tv Shepard Smith Reporting FOX News July 30, 2018 12:00pm-1:01pm PDT
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>> dana: make sure you tune in tomorrow. i'll talk withker kirstjen nielsen about cyber security and more. here's shep. >> shepard: good afternoon. president trump says he's willing to shut down the government if he doesn't get his way on border security and said he would meet with iran's president with no preconditions. the president has been taking aim at the special counsel, robert mueller. ahead, his accusations about the facts. the latest attacks comes before paul manafort goes on trial. we'll preview the case and how it could reveal some of the evidence mueller has collected thus far. air marshalls secretly monitoring and reporting on
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passengers on u.s. flights. even if those passengers have no ties to terrorism. what gets you on the list? might take a few too many bathroom trips or being too sweaty in your seat. ahead, inside the program named "quiet skies." let's get to it. and first from the fox news deck this monday afternoon, president trump going after the special counsel, robert mueller, on his credibility. the president tweeted "is robert mueller ever going to release his conflicts of interests with respect to president trump? including fact that we had a very nasty and contentious business relationship. i turned him down to head the fbi. one day before appointment as special counsel and comey is his close friend. last year "the new york times" reported that president trump tried to get mueller fired over what the president claims are conflicts of interest.
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one of them was the dispute over fees at the president's golf club in dc. as for the president turning down mueller to be the fbi director days before he was appointed to run the special investigation, ethics officials say the appointment was indeed appropriate. mueller is looking into moscow's meddling of the 2016 presidential election, possible collusion with the president's campaign and whether the president himself obstructed justice. president trump has said there was no obstruction. there was no collusion. this morning his lawyers said collusion is not a crime. >> sitting here looking at the federal code trying to find collusion as a crime. collusion is not a crime. i don't know if it's a crime, colluding about russians. >> neil: guliani is making a straw man argument and it's
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deceptive. while the u.s. criminal code does not criminalize collusion, it is against the law to influence or undermine our election or any other action. special counsel prosecutors have gotten indictments about 20 russians, three russian companies and several former trump members and including guilty pleas from a policy adviser and national security adviser. former trump campaign chairman paul manafort pleaded not guilty. he's set to go on trial tomorrow. we'll have more details ahead. the headline, the president stepping up his attacks to undercut special counsel robert mueller as the former head of his campaign gets ready to face the jury. our chief white house correspondent john roberts with the top story. what are you hearing about possible trump mueller interview? >> good afternoon. let's take a look at the level of attack that the president is
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levelling at robert mueller. it's much more personal than it has been in the past. the president used to sort of question the genesis of the mueller investigation, suggested there were a lot of conflicts of interest among his team. now he's really going after mueller. this is of a piece with a decision that we're told will be coming very soon in which the president and his legal team are likely to say and there's always a chance it could be different but we're told they are likely to say that there will be no interview with robert mueller. the president has got the final say, but there's pretty much unaminomt. there was question that i was going to ask at the press conference had i been called on. the two people that were called on did not bring it up. there's reasons why, a multitude of reasons why the president's attorneys believe that he should not sit down with him. first and foremost, they believe
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that robert mueller has not made the case that he needs to get information from the president that he can only get from the president, that he doesn't already have through all of these thousands of documents that the white house and the transition has provided to the special counsel. the other thing, of course, shep, all of this news that has been out here for weeks now about the genesis of the mueller investigation, the people that were involved. so it looks at this point like they're going down the road of saying no to robert mueller. they're still in talks. the talks do not seem to be going anywhere. so i would pretty surprised after hearing what i heard from many sources today, shep, that they would go against that and say yes, he will do a sit down. looks like the answer at this point is going to be a big no. >> shepard: so a voluntary sit down is another but a subpoena is a whole other thing. >> the subpoena is a whole other thing. robert mueller could seek a subpoena. ken starr sought a subpoena against president clinton in the
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late 90s. and then clinton agreed to an interview in the app was gone. many don't believe that robert mueller would go the subpoena route. then again, this is washington, shep. anything can happen. >> shepard: the president reiterating that he's willing to shut down the government for border wall funding and other matters of immigration. >> this would be to believe that the president could alter what has been the established course of history. every time the government is shut down, it's republicans that take the brunt of the blame for it. the president is putting forward a case where he's saying look, this is about national security. we need to have immigration reform. we need a border wall built. i need the money to do that. if i don't do it, i will shut down the government and he believes that that is an argument a fight that he can win. listen here. >> as far as the border is
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concerned and personally, if we don't get border security after many, many years of talk within the united states, i would have no problem doing a shut down. it's time we had proper border security. we're the laughingstock of the world. >> the white house is trying to minimize what would be the effects or at least rhetorically to minimize the effects of what a government shut down would be. the optics of the government shut down have never favored the republicans. so if the president does shut down the government and wins this fight, that would certainly be to alter the course of known history. we don't know, shep, if it's a bluff or if this really is a high wire game that he will play out to the end.
