tv Shepard Smith Reporting FOX News April 10, 2019 12:00pm-1:01pm PDT
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his own party -- >> dana: trashes a cabinet. >> yeah and decides to precipitate war. >> dana: thanks, jared. >> thank you. >> dana: thanks for joining us. see you on "the five" i'm dana perino. here's shep. >> shepard: it's noon on the west coast. 3:00 in the east. 10:00 p.m. in israel. benjamin netanyahu made history. he was elected to his fifth term. what that means to the united states. and the feds warning about a deadly super bug that has made hundreds of people sick all across the country. tough to identify, difficult to treat. what your family needs to know ahead. and plus, the fan who is suing a major league baseball team for more than a million dollars. why? because of flying t-shirt shattered her finger. reporting begins now.
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we could get the redacted mueller report on russian interference in the 2016 election next week. that's new today from the attorney general william barr in day two of hearings on capitol hill. during questioning, the attorney general said spying did occur on president trump's campaign and that he would take a look into whether any rules were violated. bar said, quoting here "i'm not suggesting that those rules were violated, but i think it's important to look at them." why is he concerned? >> well, for the same reason we're worried about foreign influence in elections. we want to make sure that during -- i think spying on a political campaign is a big deal. it's a big deal. >> shepard: barr offered no specifics and no evidence that such a thing actually happened. the attorney general says the special counsel prosecutors did
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not find evidence that president trump or members of his campaign colluded with russia to meddle in the election. mueller did not reach a conclusion on whether the president obstructed justice. so barr and the deputy attorney general, rod rosenstein, decided there was not enough evidence to establish and obstruction charge. barr promised more details once the redacted report is released. again, as early as next week. president trump weighed in saying today that he hasn't read the mueller report, but that he's exonerated, the investigation was an illegal attempted coup and that what they did was treason. we have team fox coverage. rich edson reporting on more reaction from the white house. first, catherine herridge reporting live from capitol hill. catherine? >> shep, the fbi opened a counter intelligence investigation in late july of 2016. these investigations are different because they're designed to gather information rather than bring a criminal prosecution and that fbi cia
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case also secure add surveillance warrant for a trump campaign aide. the attorney general was given the opportunity to dial back the spying language and here's how he responded. >> i think the word "spying" could cause everybody in the cable news ecosystem to freak out. i think it's necessary for you to be precise with your language here. >> i'm not sure of all the connotations of that word that you're referring to. unauthorized surveillance. i'm going to make sure there was no unauthorized surveillance. >> what is standard in a counter intelligence investigation is that the fbi would brief the target or the group of people and say hey, listen, you are being singled out by a foreign entity, in this case telling the trump campaign that they're being singled out by the russians for contact. so this came up in an exchange with senator graham as well as
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the attorney general. >> would it be odd that the candidate was never really briefed by the department of justice that your campaign may be targeted by a foreign entity? >> that is one of the questions i have, is i feel normally the campaign would have been advised of this. >> democrats wanted to know on what basis the attorney general was doing this personal review of the genesis of the fbi's russia case. he didn't say he had evidence, but he said he had a basis for concern based on what he knows so far. here's that exchange. >> i'm now asking what the basis is or what the facts are that leads you to that thought. >> okay. i felt -- i'm concerned about it. i was asked about whether there was any basis for it. i believe there is a basis for my concern. i'm not going to discuss the basis. >> the attorney general was also pressed on the redactions that
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will be in the public mueller report and why grand jury material has to be redacted because there's a precedent one lawmaker said for releasing that under limited circumstances. here's senator patrick leahy. >> attempts to hide swaths of the report from public scrutiny along the way will only fuel suspicions raised by many, that the justice department which represents the united states is playing the role of president trump's defense team. >> the attorney general also testified that really we're looking at a two-phased process. the public phase of the mueller report and then he said he would reengage with congress to see what additional information can be provided for their investigation, shep. >> shepard: catherine herridge reporting live. team fox coverage continues. rich edson live from the white house. rich? >> shep, the president is in texas right now doing a couple of fund raisers and also signing an executive order making it more difficult for states to
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reject pipeline projects. before leaving the white house, he addressed reporters and say the origins of robert mueller's investigation in the 2016 election interference, those origins were treasonous. >> this was an attempted coup. this was an attempted take-down of a president. we beat them. so the mueller report, when they talk about obstruction, we fight back. you know why we fight back? because i knew how illegal this whole thing was. >> the president says he has not seen robert mueller's report, he says he does not need to because he says he has been exonerated. democrats say they need to see the full report before drawing their conclusions. today is also the day that the house ways and means committee chairman richard neil has set for the i.r.s. to respond to his request.
