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tv   Fox News Reporting  FOX News  October 16, 2019 12:00pm-1:00pm PDT

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go. i want to spend time with gulliver's travels. jasper, the dog. he is not allowed in the >> it is story, theaters yet.re was a riveting, inspiring. this really is a crisis and it theater that let you bring your needs to be addressed. dog. i want to put this number on the >> then i might go. brett larson, love having you. screen. this is the department of thanks for joining us. thank you for joining us. veterans' affairs. i'm dyna -- dana perino. veterans and their loved ones can call 1-800-273-8255 and what's next? press 1 to talk to someone right hi, trace. away. that's the key. how are you? >> we are watching the federal you call the number and you talk to somebody right away. courthouse where a judge is 24 hours a day, seven days a about to sentence a woman for her role in the college week. we'll be right back. great news for my fellow veterans. admission scam. she paid thousands to help rig va mortgage rates have dropped to near record lows. her son's test admission scores. the newday team is working overtime she is asking for house arrest. so every veteran can save $2000 a year. prosecutors say that is not done. she has to do time for her crime. she is the latest suspect to plead guilty and dozens more the ups and downs of frequent mood swings still facing charges. first, president trump meeting can plunge you into deep, depressive lows. with congressional leaders at the white house amid the attacks (crying) on our allies in syria. take you to uncontrollable highs. president trump denying he gave (muffled arguing)
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turkey the green light to attack or, make you feel both at once. kurdish fighters. he is standing by his decision overwhelmed by bipolar i symptoms? to pull back american troops. ask about vraylar. >> i want to bring our soldiers some medications only treat the lows or the highs. back home. we are not a police force. vraylar effectively treats depression, >> even after all you have seen, acute manic and mixed episodes of bipolar i. isis prisoners freed, all the full-spectrum relief of all symptoms. humanitarian disaster, you don't have any regret for giving with just one pill, once a day. elderly patients with dementia-related psychosis have an increased risk of death or stroke. erdogan the green light to call your doctor about unusual changes invade. >> i didn't give him the green in behavior or suicidal thoughts. light. antidepressants can increase these i'm not going to get involved in in children and young adults. report fever, stiff muscles, or confusion, a war between syria and turkey. which may mean a life-threatening reaction, i say this with great respect. or uncontrollable muscle movements, they are no angels. >> the kurds that have fought may be permanent. side effects may not appear and died have accused president for several weeks. metabolic changes may occur. trump of betraying them and movement dysfunction, leaving them to be slaughtered. restlessness, sleepiness, the reports from syria have been stomach issues are common side effects. when bipolar i overwhelms, vraylar helps smooth the ups and downs. alarming. a u.s. defense official tells fox news many isis prisoners they were guarding has escaped. one of president's staunching e
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defe defenders, the decision to abandon the kurds is insane. >> he is not listening to his commanders or his advisers. he is making the biggest mistake of this presidency. we are about to destroy the best ally we have on the ground in the fight against isis. it would be a national security disaster. if we abandon the kurds, it will be to our shame and national security detriment and trump will own the resurgence of isis. >> they urged him to reverse course. vice-president pence and secretary of state pompeo heading to turkey to please for a cease-fire. let's bring in jeff. it sounds to me whatever happens inside this meeting, it is going to be very tense. >> i think it is, trace. i think it will be a very tense
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meeting. the clips you just played are a reflection of where republicans stand on this issue. they are obviously not alone. there has been bipartisan criticism of president trump's decision to do this. we played that clip where he said he didn't give the green light. his decision paved the way for erdogan to make the decision into syria and to essentially throw the kurds, the u.s. allies, under the bus. >> it is kind of fascinating. on friday, we played the soundbite of lindsey graham. he was furious at the president for doing this. monday, tuesday, he seemed to stop in his stance and his anger was venting at president erdogan in turkey. it seems like he is angry all over again. do you get the feeling the republicans are beginning to rally around the president on this? >> i think you are right to say there seems to be a shift, an up and down in tone from lindsey graham.
