tv Shepard Smith Reporting FOX News June 4, 2018 12:00pm-1:00pm PDT
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ask or recommendation. but certainly would reiterate the fact the president hasn't done anything wrong. >> reporter: what does the president think on foreign policy in the first 500 days? >> sarah: there have been a number of major foreign policy achievements. certainly i think the strengthening of relationships with a number of foreign leaders, i think that the conversation that we're looking forward to having here in the next couple weeks is certainly a step in the right direction, moving the embassy in israel is certainly on that st, being tough on russia and trade and making sure countries that have engaged in unfair trade practices are held accountable. those are a few. the list is lengthy and we'd be happy to provide more detail. >> can you give us more background on the pardon process? is there a process in place to review pardons and how did the
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>> that was written -- no, that was written by donald trump jr. and i'm se in c with his lawyer. the president didn't sign off on anything. he was coming back from the g-20. the statement was released by donald trump jr. in consultation with his lawyers. i do want to be clear, the president wasn't involved in the drafts of the statement. it came from donald trump jr. that's what we know. trump jr. had said the same thing. it was from him and he believes his lawyer was in consultation.
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>> sherd: jay sekulow, the president's lawyer. another lawyer for the president said sekulow was uninformed when he made those stateme that actually the president did indeed dictate the memo back in the day, just as they said in the memo to the special counsel in january. let's get to john roberts. not sure what to do with this, john. the lawyers say one thing. the white house press secretary says anoter. somebody is lying. we're not sure who it is. >> the statement that you just played from jay sekulow was july 12, 2017. this letter was sent on january 29th, 2018 to robert mueller. as written by jay sekulow and his assistant. he said in july that the president didn't dictate it. then he and his assistant is were the 20-page memo that was delivered to robert mueller january 29 saying that he did
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dictate that. you point out that sarah huckabee sanders didn't have anything to say about it today. the communications and press teams haveains to wall themselves off from the russia investigation. it's a legition to ask sarah sanders. look, you said one thing and now somebody is saying something different. what was it that informed your first statement? she wouldn't go there. let's bring up the question from the 20-page letter that led us into this. jay sekulow and john dowd in this letter writing "you have received all of the notes, communications and testimony indicating that the president dictate add short but accurate response to "the new york times" article on behalf of his son, donald trump jr." his son made a full public disclosure regarding the meeting including his public temporary that there was nothing to the meeting and certainly no evidence of collusion. as you can imagine, reaction of this is flowing in fast and furious. adam schiff saying we're told there were no meetings with the russians and then we're told he
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had no part, now we're told he dictated it. not a world can be trusted. if you go back to the memo, jay sekulow and john dowd argue this is a private matter between the president and "the new times" because that statement was to "the new york times" in response to an article that they were writing about the june 9, 2016 meeting. john dowd and sekulow insisting the special counsel has no business asking any questions about what happened in a private matter between the president and "the new york times" regarding his children. when you look at that letter in totality, it's building a big case from the point of view of the president's legal team for why robert mueller should not get a sit-down interview with the president, shep. >> shepard: thanks, john. we'll be back to you in a minute. there's more news. let's bring in peter nicholas from the white house. how are we supposed to process this? >> you have a december --
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discrepancy the white house is not willing to clear up. creates a credibility question for the white house. >> shepard: a credibility crisis. because somebody is lying to us? >> well, it's a discrepancy -- >> shepard: if one person says one thing and somebody says something different, somebody is lying to us. the inconsistencies are the most consistent thing we live now. >> that's right. >> shepard: it is right. >> it's up to the white house to clear this up. you have the memo leaked out. lawyers were -- have said one thing about it. they said the presient dictated the statement. sarah sanders said something different in her briefing. she wasn't willing to address it at that hearing. until she does, the questions
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persist. the basic question is, does she stand by that statement. until she answers it, the questions will continue and will be a cloud over the whitehouse. >> shepard: it would be weird if the lawyer for the president when speaking to the man that could subpoena him or couldn't says to the counsel something that could get him in trouble but wasn't true. i mean, help our viewers understand why it's important if the president, as his lawyers say, dictated that memo that it contained all of those arguably falsehoods. >> well, it's important because if the president dictated it and the statement isn't accurate and the president is saying it was about adoptions, the meeting at the trump tower was about adoptions when his son don jr. was trying to get dirt on hillary clinton -- >> shepard: from russians. >> right. >> shepard: from russians. that's what the lie was about. they were trying to get dirt on the campaign of hillary