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he wants six years of the president's personal and business tax returns. neil says the federal law gives them the authority to request a tax return from an american taxpayer. the president says in this case, no. >> remember, i got elected last time. the same exact issue with the same intensity, which wasn't very much. frankly, the people don't care. what i have done is approximately a 104-page summary and really in great detail of assets and values and nobody wants to go over that. >> since the campaign, the president has said his tax returns have been under audit and he won't release them. though he could still choose to release the tax returns even if he were under audit. the treasury secretary, steve mnuchin is testifying and acknowledging that the treasury department has been discussing with the white house this issue. he called them informal conversations they're having over this issue. he says the internal revenue
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service, which the treasury oversees, is still considering the democrat's request on the president's tax returns. if the irs rejects this request, this is all shep likely headed for the federal court system. back to you. >> shepard: rich edson live. thank you. an explosion in north carolina so powerful that people say they felt the shaking blocks away. officials are now updating the number of people hurt and killed when a building blew up in downtown durham. we're also learning about the simple mistake that apparently caused all of this. also, we have some other major developments overseas in israel where one of president trump's closest allies is poised for victory. that, unless breaking news chases everything, on fox news channel. my insurance rates are probably gonna double.
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>> shepard: fox urgent. police in north carolina say one dead, a dozen hurt after a gas explosion. rescuers pulling people from the rubble. happened in downtown durham this morning. a woman working at duke university, about a third of a mile away, says she felt her building shake. another worker said she saw black smoke darken the sky. police say construction work triggered the blast. the explosion caused the building to partially collapse. steve harrigan with more. steve? >> shepard, this happened just before 10:30 a.m. right in downtown durham, right near the durham school for the arts. people say it was a stunning explosion. first, a cloud of smoke went into the air. people were initially afraid it was a bomb at first. the explosion was powerful enough to kill one and wound 15.
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some of those wounded from shattered glass in very serious condition. officials explained exactly how it happened. >> a gas leak was caused by a contractor that was boring under the sidewalk. he hit a two-inch gas line that caused an explosion. >> some witnesses were terrified it could be a bomb. first, the ground shook. the building exploded and a large cloud of smoke rose in the sky and a building began to crumble before going up in flames. the contractor was working for a coffee shop in that sequence of buildings there. he apparently had all the necessary permits for his work. now five buildings are damaged. 15 people in the hospital and one dead. shepard? >> shepard: wow. steve harrigan live for us.
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looks like one of president trump's closest allies, benjamin netanyahu will stay in power after a close and ugly election. netanyahu's challenger now conceding defeat. that means benjamin netanyahu is on track to become the longest serving leader in israel's history despite multiple corruption scandals he's facing. jonathan hunt reporting live in jerusalem. jonathan? >> shep, with netanyahu almost certain to put together a right-wing coalition, one of the big questions is, what does it mean for the peace process between israel and the palestinians. if netanyahu is beholden to the right wing, it will be difficult to move forward again. the trump administration is due to present their own peace proposal plans very soon, perhaps by june. president trump of course has been a big supporter of prime minister netanyahu and today he sounded optimistic.
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listen here. >> so the fact that bb won, we'll see good action in terms of peace. look, everyone said, and i never made it a promise, but everybody said you can't have peace in the middle east with israel and the palestinians. i think we have a chance. i think we have a better chance with b.b. having won. >> the palestinians will be watching to see if the trump plan gives a green light for netanyahu to annex the west bank. if the plan does not include plans for a palestinian state within something like the pre-1967 borders, it frankly will be a nonstarter for palestinians, shep. >> shepard: where are -- where is the prime minister on his legal troubles, jonathan? >> it's a huge cloud hanging over him, the corruption charges. you don't have to go far to find
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an analyst to say that prime minister's netanyahu's determination to win the election was less about the national interest and more about his own self-interest. finding a way to make the charges disappear. that won't be easy. whatever the shake of his coalition, he has a hearing on the potential charges in july. if he is formally charged, expect a lot of pressure on prime minister netanyahu to resign. something that some analysts say he might consider in return for prosecutors dropping the charges. as so often the case here, shep, the only certainty in israelly politics is more uncertainty. shep? >> shepard: jonathan hunt live in jerusalem. infections spreading. a super bug is making people sick. government scientists say if it gets in your blood or in your brain, there's a one in three chance that you'll die. now doctors around the world are trying to track it and treat it and the keep it from infecting anybody else.
