Skip to main content

tv   Americas News HQ  FOX News  May 6, 2017 1:00pm-2:01pm PDT

1:00 pm
another loaded gun on the killer. when you have places where people can legally carry guns, some one might shoot back. paul: hope to see you here next week. [♪] reporter: republicans score a major victory in the house with the passage of their bill. but even as president trump savors his accomplishment, the bill shifts to the u.s. senate where the legislative fate is far from certain. welcome to a brand-new hour of "america's news headquarters." julie: republicans getting a win
1:01 pm
on the board with the repeal and replacement of obamacare. several are raising serious questions about the way forward. reporter: the president continues to tout his healthcare bill as a win. as far as the president seize it, it doesn't get worse than obamacare. they lived up to the promise they did not live up to a month ago. but this bill is far from becoming law. thursday they did their victory lap in the rose garden of the white house and they continued the victory lap. the president speaking in his weekly a he dress yesterday touting the american healthcare act, even boldly moving on to talking about his next big legislative hurdle, tax reform. >> thursday the house voted to
1:02 pm
repeal one of the worst job killing laws of all. it will replace this disaster with more choices and more freedom for american families. now i'm calling on the senate to take action. reporter: getting the senate to take action will be the big hurdle and big problem. democrats are saying this bill will literally kill people. senate republicans are saying we'll couple with a bill all by ourselves. completely different from the house bill. the two sticking issues are preexisting conditions and medicaid cuts. this new bill states that the states have individual -- they can make the individual decision to decide whether insurance could charge more for preexisting conditions. on the medicaid cuts, you have senators like rob portman who are saying you have lower income
1:03 pm
americans who will now have their insurance shift away from there because of the cuts to medicaid he expansion that were put in place with obamacare will disappear, and there is concern there. and concern whether there is enough money to help seniors and lower income folks with this new plan. corey lewandowski, the trump advisor -- the former trump advisor spoke earlier today. >> i think it's all in mitch mcconnell's court. and i can tell you this, the president is going to push hard to make sure this gets done quickly. reporter: the president is expected to continue to make phone calls and hand a hands on approach. there is no deadline given by the white house. they expect changes, but expect the main pillars of this healthcare bill to remain intact over the coming months.
1:04 pm
julie: thank you very much. >> the insurance companies are fleeing. it's been a catastrophe. this is a great plan. i think it will get even better. this is a repeal and a replace of obamacare. gregg: president trump sounding the alarm. let's bring in minnesota congressman jason lewis who is a member of the house budget and transportation committees. if your party is able to get both houses to aphotograph one bill, and it's signed by the president, clearly republicans will own healthcare, warts and all, that means blame for each and every problem, real or perceived.
1:05 pm
are you prepared for the potential damage it might do if things don't turn out as rosie as promised? >> november 8 the republicans owned obamacare for all practical purposes. doing nothing was not an option. we would have been blamed if we let obamacare markets collapse, and they are collapsing. we have states with 40% premium hikes. the exchange had to be bailed out based on back-to-back premium increases in minnesota. we would have owned the status quo. gregg: what happens if the bill dies in the senate? it's got to go through a conference committee. this could die in early summer. if you don't fix obamacare, what kind of blame do you genuinely deserve?
1:06 pm
>> that's the greater danger. let me be the first to say the senate needs to step up and do the job. there is no excuse for non-action over in the other chamber. i agree with you on that. we need to make certain the other chamber passes a bill that's basically the same bill. but when you have to move towards lowering premiums and expanding enrollment to get out from under this death spiral that's in the insurance market. presenting: the current -- gregg: the bill protects people in the preexisting conditions market. but that's not how it's being perceived on the internet. the meme is preexisting conditions won't be covered, period. the democratic congressional campaign committee is running an
1:07 pm
ad that says it would leave no repro techs for people with a history of illness or injury, and you know that's pay an patey false? >> not only does this bill have guaranteed issue, it has guaranteed renewability. no one can be charged more unless they have a stop in their coverage and don't pay their insurance premiums. it's the same status as the 1996 hippa law that ted kennedy backed. gregg: i have got to tell you it's out there. it ran crazy yesterday. let me ask you -- we have some power in congress, but we can't prevent people from lying. gregg: you can do a better job of messaging.