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clinton's campaign from the russians who were in the room. they forgot that in the beginning. nobody mentioned that initially. then they wrote a memo saying it was about adoptions. and then saying no, it was about dirt on hillary clinton except sarah sanders isn't admitting that. >> the question is can we rely on the president and the white house to give us accurate information about questions that were asked. so we're told by the lawyers in this memo that the president dictated the statement. the statement was not accurate. it was misleading. you know, the public and the press are genuinely asking for answers to explain that and we're not getting them right now. until that happens, there's credibility problem that they're not going to go away. >> shepard: frustrating? >> for all of us, shep. >> shepard: peter nichola from the "wall street journal," with which this network shares common ownership. this isn't about politics at all. peter nicholas is a reporter for the "wall street journal" and a
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fine one that seeks truth so he can report truth. we want to report without fear or favor and hold truth to power no matter who it is that is in power. when you get a competing set of facts, one of them completely untrue and no way toet through it from the highest elected authority in the land, from those that work for us,ery frustrating for journalists. it's not partisan. it's about facts. and knowing that someone is telling th opposite of that. president trump says he has the power to pardon himself. that's the newest thing. according to an official statement that he issued this morning, the president of the united states can pardon himself. he has as has been stated by numerous legal scholars, i can pardon myself. the president said the appointment of the special counsel is totally unconstitutional. despite that, we play the game because i, unlike the democrats,
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have done nothing wrong. the president gave no evidence for why he thinks that robert mueller's appointment is unconstitutional. based on the facts that we've seen them, it is not. coming up, i'll speak with a lawyer about both of those statements. just for context, here's what the constitution does say about the president's pardoning power. he shall have the power to grant reprieves and pardons for offenses against the united states except in cases of impeachment. four days before president richard nixon resigned in 1974, the acting head of the justice's department issued a legal opinion writing it would seem that president nixon could not pardon himself under the fundamental rule that no one may be a judge in his own case. then in 1992, the iran special prosecutor reached the same
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conclusion. neither president took that step of attempting to pardon himself. constitutional scholars say the question of whether the president can pardon himself or herself remains unresolved. of course, the special counsel robert mueller is king moscow's meddling in the 2016 election and whether the president obstructed justice. the president said there's no collusion or obstruction of justice. back to john roberts. john? >> we need to break this down in two baskets. what is possible and wha is probable. the president insists he has the authority to pardon himself if necessary despite earlier findings by the office of legal con sell at the doj and people say that he doesn't have the power to pardon himself. sarah huckab st the briefing said the president has the wer, but thankfully doesn't need it. listen here. >> he also agreed with rudy guliani, his lawyer, that a pardon for himself would be
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unthinkable and lead to immediate impeachment. >> thankfully the president hasn't done anythong and doesn't have a need for a pardon. president does not have the power to pardon him tweeting the president's legal arguments would render whole sections of the constitution moot and allow a president to engage in any form of criminalality and obstruct an investigation into his own wrong nobo above the law, not this president or any president. rudy guliani weighed in on this yesterday saying the president pardoning himself would be unthinkable and it would lead probably to immediate impeachment. so that is in the basket of the probable. the possible is that the president may be able to pardon himself. the probable is if he does it, it would bring him into a world of hurt that no president would want to get into. ask richard nixon. >> shepard: john roberts, thank you. the matters at hand, can a president of the united states pardon himself for a crime?
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we'll get a legal opinion on that matter and is the special counsel unconstitutional. weigh-in on that as well after this. mitzi:sorirthritis s to get in my way? watch me. ( ♪ ) mike: i've tried lots of things for my joint pain. now? watch me. ( ♪ ) joni: think i'd give up showing these guys how it's done? please. real people with active psoriatic arthritis are changing the way they fight it. they're moving forward with cosentyx. it's a different kind of targeted biologic. it's proven to help people find less joint pain and clearer skin. don't use if you are allergic to cosentyx. before starting cosentyx you should be checkedfor t. an increased risk of infections and lowered ability to fight them may occur. tell your doctor if you have an infection or symptoms of an infection. or if you have received a vaccine, or plan to. if you have inflammatory bowel disease tell your doctor if symptoms develop or worsen.