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but moving your internet and tv? that's easy. easy?! easy? easy. because now xfinity lets you transfer your service online in just about a minute with a few simple steps. really? really. that was easy. yup. plus, with two-hour appointment windows, it's all on your schedule. awesome. now all you have to do is move...that thing. [ sigh ] introducing an easier way to move with xfinity. it's just another way we're working to make your life simple, easy, awesome. go to xfinity.com/moving to get started. >> shepard: the university of south carolina will award a posthumous degree for a student that get killed after getting a car that she thought was her uber ride. police say on march 29, she got into the wrong car by mistake and the driver murdered her. the suspect faces charges. a local newspaper reports josephson's parents will go to what would have been their daughter's graduation.
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the 21-year-old had plans to attend drexel university's law school in philly. she had a full ride. and there's a fungus called canada aurus. it causes serious infections in the blood stream and resistant to treatments. the centers for disease control and prevention in atlanta reports that it has infected nearly 600 people in the u.s. in recent years and spreads, spread to 12 states. symptoms include a fever and chills and preys on people with weakened immune systems like the sick and the elderly. jonathan serrie has more. >> drug resistance is what concerned health officials the most. it can spread from patient to patient in long-term health claire suss.
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caurus was first detected in japan in 1989. the first u.s. case was identified in a patient treated in new york in 2013. public health officials have confirmed 587 cases in 12 u.s. states. most of those cases have been detected in the new york city area, in and around chicago according to the centers for disease control and prevention. what is not clear if these areas have the best transmission rates or these areas have the best way to detect it. >> shepard: does this hit only the infirmed? >> if you're relatively healthy, don't lose sleep over this. >> the average person that is healthy won't be at risk for c aurus. this is not something to be worried about. it affects people that are
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highly immune compromised. >> if you're caring for one of these patients, wash your hands before or after touching them. this is common sense preventing a slew of diseases and even common ones like the flu. >> shepard: the state department is trying to make americans more aware of the risk of kidnapping when they travel to certain countries after a group of men took an american woman at gun point last week in uganda. the department is rolling out a new system, one that labels high risk countries on its website. so far there's 35 countries flagged including mexico. jennifer griffin is live at the pentagon. jen? >> shep, 56-year-old kimberly sue was on safari when she and her driver were abducted at gun point. she was freed after a ransom was paid according to the travel
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company. the state department says it will now designate 35 countries with a k after their name in places where americans face potential kidnapping. a new travel warning system that includes some countries that might come as a surprise as kenya, mexico, philippines, turkey, columbia, russia and now uganda. the designation will anger countries. some allies that rely on american tourism, shep. >> shepard: jen, where are americans still being held? >> there's currently roughly 20 americans being held either captive or hostage around the world. it's been over a year since the hakanni network, a taliban off shoot, released a proof of life for kevin king, one of two western professors abducted from the american university in kabul, afghanistan back in 2016. the taliban released a video of king and australian timothy
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weeks days before then. but for president-elect trump took office pleading for their life. in iran, if i americans including princeton ph.d. candy shia wong and two u.s. residents are in president by the government. a sixth american, robert levinson disappeared in iran. i spoke to the wife of shiia wong. she says her husband is a history nerd and not a spy. she said her 5-year-old son has been traumatized over his father's detention. and in iran, a u.s. navy veteran, michael white who traveled to iran to met a woman he met online. u.s. military drones were used to help locate the american woman on safari in uganda.