1:08 pm
i haven't seen you guys out there meeting with the drum that you are protecting people with conditions previous to their coverage. the last bill that died in the house had a scant 17%. a majority of americans vigorously opposed it. that may be true of this one once the polling is done. americans grew accustomed to obamacare over its 7 years, opposition to it abated over time. if your party gets rid of it, might you pay a steep price in the mid-term elections? >> i don't think so. when you combine the premium reductions with more enrollment which will allow us to cover those who are sick with preexisting conditions. people will have more access to healthcare at more premium rates. that's the whole purpose behind the guaranteed renewability. so you will have a better product when all is said and
1:09 pm
done and i think the polls will catch up to that. gregg: thanks so much. julie: new details on the resignation of national security advice year michael flynn. according to the "washington post," senior members of trump's transition team warned flynn about this contacts "the russian ambassador telling them department mat was likely under surveillance. reporter: senior official were concerned that general flynn wasn't taking the warnings seriously. one of those officials was so concerned that he asked the obama white house for a copy of the characteristics a's class thified profile on russia's ambassador for flynn to look at before going through with their meeting. flynn was repeatedly warned that
1:10 pm
the cam bass tore was under surveillance by the f.b.i. and the cia. currents and form officials told the a.p. it's not clear if flynn looked through documents. but he did ultimately meet with the russian ambassador a mow later and had a series of conversations as well. those conversations and flynn misleading the white house and the vice president about them is what led to his dismissal. there were other warnings from deputy attorney general sally yates told the white house she was concerned that flynn's flying could make him vulnerable to blackmail by russia. julie: thank you very much. gregg? gregg: authorities say a
1:11 pm
significant amount of data has surfaced online after the campaign of centrist candidate macron was hacked. gregg palkot live in pair trils where the sun has finally set. gregg, gives an update on this. >> sounds like something out of last year's u.s. presidential election. french presidential leader emmanuel macron hit by a huge cyber data dump. thousands of emails and documents seized from his campaign and posted online. most of the material said to be routine. but mixed in with that, fake news items clearly meant to sway this election. we have seen no significant impact to the frontrunner macron. he is a reform, pro nato, and he has something like a 20% lead over far-right populist
1:12 pm
candidate marine le pen. she is anti-immigrant and says she cities for france. le pen's positive tone about moscow has some people thinking the russian connection similar to last year's allegations about tampering with the hillary clinton campaign. we spoke with folks on the street. authorities are trying to keep a lid on it here in liberal paris we did hear a lot of support for macron. the nationalist message coming from marine le pen is received well. we heard from people who are unhappy from to both candidates. and abstention could play a big role. neither of the leading candidates for the major parties are in this runoff. they got knocked off in the first round. but this election is sow
1:13 pm
important major figures from the united states have stepped in. president trump has spoke. favorably in the past about marine le pen. just yesterday the white house is saying they will support whoever the wins in tomorrow's election. >> it will you be interesting to watch unfold. thanks, gregg. julie: a major announcement from the trump administration to the status of two dozen fashion fall mom outs nationwide. house law makers launching a sweeping investigation look into whether the obama administration jep dietds fashion stall security in the lead toup'iran nuclear deal. ambassador john bolton will join us with his infight next. we're both stuck in this cube farm and you're about to hit 'send all' on some embarrassing gas. hey, you bought gas-x®! unlike antacids, gas-x ® relieves pressure and bloating fast.