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ask your rheumatologist come hok., babe. nasty nighttime heartburn? try new alka-seltzer pm gummies. the only fast, powerful heartburn relief plus melatonin so you can fall asleep quickly. ♪ oh, what a relief it is! >> shepard:. trump says he has the power to pardon himself. let's turn to caroline, a criminal and defense attorney. our reporting that is an unsettled matter, that the constitution is not clear on the matter and the supreme court has
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not ruled. you concur? >> that's right. anybody that tells you otherwise, that there is an answer to the question is wrong. a young republic, this is a constitutional crisis. we haven't gotten to that question, as you said. there's the 1974 memorandum that states due to this kind of prevailing thought in sort of the law in general, there's an idea that one can't be one's own judge and jury. so the idea would be no, you can't pardon yourself. again, it's not in the constitution. so we don't know until it gets to the supreme court, we don't have an answer. >> shepard: the president said he has not done anything wrong. if it happens, then we'll see. when the president says he has absolute power to pardon, that's wrong. it's not settled. the special counsel is unconstitutional says the president. do you have a weigh-in on that? >> that is absolutely not true. it's completely constitutional. the department of justice has regulations that were correctly
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promulgated under which robert mueller has been reported by rod rosenstein through all the proper channels and sits squarely within the context in which one would appoint a special counsel, which is a conflict of interest in the justice department. we have various legal memorandums laying out the legality. >> shepard: one of the things they're telling competing stories about is this memo that came after the meeting in trump tower. remember, they had a meeting in trump tower, russians were there that were close to the kremlin. they had a russian interpreter there. nobody remembered that at first. then later they remembered, but when they sent out the memo, the meeting was about adoptions. now they say no, it was about getting dirt on hillary clinton
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from the russians. one side says the president dictated that, the other says says no, he didn't and doesn't matt >> now both sides say he dictat it. >> s except thete s he didn't. >> i think sarah sanders today was coy on that issu she said absolutely not. he did not dictate it. in the 20-page memorandum that was written in january sent by jay sekulow and john dowd, they specifically said we have now turned over information that the president dictate add short but accurate statement. you can argue semantics whether it was accura what h said the meeting concerned russian adoptions, but we know from don jr.'s congressional testimony that the reason that he went to the meeting was to get dirt on hillary clinton. we have the e-mails from rob goldstone. we have his testimony on that. so it's pretty clear that the president lied to "the new york
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times," lied to the public about sort of the nature of that meeting. the question is whether or not that is a crime. it's not a crime to lie to "the new york times." the question is whether robert mueller will use that sort of to get to his state of mind. >> shepard: more next. you know... weeds are low-down little scoundrels. draw the line with roundup. the sure shot wand extends with a protective shield and target weeds more precisely, right down to the root. roundup. trusted for over 40 years. until her laptop crashed this her salon wasmorning.for weeks, you never know what the day's going to bring when you're running a small business, it might even bring a blue screen of death. ask a business advisor how to get virus and spyware removal, and 24/7 tech support. office depot now offers on demand tech support f. ♪ right now get your coupon for 20% off supplies,
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>> shepard: a republican revolt over immigration as lawmakers return to capitol hill this week. some house republicans are teaming up with democrats to try to force votes on bills to protect the dreamers. those are the young immigrants whose parents brought them here to the united states without documents as kids. house speaker paul ryan and the majority leader, kevin mccarthy, are planning an all-hands closed door meeting for this thursday in an attempt to hammer out an
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immigration plan that competing republican groups can support. let's go to chad pergram. chad? >> well, what they have to do is work out an agreement on immigration before this discharge petition can become ripe. what is a discharge petition? this is 218 members, a coalition of democrats and republicans can go around the house leadership and put these bills on the floor. that's what the republican leadership is trying to forestall. it's locked at 213. they need to get to 2018. right now they're not there. almost all republicans -- almost all democrats have signed except three. we're looking at henry cuellar from text and henry gonzalez. they're concerned that if the bills get on the floor, they could get construction of a border wall. the question for democrats is do
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they have unity. that's a question for nancy pelosi. >> i don't think that will be a problem for us. we just want to see the republicanam come on. >> so who wants to be number 218? they need probably five republicans here or maybe just othehre democrats. they get the the first person is darrell issa, a republican fm sn california. he's retiring. he barely won re-election last year. some people think he might be. but who will be number 218? nobody wants to put their signature on line 218. >> shepard: if republicans can't come up with some sort of deal or compromise, then what happens? on immigration. >> the casualty is the farm bill. the farm bill did not fail last week because of agricultural policy. it failed because the freedom caucus wanted the house republican leadership to have an agreement first on immigration. if they don't have an agreement this week, then guess what?