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shepard? >> shepard: there's word that one of america's biggest tech companies is creating ai technology for the chinese military. if you ever wanted to travel to hawaii, you have a chance to get there for $6. and you can thank arby's. of course, there's a major catch. the trip will last 24 hours. ten people will fly from l.a. to honolulu and back on the same day. they don't even get to spend the night. it's a promotion for arby's new sandwich on king's hawaiian rolls. tickets go on sale friday. and they have the meat! i'd like to take a moment to address my fellow veterans, because i know there are so many of you who have served our country honorably. whether it's two years, four years or thirty-two years like myself. one of the benefits we as a country
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front slams on his the hbrakes out of nowhere. you do, too, but not in time. hey, no big deal. you've got a good record and liberty mutual won't hold a grudge by raising your rates over one mistake. you hear that, karen? liberty mutual doesn't hold grudges. how mature of them! for drivers with accident forgiveness, liberty mutual won't raise their rates because their first accident. liberty mutual insurance. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ >> a fox urgent. the pentagon is identifying all three u.s. marines killed in a
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roadside bombing in afghanistan. b benjamine hines of pennsylvania. we reported that christopher slutman died in the blast. he was a new york city firefighter. the taliban have claimed responsibility. the war in afghanistan began 6,394 days ago today. there's word microsoft has worked with china's military on ai research. citing several academic papers. susan li reporting live in new york. susan? >> hi, shep. the ft is reporting that microsoft research's arm in beijing worked together with china's military researchers on three papers last year with one
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of them describing a new way to use artificial intelligence to analyze human faces and mapping out their locations and this raises a red flags with experts and could help china in surveillance and censorship. we got in touch with microsoft. it did map out the location by analyzing human facing but focused more on analyzing the surrounding life of the images. we were not sent the other two research papers in question. microsoft said their researchers that are often academics, they conduct fundamental research with leading scholars and experts around the world to advance our understanding of technology. the research is guided by our principles, fully complies with the u.s. and local laws and the research is published to ensure transparency so everyone can benefit from our work. this cooperation with china's military researchers is raising alarm bells with u.s. politicians including ted cruz of texas.
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america cannot self commerce with our largest trading partner but we have to recognize china for the threat that they pose to our national security. and the partnerships have been scrutinized more appropriately with mit. shep? >> shepard: google ended a pentagon project that used artificial intelligence for facial recognition. >> it was a project with the pentagon called project maven. it ended last year because it used artificial intelligence to use drones to detect surroundings and faces. google employees protected because it could help kill people and destroy homes and vehicles. shep? >> shepard: susan li live in the newsroom. investigators say an actor did a good impression of a mobster that the fbi busted the actor and he's facing decades behind bars. roy james wilson is the name. usually plays minor tough guy
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roles. here -- where is here? it's coming. so not when i say "here." what i should said is coming up, you can see him playing a corrections officer in 2017 crime drama "good times." now he could end up playing a real-life role of an inmate. that's not good. what happened? >> the u.s. attorney says the defendants thought it was kind of fun to act like mobsters. but acting like real convicts might be something else entirely. it's kind of ironic that wilson, the actor, has a mug shot to go with his head shot, it's specially considering the roles that he played including city jail cop in "creed" and security guy with dog in "split." that was the name of his role. he and maryann wood pleaded guilty to extortion and
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conspiracy facing 20 years in prison. they collaborated to shake down a building owner. wood and others met with the owner and demanded $198,000 claiming the landlord was somehow responsible for their cost in buying and equipping the pizza shop. it was explained it would be in the best interest of the owner to pay up. wilson, the actor posing as a body guard leaned forward to show a pistol as his hip. >> shepard: this is all very confusing. what made them think that they could get away with it? >> i don't know. a very good question. why would they target the guy that they legally bought a building from to pay them back? the prosecutors did reveal some text messages that were shared
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amongst these people. there's this gem. singer: we're confirmed for 11:30 a.m. let the be games begin. oh, yeah, baby. the government has surveillance footage. maybe that's why they didn't fight the charges and pled guilty. >> shepard: thanks, rick. >> people are getting smarter, i think. >> shepard: this is where it says we're going to talk habit the weather. doesn't seem to be happening. look at that. like a miracle from heaven. fox weather alert. we are a few weeks into spring. so time for a potentially historic snowstorm moving across the middle of the country. forecasters say 200 million people are in its path. 200 million people. okay. blizzard warnings in effect for some areas, heavy rain, strong
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winds, tornados. rick reichmuth is covering as we speak. >> i'm trying to follow the last story. >> shepard: i was lost. one sentence in, i was lost. waiting for the animation to go to you. >> i thought i laid it out clearly. >> there was no mobsters. >> i saw the 200 million thing. i don't buy that. i can tell you it's not 200 million under a blizzard warning. there's not 200 million people live where the blizzard is. it's hot in the south. cold here. you see the fine line in 85 in kansas city -- dodge city to 44 in kansas. so that is the big difference here. you can see the storm here across the rockies. to get to the 200 million, they're adding in the people in the pacific northwest. that will strengthen here across the high plains and that's where we have the blizzard warnings. you see the dark red, we have the blizzard warnings. this is how the future radar