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>> shepard: do we know he's serious about meeting with iran's leaders as no preconditions as i remember a previous president saying? >> yeah. don't forget barack obama said that and he would meet with the leader of syria. the president says he's serious about it when it comes to this particular issue. don't forget, just a few days ago, the president tweeting in all caps that iran would suffer the consequences the likes of which few have ever suffered if they threatened the united states again. then he holds out this idea for the president of iran to say look, i'll meet with you. i'd be happy to sit down. talking is good. listen here. >> if we could work something out, that's meaningful, not the waste of paper that the other deal was, i would certainly be willing. no preconditions. if they want to meet, i'll meet. >> so the president is using the north korean model to say nobody
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wanted to sit down with kim jong-un. i did. looks like we're getting something from it. he also cited russia saying the news about that russian meeting was incorrect. he did make a lot of progress with vladimir putin. the president does believe, shep, that it's better to sit down and talk than it is to fire missiles at each other. on that point, he may have a point. >> shepard: he may. those aren't the only two options. that he's well aware. john, thank you. in addition to his comments on collusion, the president's lawyer, rudy guliani, continued his attacks on the president's former lawyer and fixer, michael cohen. rudy guliani accused cohen of doctoring one of the recordings. rick leventhal is here with more. >> i had michael cohen on the phone. i wish we had a chance to talk about all of these topics. but instead he thanked me and referred me to his lawyer and hung up. but the president says cohen
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can't be trusted anymore. this morning on cnn, rudy guliani would have called benedict arnold an honest before before finding out he's a traitor. he called michael cohen a pathological lawyer. he told "fox and friends" that it's cohen's lack of credibility. >> there's numerous recordings of other people having nothing to do with the trump organization, which will give you an idea of what a scoundrel he was. >> and rudy guliani said the recordings themselves can't be trusted. >> if he taped everything else, why didn't he tape this? he's capable i think of doctoring tapes. he's not done it. hard to do it now since we have an expert all over it. it's flat out untrue. >> the tape he's referring to that we heard was a recorded
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conversation with the president and karen mcdougal, a playboy playmate. rudy guliani said about a dozen of recordings are of any substance and all of them there exonerate president trump. >> shepard: well find out. new other response to michael cohen? >> we heard that rudy guliani would waive attorney client privilege to release the tapes. the statement reads from lanny davis, mr. guliani waived attorney client privilege last week and repeatedly and accurately as proven by the time forfeited all confidentiality. we also heard from michael avenatti, the attorney for stormy daniels who got a $130,000 payment from cohen and signed a nondisclosure agreement about her affair with trump. avenatti posting on twitter at
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rudy guliani, are you denying there were other hush payment? asking for some friends. buckle up, buttercup. the president's stupidity and loyalty is -- >> shepard: you better buckle up, buttercup? >> that's what he said. reading his words. >> shepard: i wasn't sure. you better buckle up buttercup. that got a laugh from the stage crew that rarely paying attention. >> that was to the president. >> shepard: i get it. two things happening. >> only two things? >> shepard: two important ones. a mueller investigation. it's a legal investigation and there are no leaks. and then there's a political thing happening. that's a zoo. >> it is. >> shepard: i like the zoo. i wish i didn't spend all my time at the zoo. >> we all do, safe to say?