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the freedom caucus, mark meadows, he is taken as hostage, a farm bill. if they don't have an agreement, he will shoot that hostage. the farm bill is supposed to come up for a vote later this month. that's it for that. and then there's questions about the leadership. remember paul ryan is supposed to retire at the end of the year. people will ask questions if they failed on immigration and ed on the farm bill, why is he still the speaker? does kevin mccarthy have the juice in all of those questions about two or three weeks ago, shep, as to whether or not paul ryan should continue to be t speaker or kevin mccarthy, all those questions will come to the surface if they stumble. >> shepard: thanks, chad. the supreme court handed down a decision about a baker who refused to make a wedding cake for a gay couple. the court did not rule on the bigger issue. the conflict between religious rights and gay rights. that's next as weppach the bottom of the hour and the top of the news. his guy got a flat e
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>> a fox report now. headlines from the fox news deck. a police chase and gun fire halting a marathon in san diego. the police chief says one of his officers accidentally shot himself in the leg while pursuing a hit-and-run suspect near the city's annualock and romarathon. cops say they arrested a suspect on the roof of a nearby parking garage not far from the finish line. the officer expected to make a full recovery. in southwestern colorado, timeline video show as wild fire burning near durango. fire officials say the flames have forced people from more than 800 homes. the area has been dealing with severe drought. a passenger drain surrounded by flood waters in maryland outside d.c. the person that recorded this video says she woke up from a nap and saw this outside her window. the national weather service warning that rivers and streams could continue to rise in the washington and baltimore
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>> shepard: the united states supreme court in a narrow ruling has sided with a baker who once claimed that jesus christ would not make a wedding cake for a gay couple. this started in 2012. two men from denver went to a colorado bakery to buy a custom made cake for their special day. the baker refused because on religious grounds, he argued that marriage should be between a man and a woman. the couple accused him of discrimination. fast forward many years and many legal battles, and the supreme court justices have ruled in favor of the baker. the vote 7-2. but the court did not rule on the conflict between religious and gay rights that had been expected. they spoke on neutral and respectful consideration. alicia acuna live with us from denver. >> both sides are claiming some
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elements of victory here. the way the opinion is written, it deals with one issue that happened in one instance with one baker. when charlie craig and david mullens were denied the cake, they filed the plate with the colorado civil rights commission and they ruled in they favor. it was the way that the baker was treated that turned the case. anthony kennedy writing some of the commissioners at the commission's formal public hearings endorsed the view that religious beliefs cannot legitimately be carried into the public sphere. they characterized it as rhetorical and compared the invocation of his religious beliefs to slavery and the holocaust. >> we're excited that the supreme court has decided to protect the religious freedoms for everybody. justice kennedy's opinion can be summed up as tolerance is a two-way street. >> the reason we pursued this, we don't want other couples to
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go through the same thing. it's not just about us. it's about our community as a whole. >> so shep, a call after the ruling, the aclu held with the couple. the aclu holds because the opinion is so specific to the bad behavior of the commission that tomorrow a same-sex couple could walk into this same bakery, ask the same baker for a cake be, denied and go through the same process up to the supreme court and win. that is according to fox senior judicial a analyst andrew andrew napolitano rest it's indefinite ail freed dom. >> and there's a report that kim jong-un has fired three of his top generals, this is three weeks before he's set to s
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down with president trump. analysts say he's bringing in younger officers and he could be trying to weed out older officials that oppose his out reach to the united states and south korea. greg palkot is live with more. >> yould characterize it as a major housecleaning. yote, this is in advance of the important summit between president trump and kim jong-un. the reports are this, that kim jong-un has replaced his defense chief, the chief of the general staff of the army and his director of the army's powerful political bureau with folks more loyal to him, less conservative and younger. it's thought that there's some grumbling in the ranks over plans by kim to meet with president trump and to present some kind of a declaration rerding denuclearization. he also wants a team he can trust and not stage a coup behind his back when he was
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doing his diplomacy and he might want people in the military that could divert manpower in the ranks of the army towards economic goals, for example. these are the new aims of the new young leadership. >> shepard: greg, the white house says that president trump's summit with kim jong-un is officially set for 9:00.m. singapore time on june 12. >> absolutely. that that was fm sarah huckabee sanders. the white house spokesperson. this, among a lot of other activity that we've been tracking in advance of the summit. let's run it down for you. following last friday's meeting with president trump and the north korean communist party chairman, diplomatic teams the u.s. and nrth korea have been working nonstop. they met saturday, sunday and today along the dmz. they're trying to thrash out a detailed agenda for this upcoming summit. this amid more reports that we