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plays out. very heavy rain in western nebraska, all of south dakota, parts of minnesota. you go to eastern nebraska, you never drop cold enough until all the precipitation is gone. omaha, we saw the flooding, that's not a problem just yet. eventually all the snow will have to melt and that will cause more problems. almost all of this snow that will fall a lot of spots over a foot. some spots pushing two feet. most of that falls to reservoirs and drains into the missouri and the mississippi river. up across parts of north dakota, that is parts of the red river and will cause more problems as well. watch for severe weather across nebraska as well. shep? >> shepard: can we get spring after that? >> i hope so. no promises. >> shepard: you're the man. thank you. so this woman is suing a baseball team after a t-shirt flew into the stands. why she's demanding more than a million dollars from the houston astros ahead. first, a woman called 911 to
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report a robber inside her home, so the cops in oregon say they surrounded the home. once they got inside the home, they heard rustling from the bathroom. they went in guns drawn. found the suspect. it was a rumba. a vacuum cleaner annoying things that wanders about. the sheriff's department posted this picture on facebook that says all the officers had a good laugh. there's little rest for a single dad,
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and accessoriesphones for your mobile phone. like this device to increase volume on your cell phone. - ( phone ringing ) - get details on this state program call or visit >> shepard: breaking news now on fox news channel. michael avenatti will start slumming it now. federal officials say they just seized his $5 million jet.
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avenatti, of course, represented the porn actress stormy daniels in lawsuits against president trump. the attorney is facing charges of extortion in new york city and bank and wire fraud in los angeles. he says he's innocent. could face decades behind bars. i thought we had pictures of his plane. my understanding is we did. it was michael avenatti's private jet. but here's his pictures anyway. the plane is a honda hha 420. a twin engine six-seat business jet. it was parked at santa barbara airport when federal agents handed the keys over to a private contract pilot to fly avenatti's plane to chino, california where it's in the possession of threshold aviation. here's the most interesting part of the jet, which we cannot see. the jet is in ardome, a video server here in new york.
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the plane is known to be registered to, and i quote, "passport 420." we know that trips between cnn and msnbc will now require an uber as the jet is no more. investigators say they're looking to what they're calling suspicious fired that destroyed three black churches in louisiana. it's happening in st. landry parrish. local officials say the churches were empty when they were burned. each burned. they suffered significant damage forcing worshippers to hold sunday services in different locations. one woman told "the new york times" her family has been growing to the greater union baptist church for generations. she says a piece of her is missing, but they didn't purpose down our spirit. some pastors are staying in their churches to keep it from
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happening to them. the state's fire marshal says there's suspicious elements in each case and they believe that crimes have occurred. jamal khaishoggi's son parentally confirming that the saudi kingdom is paying his family compensation after a saudi hit squad murdered him and cut him up to pieces with a bone saw, this comes after the post reported that saudi arabia was giving khaishoggi's children multimillion dollar mansions and tens of thousands in payments. it's called blood money to keep the family quiet. khaishoggi's son posted a statement on twitter calling the king and crown prince guardians to all saudis. acts of humanity comes from the high moral ground that they possess, not admission of guilt or scandal. we jamal khaishoggi's family were brought up by our parents
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to thank acts of good, not disavow. here's the same son shaking hands with mohammed bin salman after khaishoggi's murder, the same mohammed bin salman who our security forces say ordered his father's murder and chop up. the crown prince faces accusations of personally forces that hit who is an outspoke detractor of saudi arabia. saudi arabia is blaming 11 suspects, some members of the hit team. the washington post reports the trial has been cloaked in secrecy. the kingdom is accused of throwing off lower level officers. bernie sanders rolling out a medicare for all bill. he says it would make the government the chief financer of healthcare. 14 democratic senators backed the healthcare bill. that includes four of his rival
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candidates, elizabeth war len, kamala harris, cory booker and kristin gillibrand. it would change healthcare for all americans mainly by getting rid of private insurance and putting everybody under one payer. that means people that buy coverage on their exchanges or get healthcare through your employer would all move to a single government-run, single payer plan. even folks on medicaid would move to the new system. peter doocy reporting live from the washington newsroom. peter? >> today's proposal is different because it beats up long-term in-home coverage. the meat of the bill is moving on to medicare. no deductibles, no copays and no private insurance. >> we cover all basic healthcare needs. they won't be there to do that. i suppose if you want to make yourself look more beautiful, work on the nose, your ears, they can do that. >> so basically blue cross/blue
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shield would be reduced to nose jobs? >> something like that. >> sanders brags that his progressive platform has become the democratic main street. one candidate, amy klobuchar is unconvinced. >> i make clear what i'd like to do, get up universal healthcare more quickly and first of all, put in a public option. >> so some candidates want to improve obamacare and others want something more progressive. shep? >> shepard: peter doocy, live in washington. the baseball fan says his team's mascot shot her with a t-shirt cannon and she's now suing. first, the ever elusive video of michael avenatti's jet has been released. here it is. again, you'll never again see it fly between msnbc and cnn. michael avenatti is grounded.