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the latest comments on the president's lawyer on the russian investigation. let's bring there chad day for the a.p. none of this chatter makes any matter in all matters mueller. but since they're saying it's and leading us down this road, today we got we'll talk to iran. the president said without preconditions, rouhani he would meet with, the ayatollah ho holemani would have to sign off on it. >> with the meeting with iran, could be -- >> shepard: the suggestion of such. obama suggested the same. >> right. the suggestion is not unprecedented. president obama shared a phone call with president rouhani in 2013. what is interesting about this is trump saying that the meeting would come with no preconditions. as you know, this administration has been -- tape a very hard
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line on iran. president tearing up the jcpoa and new sanctions are coming in next week. so you know, it's an interesting view in trump diplomacy at this point where he kind of is harkening back to how he approached the north korea meeting as well. >> shepard: you wonder if he found out obama did the same thing he will take the same stance. time will tell. what's up at stake for the paul manafort trial? >> what is at stake, paul manafort is facing a serious amount of time in jail if he was convicted. on a larger ramification for this, this is all coming -- none of this is happening in a vacuum. mueller is still continuing his investigation in other parts of russian election interference. as we have seen today, the president ratcheted up his
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attacks on mueller trying to continue to undermine his witch hunt or hoax. so what it's setting up to be, we'll be having a week or two or three weeks for news coverage that the president will be seeing where mueller and a trial is going on, so it's going to be at t at the forefront of his mind. there's going to be a lot of attention on mueller. >> shepard: how does this trial fit into the bigger picture mueller investigation? >> right, this trial is actually -- what it's handling is tax evasion and bank fraud charges against paul manafort. the way it fits in. manafort is facing two trials. one, this trial is more of a financial trail and one in september where he will face charges of being an unregistered
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agent for the ukrainian interests. neither of these cases have anything to do or any charges that are directly connected to russian election interference, which is something that manafort's team has seized on. what it fits in the larger perspective of, there's going to be some discussion of the campaign. prosecutors have said there was a bank loan that was extended to paul manafort in which the banker actual live was -- extended a fraudulent loan to paul manafort where he was promised a job on the campaign and later floated the idea of a possible job in the administration. so as this fits into the larger context, we'll see as the evidence comes out of trial. but what we do know is that this is a serious trial nor paul manafort. >> shepard: chad day for the a.p. thank you. >> thank you. >> shepard: president trump's supreme court nominee is meeting with a democrat for the first time. what we're learning about that
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provides the most wifi coverage for your home, and lets you control your network with the xfi app. it's the ultimate wifi experience. xfinity xfi, simple, easy, awesome. >> shepard: president trump's supreme court pick, judge brett kavanaugh meeting with a democratic lawmaker for the first time since the president announced his nomination. senator joe manchin of west virginia was one of three that confirmed neil gorsuch. now he's meeting with judge kavanaugh. chuck schumer promising to fight kavanaugh's confirmation. he's demanding to see documents from kavanaugh's past work in the bush white house. many other democrats following his lead. earlier this month, joe manchin
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said that schumer could kiss his, you know, if he tried to pressure him. our chief congressional correspondent mike emanuel is live on capitol hill. hi, mike. >> this is judge kavanaugh's 39th meeting with a senator according to senate sources. first with a democrat. we saw judge kavanaugh arrive with joe manchin within the past hour or so. there's no doubt that judge kavanaugh would love some democrat support. manchin is seen as a possibility. manchin has held meters with constituents to get their take on the supreme court nominee to make sure he has their input. meanwhile, senate democratic leadership continues to push for more documentation, particularly from when kavanaugh worked in the bush white house. >> namely in these documents, if we get them, there may be bomb shells and smoking guns and other revealing evidence that goes to his views on these critical issues. not just presidential power but