1:14 pm
huh, crisis averted. iit's not how fast you mow...'s how well you mow fast. ...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 and save up to 250 dollars on select john deere residential ztrak mowers. say no to this because of my bladder? thanks to tena... not anymore! only new tena intimates has pro-skin technology
1:15 pm
designed to quickly wick away moisture. to help maintain your skin's natural balance. it goes beyond triple protection from leaks, odor and moisture. so you can feel fresh and free to get as close as you want. only tena, lets you be you. ♪ w...i was always searching for ways to manage my symptoms. i thought i had it covered. then i realized managing was all i was doing. when i finally told my doctor, he said humira was for people like me who have tried other medications,... but still experience the symptoms of moderate to severe crohn's disease. in clinical studies, the majority of patients on humira saw significant symptom relief... ...and many achieved remission. humira can lower your ability to fight infections... ...including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections and cancers,... including lymphoma, have happened; as have blood, liver, and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions,... ...and new or worsening heart failure. before treatment, get tested for tb.
1:16 pm
tell your doctor if you've been to areas where certain fungal infections are common, and if you've had tb,... ...hepatitis b, are prone to infections, ...or have flu-like symptoms or sores. don't start humira if you have an infection. if you're still just managing your symptoms, ask your gastroenterologist about humira. with humira, remission is possible.
1:17 pm
gregg: we are learning the identity of the navy sealed killed in action in somalia. 38-year-old kyle mail began. he was a 15-year veteran who had been awarded the bronze star five times.
1:18 pm
the department of the interior has a list of mostly western mom outs. president trump said those protections were a massive land grab. and large chinese-made was passenger jet takes off in china. they are hoping to compete with boeing and airbus. julie: leaders of the house oversight committee confirming an investigation under way whether the obama administration dropped possible kiewghtss of several iranian fugitives in order to pass the nuclear deal. ambassador john bolton, what do
1:19 pm
you think? >> it looks that way. there have been reports of criminal investigations and potential prosecutions being dropped around about the time in 2015 when the deal with iran was actually struck. but in the past several days there have been a lot more details that have come out. now as you say we have this investigation by the house oversight committee it's very disturbing, not for the least which reasons, many of these versus gaightss were individuals suspected of pro live laying-related activity. that is to say potential no curement on behalf of iran, precise any what the focus of the vienna deal with iran was. the idea that these people would escape further investigation
1:20 pm
simply to make it easier for the ayatollahs to buy the deal is very disturbing. julie: the may 5 letter the senators asked the obama administration to produce justice department documents that would help the committee better understand them. chaffetz wants details on 21 cases in which charges or warrants were dropped. >> these are the ones that look like they were the subject of f.b.i. investigation or had gone before that perhaps with testimony and evidence and evidence froad grand jury. so that these were well developed, i think part of scene ongoing effort we have seen for quite some time to prevent agents from places like iran and north korea using american technology.
1:21 pm
you know, this is like giving something back to the iranians that they can use against us. you see people who are expert at procuring this lie technology, these products, are free to go roaming around in aid of iran's nuclear weapons program. we still don't know exactly how many side deals that the obama administration cut with the ayatollahs in order to facilitate the underlying deal itself. julie: you can't make a deal with iran. it's like making a deal with north korea. they don't uphold any nuclear deal and shift speaks for itself. what would you say would be the biggest mistake there, that prisoner swap gained a lot of criticism by exchanging price nerts you are rewarding iran. and they can do whatever they want with those prisoners.
