mike, the russians have known this was going to happen. while you were speaking, we just got an answer. dateline washington has said that the united states has concluded russia knew in advance of syria's chemical weapons attack that happened last week. the so the russians knew in advance. so if the russians knew this was going to happen and allowed it to happen, did this meeting just take a dramatic turn? >> most certainly. if that's intelligence coming in now, it's something that he will have to raise. as you mentioned, he's not
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meeting with vladimir putin. some people i've talked to in the past few days have suggested this meeting is really kind of a waste of time if he's not actually sitting down with the one decision maker in russia who we can exert pressure on. now this is in the open, it will change the tone of what was already going to be a difficult meeting. >> shane harrison from our washington newsroom. thank you. >> shepard: so that changes a lot. a senior u.s. official tells the associated press that russia knew in advance of the chemical weapons attack last week. the russians knew. does that mean they were complicit? more on that breaking news coming up. now the military is on the move again, a navy strike group heads to the korean peninsula ahead of an important anniversary for the north koreans. back to jennifer griffin for a
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live report and a follow up on this new information that t russians knew the syrians were going to take that chemical strike that killed women and children as they slept in their beds. that's coming up. look closely. hidden in every swing, every chip, and every putt, is data that can make the difference between winning and losing. the microsoft cloud helps the pga tour turn countless points of data
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introducing new beggin' strips premium edition. twwwoooooo?!?! with real meat as ingredient one. everything to your liking? mmm mmmmm... new beggin' strips premium. becaussssseeee beggin'! >> shepard: breaking news on fox news channel. we learned in the last five minutes, u.s. officials have reported that the russians knew in advance that the syrians were going to carry out this chemical weapons strike that left dozens and dozens of people dead
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including women and children as the president described it babies murdered in their beds and hundreds others injuries. it was the reason given by the white house that we launched this strike on an air base there that hit a number of targets. did not cripple the air base that was being used. jennifer griffin is at the pentag pentagon. what's being said there? >> on friday afternoon after the air strikes, there was a proofing here at the pentagon with two senior air force personnel, commanders who were describing -- that's where we first learned that the u.s. was investigating whether russia knew at the time of the chemical weapons strike, that they knew that the syrian air force would carry this out. whether they were involved more directly in terms of having -- we were told friday that they had chemical weapons expertise
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on the ground. remember, at this air base there were between a dozen and 100 russians based at that air base. this is a base that was well-known before 2013 for storing chemical weapons and continued to have chemical agents that can be combined together to create this sarin gays and that was used in the strike last tuesday. so it really baffles the mind that russians could be at that base, being knowledgeable of when syrian planes take off and not know that chemical weapons were being a sum belled there, especially since we learned that russian experts with chemical weapons have been based in syria in recent months. >> more details just coming in, jennifer in the last few seconds. the official says a russian operated drone flew over the hospital in serial where the victims were rushing to get
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treatment. hours after the drone left, a russian made fighter jet bombed the hospital in what american officials believe was an attempt to cover up the use of chemical weapons there. this sounds like the russians were complicit in many ways. >> that's what federal officials said they would investigate. we understand some of the results are coming in. it's notable this is coming out, this official is coming out of washington on the eve of secretary of state rex tillerson's visit to moscow. tillerson will be me having with sergei lavrov. the u.s. will use this information to try to get russia to pressure assad to step aside or to back down. >> jennifer griffin at the pentagon. thanks. the russians knew, the russian
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>> another major move from the united states military, a navy strike group on the way to the korean peninsula. the goal is to maintain readiness as north korea gets ready to celebrate key dates in its nation's history. in other words a show of force ahead of the marking of the lit kim il-song's birthday. north korea marks 85 years of the creation of the people's army. kim john on and his regime may be getting ready for another
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nuke taste. april 15 is when the north korean military gets frisky. the u.s.s. carl vinson aircraft carrier is leading the group. the president's national security adviser, h.r. mcmaster called the decision prudent. >> north korea has been engaged in a pattern of provocative behavior, this is a rogue regime that is a nuclear capable regime. president xi and president trump agreed that that is unacceptable. what has to happen is the denuclearization of the peninsula. the president has us ready give him a full range of options to help the region. >> north korea put out a statement in response to the strikes in syria promising to defend itself with tremendous
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military muscle and nuclear force. fox news has told the u.s. ships will arrive near the peninsula in two weeks. let's turn to gordon chang, the author of "nuclear show down, north korea takes on the world." help us understand this. >> we're sending the carl vinson into the sea of japan. in 2010, we had a kerfuffle with beijing because the north koreans sunk a frigate. killed 46 sailors. we wanted to send another aircraft carrier in the region. beijing objected. we pulled back. and the north koreans killed another four southern koreans shelling an island. there's a history to us sending carriers around the peninsula.