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roe v. wade. >> democrats say there could be critical information there in his past employment history. some republicans suggest that could be a stall tactic, shep. >> shepard: we've been waiting to hear from rand paul on this matter. you knew what was going to happen. there's a pattern here. he's true to pattern. >> senator rand paul says he's a yes on judge kavanaugh's con fir makes. he said he was evaluating the nomination and had some concerns about privacy issues. he issued a statement saying that he was re-assured that judge kavanaugh would execute the law faithfully in a statement saying "after meeting judge kavanaugh and reviewing his record, i have decided to support his nomination. my conversation with judge kavanaugh reinforces my belief that he will evaluate cases before the supreme court from a text you'll and originalist point of view. i believe he will carefully adhere to the contusion and protect individual liberties
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seriously." another keep republican sounds very upbeat. >> as you'll see in the poll numbers in these states that are red states where you have a democratic senator. he's very popular. people want to see him confirmed. in the end, he will do well. >> if rand paul was a no, this could have fallen apart. republicans think it's a matter of time. >> shepard: thanks, mike emanuel. the first trial in the special investigation of russian meddling will start today. in this case, paul manafort is facing charges including tax evasion and bank fraud. prosecutors accused manafort of making $60 million and failing to report a significant portion on his tax returns. manafort has denied all of the charges against him. he's the only american charged in the russian investigation who
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has not cut a deal to cooperate with prosecutors. this is the first courtroom test for robert mueller and his team. let's bring in caroline, federal and white collar criminal defense lawyer. good to see you. >> you too. >> as a reminder of what it was that was happening here, the russian government was propping up victor janakovich, the sponsor in the ukraine and wanted you cane to be more with russia and nato at a time when ukrainians were moving towards the west. it was paul manafort that was working for the russian prop-up and didn't report tens of millions of dollars and didn't report that he was working for the ukrainian government sort of but really working for the russians in support of the ukraine. >> that's right. there's two trials. he's indicted in two different districts. so the failing to register as a foreign agent of the ukrainian
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government, that trial is next. this trial has only to do with tax fraud and banking fraud. ones janakovich fled the ukraine, the money dried up. >> shepard: that's the point when he went to work for donald trump. when the russian money dried up and there was no more job for victor janakovich, the guy supporting him because the guy is supporting him, whoops, he's heading to russia, when that money ran out, he started working for future president trump. >> that's right. he had been making millions on millions of dollars and the allegation of which is that he funneled those assets to foreign bank accounts and used it to fuel his lavish lifestyle. you have to see the exhibit list that the government put out. it lays out to the extend that
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he led the high life. he spent over a million dollars on suits. watches. he had multiple homes in different areas. rugs. a lot of landscaping bills. he would use these foreign entities to pay for that lavish lifestyle and never reporting it as income, defrauding the united states. >> shepard: his connections with russia would have been a quick google. >> that's right. you're point being what? >> shepard: anybody that didn't know that he was working for russian interests didn't use the google machine. >> that's right. that's a big point of contention here in this trial. the question of whether or not the prosecutors can bring in evidence of russian collusion in the election of his work for donald trump on the campaign. that's been hotly contested. we know the judge has laid this smack-down on the prosecutors in this case saying the only reason that they're bringing this case is to get to trump. he ultimately did not dismiss
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the case. he's had an eye on it. prosecutors have been taken to task saying they're not going to introduce prejudicial information. >> shepard: since when of tens of millions in irs fraud be overlooked? sounds outside the scope. >> initially manafort made a motion to get this case dismissed saying that. that's where we got the bomb shell rod rosenstein memo which laid out in perfect order the mandate of the special counsel, which the word "collusion" appeared for the first time in any federal document. that was really a turning point in this investigation. the public say the extend to which, you know, robert mueller was mandated to investigate these things. >> shepard: caroline, good to talk to you. >> thank you. >> shepard: all right. weeks after slamming our nato