1:22 pm
there is no guarantee they will continue to incarcerate them. what was your biggest problem with that? >> i wouldn't have done this deal at all. i think what we have got here is iran using the leverage, knowing obama wanted this deal a lot more than the iranians wanted the deal to extract concessions from the united states that are almost unthinkable. the release of certain hostages iran had in exchange for a $1.5 billion settlement on a 35-year-old plane that wasn't going anywhere. $400 million at least that we know of delivered in cash. now we have the dropping of prosecution. i'm not aware of any vaguely comparable precedent. julie: talk about the steps taken by the obama
1:23 pm
administration to lessen their capacity in deal" all arms agreements. this precedent set by the united states need to be corrected. >> remarkably, over 15 years ago a bipartisan coalition led by jesse helms and joe biden came with an agreement that the function of verifying compliance with arms control and anti-proliferation agreements would be given a separate bureau inside the state department sow it wouldn't be under the thumb of the people who had negotiated the deals. what happened under obama was those two offices were put back together again, effectively suppressing the voice of the rare fires. i think there is a lot we'll learn about the iran nuclear deal in the year and a half, almost two years it has been in effect that hasn't seen the light of day while obama was
1:24 pm
president. julie: you have to look at how north korea is doing all this. as we are trying to rein in north korea and the bad deals we made with iran does not set a good precedent there. ambassador john bolton, thank you very much. gregg: is trouble getting worse for general michael flynn? new reaction. reports that trump transition officials raised red flags over his contacts with russia. as trump returns home as first time as commander-in-chief. we'll look at how the ncpd is raising the challenge of protecting him. they replace it with a brand new one. that's cool. i got a new helmet. we know steve. it's good to be in (good hands). ykeep you sidelined.ng that's why you drink ensure. with 9 grams of protein and 26 vitamins and minerals.
1:25 pm
for the strength and energy to get back to doing... ...what you love. ensure. always be you.
1:26 pm
whether it's connecting one of or bringing wifi to 65,000 fans. campuses. businesses count on communication, and communication counts on centurylink. as after a dvt blood clot,ital i sure had a lot to think about.
1:27 pm
what about the people i care about? ...including this little girl. and what if this happened again? i was given warfarin in the hospital, but wondered, was this the best treatment for me? so i asked my doctor. and he recommended eliquis. eliquis treats dvt and pe blood clots and reduces the risk of them happening again. yes, eliquis treats dvt and pe blood clots. eliquis also had significantly less major bleeding than the standard treatment. both made me turn around my thinking. don't stop eliquis unless your doctor tells you to. eliquis can cause serious and in rare cases fatal bleeding. don't take eliquis if you have an artificial heart valve or abnormal bleeding. if you had a spinal injection while on eliquis call your doctor right away if you have tingling, numbness, or muscle weakness. while taking eliquis, you may bruise more easily ...and it may take longer than usual for bleeding to stop. seek immediate medical care for sudden signs of bleeding, like unusual bruising. eliquis may increase your bleeding risk if you take certain medicines. tell your doctor about all planned medical or dental procedures. eliquis treats dvt and pe blood clots.
1:28 pm
plus had less major bleeding. both made eliquis the right treatment for me. ask your doctor if switching to eliquis is right for you. julie: nigerian officials telling reuters boko haram militants released 82 school girls out of a group of more than 200.
1:29 pm
as you may remember, the girls are were you kidnapped from a town in the country's north back in 2014. the girls reportedly released after negotiations with government officials. however, we don't know the terms of those negotiations. we'll keep an eye on this breaking story as we get more information. gregg: former national security advisor michael flynn back in the spotlight. the trump transition team raised concerns about his connections with russia. jamie weinstein, general flynn may be gone from the trump administration, but does he continue to hang like a political albatross over the
1:30 pm
neck of president trump? is that fair or to some extent is it unfair. >> there is a lot of smoke with the russia connection to the trump campaign. there is no evidence that the trump campaign collude with russia. whether it's general flynn or paul manafort or carter page. the intelligence community believes russia was attempting to influence the election. this is why the investigation in the senate continues and we understand there is an fbi investigation into this. there may be fire there and we need to see where these investigations lead. gregg: i would think general flynn would well know every russian official, especially the
1:31 pm
ambassador, would have ties to russian intelligence. everybody does, and flynn would be guard in his conversation with sergei kissl sergey kislya. and maybe was. there is no evidence of wrongdoing that we are aware of. >> there is no evidence of collusion. that's what the investigation is looking into. you think general flynn would know a lot of things. gregg: it came from a news organization that has the backing of the kremlin. arguably that's not a violation. >> which is well known by general flynn to be a proper began today arm of the russian government.