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april 15, the day kim song-il was born. they do something provocative. >> kim jong-un wants to bolster his position in the area. so detonating a nuke or sending off a missile would be perfect that would show the generals and admirals that kim is on their side? hand cause the world to freak o out. >> and all they need to do is push the button now. they'll do it when there's a maximum effect on other countries and maybe internally. this is a time when the north koreans will do something bad. >> i read the chinese military has send forces to the border. i don't know what to believe in that region at that point. you read here and there they may
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have. >> they often do that and the north koreans have been sending heavy or more to the border that is a sign that the north koreans and chinese are not getting as long as well as they thought they would. clearly on that border, it sometimes gets tense. they won't fight because of various reasons. where we are really concerned is the dmz separating the two crees. there's been incidents where south koreans have been killed by north korean soldiers. >> shepard: kim jong-un has a lot of problems. he's concerned about the population rising up against him. he's killed his own brother. >> with a chemical agent. >> how unstable is that regime? >> i think it's unstable. from the end of january, we saw four instances of instability. the minister of state security a really important figure was demoted and detained. five of his senior subordinates.
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and the missile test, the head of the missile forces wasn't there. indicating problems there. you put that together in a short period of time, it means the regime is fluid. kim jong-un has a low threshold because his power may be slipping. >> and what does the u.s.s. carl vinson mean being there? >> we need to do something to bolster the south korean public. they're nervous about the american commitment. clearly we're trying to do -- walk that line. kim jong-un sees that as provocative. so do the chinese, by the way. we have to deter pyongyang. >> thanks, gorden. >> thank you. >> shepard: christians in egypt burying their dead after attacks on palm services sunday killed
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45. surveillance video shows the moment one of the bombs went off in alexandria, 130 miles north and west of cairo. it was a horrible scene. officials think the man walked up to the gate and blue himself up. the other attack on a church about 25 miles from alexandria. officials say two dozen people died there. the islamic state has claimed responsibility for both attacks. neil gorsuch is now a supreme court justice. it happened today. and it didn't get on tv until halfway through the hour. that tells you how crazy the news cycle is. hear what judge gorsuch had to say after the ochocinco. plus, back to the crisis in syria and the dictator that slaughters his own people and along with his wife who once
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>> shepard: neil gorsuch sworn in the u.s. supreme court today to fill the seat left vacant an last year, this morning judge gorsuch took the oath of office in a private ceremony in the supreme court. chief justice john roberts administered that. later, justice gorsuch took the judicial oath at a ceremony at the white house. justice anthony kennedy spore him in. justice gorsuch clerked for kennedy. he will be the first supreme court justice to serve alongside his former boss. >> i'm humbled by the trust placed in me today. i will never forget that to whom much is given, much will be expected. i promise you i will do all my powers permit to be a faithful
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servant of the constitution and laws of this nation. >> shepard: the senate confirmed him after the republicans used the nuclear option to break a democrat filibuster. tomorrow is not a given. but entresto is a medicine that helps make more tomorrows possible. ♪ tomorrow, tomorrow... ♪ i love ya, tomorrow in the largest heart failure study ever, entresto helped more people stay alive and out of the hospital than a leading heart failure medicine. women who are pregnant must not take entresto. it can cause harm or death to an unborn baby. don't take entresto with an ace inhibitor or aliskiren. if you've had angioedema while taking an ace or arb medicine, don't take entresto. the most serious side effects are angioedema, low blood pressure... ...kidney problems, or high potassium in your blood. ♪ tomorrow, tomorrow i love ya, tomorrow ♪ ask your heart doctor about entresto. and help make tomorrow possible. ♪ you're only a day away.