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allies, president trump is hosting the leader of one of those countries at the white house. this leader is actually a man with whom he has some things in common, at least politically. so he patching things up with our friends or is this something else? the bottom of the hour, top of the news. headlines from the fox news deck in moments. no matter who rides point, there are over 10,000 allstate agents riding sweep. call one today. are you in good hands? we really pride ourselves on making it easy for you >> tech: at safelite autoglass, to get your windshield fixed. with safelite, you can see exactly when we'll be there. saving you time for what you love most. >> kids: whoa! >> kids vo: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace ♪
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>> shepard: president trump claims the money is pouring into ney though thanks to him. he made the comments earlier today. >> i went to nato. nato was essentially going outs of business. people weren't paying. it was going down, down. the european countries are paying and nato is stronger because of it. >> shepard: that's not what happened. in each of the last four years, after the nato countries agreed to do so, most countries in the alliance have already been increasing their defense spending as a percentage of their gdp.
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it began under the obama administration. weeks ago president trump slammed our allies including italy and demanded that each spend more on their own militaries. the italian prime minister pushed back saying italy had not made any promises to boost defense spending. blake burman live at the white house with more. hi, blake. >> seems like a lifetime ago. we were in brussels 2 1/2 weeks after. one of the criticisms, why was tough on our allies? the president said the coverage about nato was unfair and he said he had a good nato meeting and he talked about defense spending this year compared to last in a stronger tone. the president appears to have a new ally on the world stage. that being the italian prime minister, guiseppe conte. conte described the discussion
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at nato as a "fruitful exchange" and he said the american people are well-served when it comes to negotiations by this president. >> as a lawyer, you have a president that is strong, supporter and advocate of the interests of the american people and the american country. he's a great negotiator. >> shepard, one of the coincidences there of that comment is that italy is not one of the countries that has lived up to the moment to its spending goals, 2% of gdp to military spending. the president said he wants to see it get to 4%. italy right now is 1%. they have a handful of years to get there. >> shepard: he talked, blake, about trade with the european union as a whole. >> he did. we're still asking questions about a comment that he made at the tale end. last week he made a statement
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with jean-claude joncker made an agreement to lower tariffs. the two sticking points going forward is that the eu will buy more soy beans from the u.s. and import more liquid natural gas, lng. the president appeared to drop one detail at the very end of that press conference. watch here. >> we're already talking to the european union about building anywhere from nine to 11 ports, which they will pay for so we can ship our lng over to various parts of europe. that will be more competition. the sanctions on russia will remain as is. >> 9 to 11 more ports in the european union. we don't know exactly where these would be, if it's been agreed to. the president says the e.u. will pay for it, but which countries might pay for it? bottom line, shepard, lots of
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questions involving that. by the way, natural gas prices dropped on that news. they were dropping before. but dropped as the president made those comments as well. more supply inevitably mean price goes down. >> shepard: thank you, blake. let's go to john bussey, fox news contributor. associate editor at the "wall street journal." john is working in madrid right now in spain. spain is a member of the european union. john, good to see you. >> good to see you. >> shepard: the port thing was all kinds of new to me and i guess to the markets. >> yeah, i'm not sure what to make of this. the president is looking for successes to give to congress. he's got a lot of criticism from the gop for his tariffs on china and the e.u. the european union is mad about it. he came out of that meeting last week and said look, they're going to buy more lng and soy beans from us.