1:32 pm
greg: it doesn't fall under the rule of disclosure. >> i think general flynn and the intelligence community would know well. there could be smoke and no fire. but that's what these investigations are about. from my monitoring of the senate intelligence committee that conducted the investigation. they did a good job and it ways very bipartisan. and i think there is enough smoke to continue investigating here. but as you mention we don't have evidence of collusion. gregg: it invites the question, is there a conspicuous double standard here. president obama and his aides spoke with a great many foreign leaders, likely the russians as well. is the trump administration being held to a different and unfair standard?
1:33 pm
>> i don't think it's talking to the ambassador of russia that's the problem here. even in the story today, it mentioned there were members of the trump transition that were taking classified information, copying it out of a secured setting that raids alarms. so i think there are other questions beyond meetings with the ambassador of russia. it's all the smoke. not just that meeting with the ambassador. i think that's a fair concern. gregg: one of the stories says they were trying to establish back channels with the russians. famously president trump did the with his broth everything during the cuban missile crisis.
1:34 pm
this isn't terribly unusual. >> the meetings themselves are not what raised alarms for me. it's the dishonesty of the general -- telling vice president pence. and all the smoke around the meetings themselves. that's where the real concern is. the meetings alone are probably not most concerning aspect. julie: when the president comes to new york city, keeping him safe is a top priority. earlier this week the city launched a massive security operation to prepare for president trump's first visit to his hometown. and it requires many layers of nypd resources and highly trained units at the ready. i got a behind-the-scenes look
1:35 pm
at what it entails. for the first time since it began in 1845, the new york city police department is tasked with protecting a u.s. president who calls the big apple home. like no other police force in the world. the nypd is up for the job. among its active force of 36,000 officers, is a team of 1,500 men and women devoted to one job, counter terrorism. with the president's first visit since getting elected, their job is to protect the president and the city and its residence. >> we are protecting the president of the united states when he's in residence. and when he's not in residence we are protecting a building that could be a symbolic target.
1:36 pm
julie: it takes many layers weren't nypd. >> whether it many the counter terrorism pure owe, the bomb squad, the network of cameras. the explosive detection dogs other intelligence bureau, which is the investigations -- sources of information. julie: officers armed with long guns visible to the public protecting trump tower. the critical response teams have president trump's every step covered. layer two. if the not so visible counter sniper team. and we got an exclusive behind-the-scenes look at how they train using a magnified scope on an m-16 assault rifle.
1:37 pm
at 200 yards, it's as if it's 20 feet away. >> we preparer fromr for from a hostage situation, anything from a perp search, a man with a gun so we can protect our team. julie: officers are armed with virtual what he phones. here i'm responding to shots fired and have been told there is an active shooter inside a new york city bodega. i find bloody bodies on the floor. the lesson is to be prepared if it temperatures need. i draw my gun, but it's too late. i try again. i he encounter someone inside. this time i'm ready. after refusing to follow orders, he's an object at me.
1:38 pm
i shoot. was it the right move? an eye opening reminder of the intense pressure trained police officers are under every day. knowing it takes just one second to make a life or death decision. an layer three. an eye in the sky. sniper teams are not only counterterrorism layer. heavily armed officers steams are ready to rapel from helicopters like this one on to the ground or on top roof top ofs. they have a plan a, b, c, and d in place, but there is as plan e. officers can deflow from a helicopter on to any platform anywhere in the city within minutes. a tremendous resource in terms of people and costs.