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are seeing that south korean president moon jae-in could be flying in for an after-summit on june 13 to declare unofficially at least with president trump and the north korean leader that the korean war is over. remember, that for the past 65 years, it's just ended on the basis of a truce. one more final note, shep, kim jong-un's diplomatic dance card might be filling up. over the weekend, we got word he might be meeting with bashar al-assad and president putin has invited him to a regional summit. >> shepard: he's popular with those that murder their own people. good news for forger president geor h.w. s we got word from the family spokesperson this. president george h.w. bush was discharged from southern maine healthcare today after being treated for low blood pressure. the president is deeply appreciative both for the
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terrific care and the many good wishes that he's received. president bush 41 checked into the hospital las sday after he traveled to his family's home in maine. he also spent nearly two weeks in a hospital in houston for a separate blood infection just bush, died in the month of a april. the former president turned 94 years old next week. former president bill clinton says he never personally apologized for the former white house internal monica lewinsky following their sex scandal and he says he does not owe her a private apology now. some of his critics argue that he should have resigned after he admitted to the affair and ca l relationship a gross abuse of power. president clinton told "the today show" that he wouldn't do anything differently in the scandal played out today. despite the me too movement and the current dialogue and sexual
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misconduct in the workplace. >> i think i did the right thing. i defended the constitution. i dealt with it 20 years ago plus a t american people stayed with me. i tried to do a good job since then with my life and with my work. that's all i have to say. >> president clinton apologized over the scandal to everyone in the world and that public apology includes lewinsky. trace gallagher with this live for us. trace? >> because of the me too movement, former president clintos sexl misconduct allegations and his affair have gained new scrutiny. even though mr. clinton says the me too movement is long overdue, he was combative and a bit vague in answering questions for "the today show." he does not think that president trump has gotten a free pass on the dozen plus sexual misconduct allegations against him, but he does say the media coverage is not nearly what you'd expect.
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if this was a democratic president, impeachment would be underway. >> a lotf the facts have been conveniently omitted to make the story work. i think partly because they're frustrated that they got serious allegations against the current occupant of the oval office and his voters don't seem to care. >> you saw the author, james patterson sitting next to hi he's part of the interview because he and the former presidents have written a new book. patterson was surprised by the lewinsky details and that we should move on. >> and monica lewinsky has reacted, has she not? >> indeed. she's an advocate for me too and says it's emboldened a new generation of women about sexual misconduct. after the former president's interview aired, lewinsky said grateful to the myriad of people that have helped me evolve.
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she is referring to a piece she wrote in vanity fair in march saying he was the most powerful man on the plan met. he was 27 years my senior with enough life experience to know better. he was at the time at the pinnacle of his career and i was in my first job out of college. she says none of that excuses her behavior. that scandal ended with bill clinton to be the second president ever t be impeached. shep? >> shepard: trace gallagher, thank you, a volcano has sent ash and hot rock miles in the sky, sent boiling lava crashing on villages. now the hunt for the dead and the missing and the update on the incredible death toll.
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th >> shepard: a molten mix of lava and gas coming down the slope in guatemala, burning villages faster than people can run away it from. they're calling this eruption the volcano of fire. now they say at least 62 people have been killed since it erupted yesterday and they say that number is expected to rise. right now rescuers are working to pull burned and ash-covered people from the rubble after the most violent eruption in more than a century. more images that i have for you
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today in the slide show. this is an overview. police in guatemala releasing this picture. it wasn't like the lava in hawaii that is slow. not like that at all. the type of flow from this volcano can travel around 430 miles an hour. it's different. more rescuers on the ground here. some of the land too hot to touch and melted workers shoes, we're told. this is incredible. rescuers say the people they found were covered in such a thick layer of ash they looked like statues. this image of a victim. a man that made it out alive with a gas mask on and holding a dog. steve harrigan with this in a live update. steve? >> short, the ash and the lava moving so quickly that first responders were quite by surprised and trapped. here's a police can outrunning a
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cloud of ash. they gunned the car but suddenly day turned into night. you can sense the panic, go, go. wash out for the people. a sense of panic on the people even resnding to help. we're getting a death toll that is revised each hour. still dozens of people not accounted for, shard. >> shepard: what are we hearing about the rescue efforts? >> it's tough because the lava is recovering the roads. even for those that are being rescued, there's still a real sense of trauma. one woman said i turned back and saw cars with people inside being covered by lava. she said i saw a little girl scream out for her mother and her grandmother. really simple horrific images. a lot of these people were faced with a split second decision.