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they're not huge on soy beans in europe and the reason that they may be buying more is that the prices are down and the reason for that is that china put tariffs on our soy beans, we're not selling as much to china, having to prop up farmers with special subsidies now. the u.s. put the tariffs on chinese goods and the chinese retaliated against. we have a good story on line right now. the people close to the european trade negotiators said what came out of last week's meeting, yeah, we'll buy more soy beans i guess because the prices are down and lng is cheaper than oil. we'll leave to it the market. we have not going to step in like the soviet union did and buy because the leaders have agreed to that? and lng is liquefied natural gas. didn't know if you knew that. meeting with the iranian leader.
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i remember distinctly when president obama brought this sort of thing up. so i know exactly how republicans will react to this because i've seen it. the president can out in, shall not, may not meet with any iranian leader without preconditions without no chance no way. i heard them because i heard them say it largely here. so i know that's their reaction this time, too. >> right. that was the reaction to kim jong-un as well. the president met with the leader of north korea. this is something that he's offered in the past. he says look, it works. you've got to sit down and talk to people. that's what he's saying here. whether or not it happens, we'll see. not surprising for this president to say he's going to do this, go the extra mile. whether or not he will be allowed to, we don't know. one thing, shep, i wanted to say
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about conte from italy. he may be problem for trump. it looks like they're allies because conte is also tough on immigration. they turned away some boats trying to dock in italy carrying immigrants. it sounds like border security, anti-establishment, anti-e.u. is keeping them together. the truth of the matter is, italy may get in the way of a deal between the e.u. and canada right now. they're threatening to veto it. if president trump actually does ended striking some deal with the european union, you may see italy doing the same thing there. you have to have all of the european union countries voting for any deal. in a way, the trump of italy may get in the way of the trump of the united states. >> shepard: john bussey life with us from spain. thanks very much. special safety precautions at a funeral for a british woman poisoned with a soviet-made nerve gas. dawn sturgis is her name.
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she died earlier this month in southern england after she and her partner were exposed to a chemical nerve agent. funeral organizers say they followed the advice of public health officials to make the service as safe as possible. sturgis's partner, charlie rowley survived. he told a british tv network what he thought perfume bottle who gave to it sturgis who sprayed it on her rest. police have not confirmed that was the source of the nerve agent. it came four months after a former russian spy and his daughter with poisoned with the same substance a few miles away. the kremlin has denied any involvement. air marshalls monitoring and reporting on passengers with absolutely no ties to terrorists as part of a security program that was a secret until now. details on how that behavior could put you on their radar and
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>> shepard: if you have flown on a jet in the past several years undercover air marshalls could have been sitting next to you keeping tabs on how often you or someone else goes to the bathroom or how often you sweat. it's part of the tsa's quiet skies program. the "boston globe" first revealed details about it over the weekend. we learned the goal is to prevent threats from terrorists. air marshalls say it's a time consuming and expensive way to track people that are not a threat. jonathan hunt has more. jonathan? >> shep, this is an undercover program that bottles down to this. the monitoring of passengers
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in-flight behavior that is considered to be suspicious even if the passenger in question has no known links to terrorism. the computer program identifies passengers that raise any red flags and whose activities might match current threat intelligence. air marshals may monitor the passenger in flight noticing changes of clothes, technology use and heavy sweating and rest room use. american citizens and travelers from overseas may be the targets, which is a behavioral profiling program. the tsa says they do not single anyone out on the basis of race or religion. they won't say whether the quiet skies surveillance led to any arrests or breaking up of terror plots? >> shepard: what are critics saying about this?
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>> the aclu not at all happy about it, a senior staff attorney with the organization says it's essentially a waste of taxpayer money and raises constitutional concerns. they said tsa has a track record of using rereliable and unscientific techniques to screen and monitor travelers that have done nothing wrong. the tsa says the program is simply an additional line of defense and "we are no different to the cop on the corner that was placed there because there's an increased possibility that something might happen. when you're in a tube at 30,000 feet, it makes sense to put someone there." so this add one more lay tore the debate of whether security and privacy can co-exist in a
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post 9-11 world. >> shepard: thank you. coming up what we're learning about a 20-year-old college student that disappeared. the walk with custom ink. the shirts were so easy to design on the site. the custom ink team was super helpful and they just came out perfect. seeing my family wearing my shirts was such an amazing reminder of all the love and support that everyone has for my dad. - [narrator] check out our huge selection of custom t-shirts and more, for teams, businesses, and every occasion. you'll even get free shipping. get started today at customink.com.