1:39 pm
the good news is that congress announced it has approved a federal budget to reimburse the city of the tens of millions of gallon dollars it already spent. also mar-a-lago, when he goes to his estate there, that costs people money there as well. gregg: it was very informative. you have thought a guy armed with a stapler. julie: it speaks volumes. when we hear these stories when these officers in the fields, and they don't have backup and they shoot somebody who unfortunately pulled out a bag of skittles. it's you shoot or the officer died. gregg: i wouldn't wants to be in their position and frankly city wouldn't you want in that position. julie: thankfully not. moving on. gregg: millions on alert as the
1:40 pm
mississippi river reaches near record levels after days of heavy rain and flooding. the republican healthcare bill passed by the hill is squarely in the hands of the senate where it faces a significant makeover. our panel is here to weigh in on the potential hurdles ahead. >> we expect there to be to changes. but we expect the principles and the main pill larls of the healthcare bill as it exists now to remain the same.
1:41 pm
ahh. where are mom and dad? 'saved money on motorcycle insurance with geico! goin' up the country. love mom and dad' i'm takin' a nap. dude, you just woke up! ♪ ♪ i'm goin' up the country, baby don't you wanna go? ♪ ♪ i'm goin' up the country, baby don't you wanna go? ♪ geico motorcycle, great rates for great rides.
1:42 pm
1:43 pm
1:44 pm
julie: house republicans celebrating after the passage of a new healthcare bill. but the new bill could get a complete makeover in the senate. a griewch snorts is already drafting their own healthcare legislation. we are joined by marjorie clifton, a form consultant and
1:45 pm
guy benson. fox news contributor and term editor of town hall.com. marjorie, let me ask you, do you see this as being set up to fail? is this going to be reef written by the senate in did the house do it all for nothing? >> the house put this together pretty darn quickly. the senate republicans are look at it on a different side. anyone who passes this bill has to carry it into their district for voting. there has been an issue with people with preexisting conditions. and they estimate 24 million people would lose their health insurance. anybody who picks up healthcare has a hot potato. being able to get the cbo to
1:46 pm
assess it and understand the economic impact, they think this will take months to put something together, but it will look very different. julie: let's talk about preexisting conditions. guy, you say that that whole premise out there, the preexisting conditions not covered or that if you have a preexisting condition, whatever you have is considered a preexisting condition, you will end up paying more. is there truth to that or not? >> it's mostly a myth. under the healthcare bill as it currently stands and as you point out, it will change in the senate for sure. but the house-passed bill requires every one, insurers must cover people with preexisting conditions. step two is if you are continuously insured meaning you have coverage now or have it before the new law goes fox news
1:47 pm
channel effect with, if you were to lose that insurance or lose your job insurers must take you on regardless of preexisting conditions at the same price as everyone else. the only thing that some people might be pointing out is under the bill there are some states that can apply for and get waivers for community ratings which is making sure you can't charge people more if they are sick. they could get a waiver for that. if that's the case, you can't be waived if you have continuous insurance, you can't have a higher price tag attached to your care, but if you don't have insurance and you live in a state that asks for a waiver and gets one, then you might have to pay more which is where the high-risk poolts come in which are funded in the bill. julie: that's where the senate and moderate republicans might want to tweak this.
1:48 pm
>> this bill is essentially bringing us back to where we were preaffordable care act. the opt in for states is the key piece of this. if you have continuous coverage it stays the same. but it doesn't mean certain health insurers won't pull out of certain states. so you may not have that plan available to you. then insurance companies do not have the same control they had on them. if you are a sicker patient and fall into a high-risk group your rates may go through the roof. julie: if you are young you are good. what about being pregnant? a lot of the questions are about preexisting conditions? and what constitutes them? apparently pregnancy does. i just sort of kind of want to make a point. if you look closely you will
1:49 pm
notice one woman, two women. do you see any other women there? so now my question is this. you have a predominantly male group of congressmen passing legislation that are deeming preexisting conditions such as pregnancy and mammograms and vaccinations and sexual abuse victims, those are paul preexisting conditioning under this. i also want to make one mention. viagra is covered. >> the point about sexual assault and rape was given four pinocchios by "the washington post." it's not true. if it became law as is which it won't, it would bring us back to biewm care. guaranteed issue is still the law of the land. and 10 of the essential benefit
1:50 pm
areas obama created remain in the law, including pregnancy. certain states can ask for opt-outs. but there are a lot of lawmakers, all the states in america before obamacare have all sorts of regulations and mandates, most of which stay in the law under the acha. julie: but the option is there for them to opt out. the likelihood of that happening may not be high. but the fact they have the option scares some. >> to your point about the number of women and i would say minorities as well. men aren't bad guys. but before -- prostate cancer was funded 8 times more than ovarian cancer. that's because guys don't have ovaries. represent the interest of all people. >> there were plenty of women at
1:51 pm
that ceremony. there's a more enjoyable way to get your fiber.