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you hear the accounts over and over again saying i tried to run for high ground. i tried to run for a hill. often they had to leave everything. at times even family memrs behind. >> shepard: welcome to the last century, saudi arabia. finally. the saudis issuing drivers licenses to ten women as the nation gets ready to lift its ban on women behind the wheel. by the way, it's the only such ban in all the world. here's one of the women showing off her new license to drive. the ten women already had licenses from other places so they only had to take a short driving test. we reported the country has also opened driving schools for women. the government is scheduled to drop the ban in less than three weeks. an officer accused of being a coward during a school shooting is telling his side of the story. that's ahead. first, the hunt for a suspected serial killer came to a dramatic end today.
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>> a suspected serial killer many the state after zone killed himself this morning. police in scottsdale have given us a run down outside of phoenix. they say they linked the suspect to fou separe murders. murders that happened over three days within miles of each otr. the guy was apparently holed up and he shot himself. no word yet on who he is. or what his motive may have been. the victims, a counselor, two paraplegics and a forensic
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psychiatrist. i should say said parallels. the psychiatrist, dr. stephen pitt, worked on high profile cases including jonbenet ramsey case. the former resource a marjory stoneman goodman high school in florida says he's still asking himself why didn't i go in. months after the gunhere killed 17 people. sheriff's deputy scott peterson had worked at that high school in park land, florida for nearly a decade when the massacre happened in february. some parents and the media have criticized peterson for not going in the building as it was happening. the sheriff even called it a dereliction of duty and peterson was forced to retire. now he's speaking to "the washington post" in a lengthy profile out today. peterson tells the post that he attended conferences and classes on school shootings and led lock down training for teachers. he said he couldn't tell where the shots were coming from that
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day and whether the shooter was inside the building or outside the building. maybe in the parking lot, even sniping from the rooftop. he said he didn't know. so he says he didn't do what he was trained to doi which is take cover and clear the area. he calls it haunting. he said "i cut that day up a local of different ways, the bottom line i was there to protect and i lost 17." the news continues after this. a, benjamin franklin captured lightening in a bottle. over 260 years later, with a little resourcefulness, ingenuity, and grit, we're not only capturing energy from the sun and wind, we're storing it. as the nation's leader in energy storage, we're ensuring americans have the energy they need, whenever they need it. this is our era. this is america's energy era. nextera energy.
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most people come to la with big dreams. ♪ we came with big appetites. with expedia, all in one place. ♪ everything you need to go. ♪ expedia® >> shepard: so if you want your home to smell like food but y don't want to cook, there's some new candles for that. the makers of a-1 steak sauce rolling out these meat-scented candles for father's day. they come in three flavors. regional meat, back yard barbecue and classic burger. they're already sold out it says here.
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folks with a-1 say that they may be able to bring them back for another occasion. on this day in 1917, columbia university awardedhest pulitzer prices recognizing excellent in journalism in the arts. the award names after joseph pulitzer. in his will, he set aside $2 million to create a gradu school for journalism at columbia. 1/4 of the money was for an awards system. today the pulitzer price hand out 21 awards, including breaking news, investigative reporting and photography. should news break out, we'll break in because breaking news changes everything on fox news channel. "your world" with neil cavuto is coming up. he will give us the low down or
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the markets thatre in fantastic shape. the dow jones industrial average up 177points. the news continues now because cavuto is deck. >> neil: thank you. i'm neil cavuto and this is "your world." you're looking live at the supreme court of the united states where there was a victory for the baker. do you remember the baker? jack philips, a colorado baker that refused to make a cake for a same sex couple he said he wasn't having a problem with gays, period but that he simply couldn't do this on religious grounds. today the united states supreme court after years of legal battles back and forth essentially ruled the baker was with within his rights to argue that his religious concerns were valid. and that in his s
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