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this guy just shattered the single game jeopardy record by $30,000. he's a professional sports gambler from vegas. he says probably gives him an advantage since he's used to making huge wages. he bet big and he won. risking more than $38,000 on final jeopardy. it turns out, the amount was note random. he says every wager he makes coincides with an important date in his life and that final total, 11,009.14 is his daughter's birthday. exactly, nothing. they're completely different people, that's why they need customized car insurance from liberty mutual. they'll only pay for what they need!
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we really pride ourselves >> ton making it easyautoglass, to get your windshield fixed. >> teacher: let's turn in your science papers. >> tech vo: this teacher always puts her students first. >> student: i did mine on volcanoes. >> teacher: you did?! oh, i can't wait to read it. >> tech vo: so when she had auto glass damage... she chose safelite. with safelite, she could see exactly when we'd be there.
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>> teacher: you must be pascal. >> tech: yes ma'am. >> tech vo: saving her time... [honk, honk] >> kids: bye! >> tech vo: ...so she can save the science project. >> kids: whoa! >> kids vo: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace ♪ >> shepard: decades after he died, albert einstein is proving his smarter than everybody. a century after he predicted the existence of black holes, scientists have snapped the first photo of one.
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it wasn't easy. here it is. the hole in the center is where gravity is so strong that not even light can escape. none of the rules apply. the orange though around it is the gas and dust circling the black hole. ordinary black hole forms when a star collapses. this is a super massive black hole. scientists are not positive how they form. we have a wider shot. by the way, these images do not show what the black hole looks like now since this is 53 million light years away, we're seeing what it looked like 53 million years ago, a picture of the past thanks in part to einstein himself. now that baseball fan suing the major league baseball team for more than a million dollars claiming that the mascot shot a t-shirt cannon and shattered her finger. now everything is ruined. at least the red sox started 3-9. that's the good news.
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>> that is that. the plaintiff is jennifer harrity. she bring this finger when the t-shirt hit her in the palm. it required two surgeries and two pins to fix. the only reason she's suing, the team refused to help cover her expenses. watch. >> we were just asking for some compensation for medical bills. i've never sued anybody in my life. >> her lawyer said the astros failed to warn customers how powerful the t-shirt cannon is. the astros issued a statement saying we do not agree with the allegations. the astros will continue to use fan t-shirt launches in the game. ticket holders are notified that they assume all the risks and
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promotions. her lawyer says the t-shirt cannon is not getting hit by flying balls. >> shepard: i feel bad now because of the way we talked about it. >> in 2009, a kansas city royals fan was hit in the yeah thrown by a hot dog. the fan had $16,000 in medical bills. the fan sued and the jury sided with the royals. missouri supreme court returned it saying a hot dog in the eye is not a normal baseball risk, a second injury found neither party at risk. it was a push. last year a at philly's game, a woman got hit in the eye with a hot dog. she got free tickets and no legal action was filed. the san diego chicken hit me with peanuts. i didn't see. still bitter though. >> shepard: there was a bagle
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thrown here. the statute of limitations have ran out. it was 1996. it was an event at the time. >> yeah. you can bring that charge up and you might get a little action. i remember that, shep. >> shepard: not going to do it. i'll leave it to cavuto. here's him. >> what has been found during this period of time are the illegal acts of getting this whole phony investigation started. hopefully that is where people are going now. that's where people are going. >> president trump says he wants to get to the bottom of the origins of the russian probe. welcome. i'm charles payne in for neil cavuto. this is "your world." the president making those comments before heading to texas today where he's expected to speak later this hour. we will be monitoring that. first, more bomb shells as the attorney general testifies for a second day. we have
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