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>> shepard: breaking news. an it date on a shooting in san bernardino, california. the police just held a news conference. the chief confirming it looked like a murder suicide to him. police say two adults dead, shooter and teach. two children in the hospital we just learned are in critical condition. trace gallagher with the rest. >> yeah, shep, the man walked into the classroom, opened fire on a teacher, a female teacher. she was shot and killed. two other students were critically injured in the crossfire apparently and then the gunman turned the gun on himself. the two bodies are still in the classroom. the injured students, one was taken by life flight to a local hospital. another was taken by a ground al
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balance to a local hospital. right now the process is trying to get the kids back in contact with their parents. the parents were alerted by this robo call, but because there's no cell phones allowed on this campus, the parents were scrambling trying to get in touch with students but they could not do that. now the process is all of the students are being taken to a local middle school. it will take two or three hours to get them back in contact with their parents because the parents have to show up with an i.d. before they can claim their students. one parent said earlier, they were very confused as to how this could happen. considering just to get on to new york park elementary school, you have to go through a gate and be allowed into a front door. a.p. was reporting that the fact the shooter did know the teacher and this was a domestic dispute, again, the authorities have not yet confirmed that. as for the ages of the students
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who were injured, police won't tell us what great level or their ages until they have been identified and their families have been notified. again, this is san bernardino which was home to the terrorist attack in 2015. the school is six miles from where the attack happened. 10:40 local time this morning. just exactly two hours ago, shep. >> trace gallagher, thank you. back to syria now where we are learned during this hours the russians knew in advance according to u.s. authorities that the syrians were using chemical weapons on their own people. the russians videoed it after and the russians made an attempt to cover it up. so who is the syrian dictator? when bashar al-assad came to power, his people hoped he was
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going to save them. six years ago when the people of syria revolted, al-assad turned to violence and killing which led to the country's on going civil war. a group that documents the atrocities in that country estimates 500,000 people have died in syria's civil war. dan springer has more on his rise to power. dan? >> yeah, shep. when assad took over, there was more hope for a more democratic syria. many believed that his youth, his team in the u.k., early economic reforms might mean he could be a middle east modernizer. secretary of state hillary clinton referring to those hopes in an interview with cbs in 2011 that said "many of the members of congress of both parties that have grown to syria in recent months have said that they believe he's a former."
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the hopes were destroyed as assad made a decision not to push for reforms but to cling to power as pro democracy protests turned to civil war. now whatever happened in the future, his place in history is seen as one of the most brutal dictators the world has seen. >> shepard: tell us about his wife. >> she was born in london. educated in the u.k. worked as a short time as a banker in new york. she med bashar al-assad in london in 2000 and married him a year later. she was glamorous, appeared to have western values. but that image has been sheriff's department like so much of syria's infrastructure. any homes that she might modernize her husband have disappeared even as the couple continues to have concern for the orphans of syria's civil war as in this video shot lasts can. e-mails published by the guardian newspaper show clear that she's completely behind her husband's decision to do whatever it takes to keep power.
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saying in one of the e-mails, if we're strong together, we will overcome this together. i love you. in the e-mails obtainedgy the guardian, she inquired about fondu sets and night stands that she ordered all as her husband murdered his on people. the transformation seems complete as vogue dubbed her the desert rose to what others call the first lady of hell. >> dan springer. more on the rising tension of the united states and north korea. we'll get more on the american military operation across the border in south korea. including spy planes that are used to gather intelligence. we'll go live to seoul next.
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region. u.s. war planes operating at a base soul of seoul. the u.s. gathering intelligence with spy planes that date back to the cold war. our team got a rare glimpse that one of those u2 planes. greg palkot is live in seoul. greg? >> hey, shepard. remember the u 2? it's still around. some called it a cold war relic. very much a part of this modern day crisis. we got a close look at the plane. it's been updated since the 50s and the 60s. it's been stripped down but built up with all sears of high tech gear. two go up each day and pay spend ten hours aloft. they're 14 miles high in altitude and give them a good broad picture of what is happening on this peninsula. that information gets fed back
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to the air base for analysis and possible action. >> shepard: i hear you talked to the pilots. what are they telling you? >> yeah, it's amazing. they're active in general here running various exercises and drills. but now they're a little bit more focused. they hear the information, they hear the news and the it are rick and gives them more of a confirmation of what they know already. that this is an unsettled region. north korea is a definite challenge and kim jong-un is an unstable character. here's a little bit of what two pilots had to say to me about their korean mission. >> a very tense time. that's kind of what we do here. we do our daily mission. we're always maintaining our readiness. >> we go to the same airspace that we go into in a wartime situation. 030 miles to the north of us and we'll be there in defense of the