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>> shepard: the university of iowa student that disappeared after going out for a run may have made it back to do homework that night. that's according to relatives of 20-year-old molly tibbets. police say she was staying at her boyfriend's home to dog sit while he worked a construction job about 100 miles away. now nearly two weeks later, investigators say they put together a pretty solid time line of what tibbets was up to before she went missing. matt finn is live with more. matt? >> shep, so far there's been intense widespread searches for
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molly. there's a strong chance that she disappeared while out on her job. but a family member says she might have made her back to her boyfriend's night the night she vanished. a relative told investigators that tibbets lab top might show that she was doing homework at her boyfriend's house into the night after her job. tibbets boyfriend claim she sent him a snap chat picture from inside his house after her job. police have not named any suspects. investigators have not indicated if there's any signs of forced entry at her boyfriend's home where she was staying and as of this afternoon, authorities have not released a new time line or new leads based on the informatio information. tibbets father is pleading for information. >> we just need people to think. does somebody know something? they don't know it's important.
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>> tibbets suit to start after the university of iowa in a couple weeks. shep? >> shepard: it's my understanding she was wearing a fit bit or something like that. >> yes. she's described as an avid runner. investigators could get a lot of information from her fit bit and including her gps location and her heart rate on the day she wept missing. shep? >> shepard: thanks, matt. after this news cast, you can catch our fox news update on facebook watch. it will stream live on facebook watch and home screens on your phone, your computer, wherever you go in a few minutes. you can watch it there on demand later in the day. on this day in 1932, the summer olympics kicked off in los angeles. l.a. was the only city to host the games, so they got the gig. then the great depression hit making it hard for some
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countries even to send athletes. some teams sold goods like coffee beans and sugar to pay their way. the 32 games were the first to use an olympic village since athletes couldn't list anywhere else. after the olympics got started despite the great depression 86 years ago today. everybody's parent or grant parent has a story about the great depression. the one in my house is my dad played football and baseball. they played football but they couldn't afford the gas for everything. so football sent went on. baseball was cancelled because you had to have coupons to get gas. the school didn't have enough coupons. or i'm sure he would have been up there with the greats. should news break out, we'll break in. breaking news changes everything on fox news channel. neil cavuto is coming up. trish regan is subjecting.
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we got a decent start but it's been trending down. i don't know how much of this is about the light natural gas mentioned from the president, but we'll find out because business is the next program's big news and it begins in just 3 minutes. wasn't my top priority. until i held her. i found my tresiba® reason. now i'm doing more to lower my a1c. i take tresiba® once a day. tresiba® controls blood sugar for 24 hours for powerful a1c reduction. (woman) we'd been counting down to his retirement. it was our tresiba® reason. he needs insulin to control his high blood sugar and, at his age, he's at greater risk for low blood sugar. tresiba® releases slow and steady and works all day and night like the body's insulin. (vo) tresiba® is a long-acting insulin used to control high blood sugar in adults with diabetes. don't use tresiba® to treat diabetic ketoacidosis, during episodes of low blood sugar, or if you are allergic to any of its ingredients. don't share needles or insulin pens.
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>> if we don't get border security after many, many years of talk, within the united states, i would have no problem doing a shut down. it's time that we had proper border security. >> trish: president trump threatening to shut down our government if that's what it takes to get the border wall built. welcome, everyone. i'm trish regan in for neil cavuto. this is "your world." the president calling for a shut down unless congress approves the funding needed to build the wall. democrats, they're already slamming it. republicans are starting to get
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