1:52 pm
try phillips' fiber good gummies. they're delicious... and a good source of fiber to help support regularity. mmm. these are good. nice work, phillips'! try phillips' fiber good gummies!
1:53 pm
if you're approaching 65, now's the time to get your ducks in a row. to learn about medicare, and the options you have. you see, medicare doesn't cover everything - only about 80% of your part b medical expenses. the rest is up to you. so if 65 is around the corner, think about an aarp medicare supplement insurance plan,
1:54 pm
insured by unitedhealthcare insurance company. like all standardized medicare supplement insurance plans, they help cover some of what medicare doesn't pay. and could save you in out-of-pocket medical costs. so don't wait. call to request your free decision guide. and gather the information now to help you choose a plan later. these types of plans let you pick any doctor or hospital that takes medicare patients. and there's a range of plans to choose from, depending on you needs and your budget. so if you're turning 65 soon, call now and get started. because the time to think about tomorrow...is today. go long. gregg: major developments to tell you about. lea gabrielle has more.
1:55 pm
>> prosecutors say the penn state student suffered for hours before he died. the fraternity and taste its members were charged with involuntary manslaughter. he died from a traumatic brain injury. he was forced to drink excessive amounts of alcohol. after running a drinking gawnts let he fell and hit his head repeatedly. his father said his son died because of disregard for moral values. >> in hon honor of our son to insure no other parents will have to go through the pain and grief we are currently experiencing. reporter: the grand jury reports that fraternity members tried to cover up with happened that night.
1:56 pm
they carried him up those steps, shook him and tried to dress him before someone finally called 911. the university disbanders the fraternity. the first 10 defendants were arraigned yesterday and released on bail. others will be in court next week. hazing and aggravated assault and those charged with involuntarily manslaughter could face up to five years in prison. gregg: it's obviously an important story, and every parent who has kids going to college, you worry about these things. julie: i'll see you back on the fox report at 7:00. beyond, youl pet food that goes beyond telling ingredients to showing where they come from. beyond assuming the source is safe... to knowing it is.
1:57 pm
beyond asking for trust... to earning it. because, honestly, our pets deserve it. beyond. natural pet food. the uncertainties of hep c. wondering, what if? 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 than a quarter million people. . . . certain patients can be cured with just 8 weeks of harvoni. before starting harvoni, your doctor will test to see if you've ever had hepatitis b, which may flare up and cause serious liver problems during and after harvoni treatment. tell your doctor if you've ever had hepatitis b, a liver transplant, other liver or kidney problems, hiv or any other medical conditions and about all the medicines you take including herbal supplements. taking amiodarone with harvoni
1:58 pm
can cause a serious slowing of your heart rate. common side effects of harvoni include tiredness, headache and weakness. ready to let go of hep c? ask your hep c specialist about harvoni. our 18 year old wase army in an accident.'98. when i call usaa it was that voice asking me, "is your daughter ok?" that's where i felt relief. we're the rivera family, and we will be with usaa for life.
1:59 pm
2:00 pm
eric: hello, i'm eric shawn. >> i'm laura i think for arthel neville. eric: texas police officer has turned himself in facing murder charges and the killing of a 15-year-old boy. >> allegations of election meddling the country of france with hours to go in pivotal election for major implications

86 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on