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south koreans. >> think about what he said, shep. he goes to the same place that he would go to if it was wartime. all he is does is fly, fly north, does his combat drill and it's as if it was the real thing right now. it isn't. thankfully. back to you. >> shepard: greg ball cot early this tuesday morning in seoul. everybody makes mistakes including doctors. could be deadly if you don't shell out for a second opinion. details on that straight ahead. it's not how fast you mow... ...it's how well you mow fast. woooh! it's not how fast you mow... it's how well you mow fast! it's not how fast you mow... it's how well you mow fast. they're not just words to mow by, they're words to live by. the john deere ztrak z345r with the accel deep deck to mow faster, better. take a test drive
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their money. they say hackers change the bank deposit information on active accounts and stole tens of thousands from the accounts. cyber security analysts say some of the hacks involved passwords stolen from accounts on other websites. they say amazon is becoming a bigger target once it grows. a spokesman for a said as fraudsters get smarter, so do we. apparently going to one's doctor or just one doctor might not be enough. it could be deadly if you don't pay for a second opinion. that's according to a new study out for the mayo clinic. researchers say 90% of people that go to a doctor for a second opinion get a different opinion. they say primary care doctors
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misdiagnosed 20% of conditions. c kennedy is here. 20% say get a second opinion. do they pay for that? >> no, they don't, especially with obamacare. you're eventually farmed out to a specialist. how nice would it be if you can go to the specialist in the first place, especially if you know something is oddly wrong with you. what happens is specialists, they differentiate and see a number of people that have your exact condition and so they know right away if it's good, bad or very ugly. >> shepard: this headline that it could be deadly without a second opinion sounds like scare mongering. >> that is a bit of hysteria. what they're talking about is defined diagnoses in most cases. when you go to a specialist, your pcp thinks you have one thing but the diagnosis turns out to maybe not be that bad.
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>> when you go to the primary care physician and they say you have a and you ask the doctor, do i have to get a specialist or do you have to get referred to one? >> if you have something that could be deadly, they're going to refer you to something else, spectacularly cardiovascular or cancer zone. near going to send you to a doctor who has more refined exer centerpiece in that area. when they talk about the deadly conditions, that's what they're talking about. >> shepard: so especially if you have something that your primary doctor is not sure about, you have to get it checked a again. >> the medical system in this country is set up that you only make money when you specialize so more doctors are becoming specialists but they have to be referred by the pcps. >> and pcp is primary care physician. and one thing they're doing is
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going to concierge services. you pay them a fee every year. >> yeah. sometimes thousands. >> shepard: so you can get in, be seen. you don't have to sit in line. that's taking it away -- >> creating more options from those that can. that's what happens when you have government-involveded insurance. it's a bifurcation for the haves and have notice. we have breaking news from the state of alabama. the governor of alabama has been in a world of hurt. there was talk of impeachment. this morning we heard might he resign instead. breaking news and coming next on fox news channel. nties of hep c. wondering, what if? nties of hep c. i let go of all those feelings. because i am cured with harvoni. harvoni is a revolutionary treatment for the most common type of chronic hepatitis c. it's been prescribed to more
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position of power to cover up an affair he was having with a top aide. bentley denied misusing state resources and claims he did nothing illegal. story made headlines when his wife divorced him in 2015 after she reported sexually suggestive phone conversation him and a senior political advisor. he's been named "the love gov." the audio recordings have made the rounds on the internet and disseminated on national television. the ethics committee explored this last week and they had reason to believe the gourmet have committed up to four felonies. they were to begin impeachment
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processes today. instead, the governor has been meeting with prosecutors, apparently to plead guilty to some lesser charges and will resign and face those charges instead. the governor of alabama expected to resign before close of business today. on this day in history, the rms titanic set out for its maiden voyage. it was believed to bun sinkable thanks in part to the watertight compartments. several days in the trip, ships reported icebergs in the area. the captain never got the message. an iceberg tore through the side of the titanic ripping through compartments and flooding the ship. passengers headed to life boards but there were enough for half of them. it sank and 1,500 people died.
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the dow has been all over the place today. it's about flat right now. "your world" with neil cavuto is never that. the news and much more still to come, this is fox news channel. >> neil: welcome, everybody. i'm neil cavuto. you're watching "your world." what a world a difference this makes. a revolution that russia knew ahead of time about the planned chemical weapons attack in syria. the attack that triggered our tomahawk missile attack last week. does that change is entire equation here ahead of rex tillerson headed to russia tomorrow? we're told no vladimir putin. to kevin corke at the white house. >> hi, neil. this is a devastating revelation if it's true. the means that the russians knew that children would be the victim of
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