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we saw some harsher words against president trump. he said he should be focusing on other things. lindsey graham has been a pretty strong ally of president trump's for the last 2 1/2 years. not on this. in that sense, he has a lot in common with many democrats in congress and with many when bipolar i overwhelms, to help every veteran refinance their mortgage republicans. despite the disagreements at these near record low rates. across the aisle, jeff, what's one call can save you $2000 every year. your sense about lawmakers putting together an effective package of sanctions against syria? >> well, they are certainly working on that and wanting to have tougher sanctions that the white house that is proposed. that said, one of the larger questions about sanctions is >> trace: houston rockets whether or not that will do any general manager apparently the good. president trump has been saying target of a pro-china troll campaign, according to the from the gibeginning that he wod perhaps try to decimate turkey's reporting of "the wall street journal" and the parent companies share economy. that doesn't seem to be having much influence on erdogan who ownership, the nba china sees an opportunity and is controversy after he sent out a taking an opportunity to achieve tweet.
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a strategic goal. hours after it, reporter say >> i want to play this soundbite pro-chinese government hit his account with thousands of from marco rubio. >> if you want an easy answer to contents. susan li joins me with more. this is crazy. a difficult and increasingly to. >> this is what they call a serious problem, i'm not sure anyone can give you an honest troll mob after that infamous one right now. there are some mistakes that are not easy to reverse and some october 4th tweet from darrell morey, they found that there was that are irreversible. >> what he is saying is you 168,000 responses in the six cannot undo the damage? days afterward. >> sanctions wouldn't undo that october 4th to october 10th. what they found was 22% of the damage. i doesn't think people that are pressing president trump to responses came from an account reverse his decision will have that had no followers. any luck. the president has doubled down. a zero. 55 percent from accounts with 13 at this point, even if he were or less, and he got 5,000 to change his decision, which he is clearly not going to do, it responses from twitter accounts would be hard to undo what has that were tweeting for the very first time. happened in the region. so to them, that came from bots >> yeah, it really is. jeff mason, reuters, good to see which could be one central you. >> you too. >> thank you so much. authority, mainly from china. they think it is china's way of as president trump and congressional leaders meet at the white house, half a world manipulating the conversation around the hong kong protest. away, the situation in syria but so then daryl morey, he put remains very serious. steve smith is on the ground in the northeastern part of that down the tweet an hour after he posted it. country. he knew that he offended steve? >> trace, the battleground has
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somebody. but also posted an apology changed dramatically. afterwards. can you imagine that the apology, there it is. eight days ago when the turks launched their military that actually got four times the offensive, they were facing the kurds. you had a professional military amount of response on twitter than the original tweet in the power versus a group of kurdish five hours afterwards. fighters, militia with no air >> trace: it is amazing, power to speak of. because the nba really pushes that has changed over the past couple of days. the social justice comments, now, the kurds have allies, outspoken, they want them to speak out. syrian government forces, as well as russian forces. what is twitter's response? russian forces at this moment >> i got in contact with them, and they said that the coordinated activity and other are patrolling some key forms of platform manipulation have no place on our service. strategic cities along the they will take action on any account. border. they have seized territory along against this type of behavior. what can they do? they say that we can permanently the border. suspend accounts, we can a number of the key towns, there blacklist you arlos. have been intense battle and control has swung back and don't forget that facebook forth. this has been no cake walk for suspended numerous accounts, part of a disinformation the turkish military. campaign for the hong kong it has gotten a lot more protest over orchestrated by china. difficult, trace. >> trace: it is crazy. susan li, thank you. >> we have mentioned vice-president pence and secretary pompeo heading to the well, from basketball, baseball, the washington nationals headed region to meet with president
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to the world series for the erdogan. what's the latest on america's first time in history. push for a cease-fire? what's your sense on the ground? after sweeping the st. louis >> both sides have pretty much cardinals and the best-of-seven laid out their position in series, washington scoring seven advance. secretary of state pompeo say we runs in the first inning of gam. are going to need him to stop the nationals putting together a right now. strong playoff run after a turkish cease-fire starting the season with a 19-31 immediately. erdogan saying a cease-fire is record. off the table. we'll see which moves. they were terrible and everybody as the high-level debate goes said it. washington will face the winner on, we were seeing some shelling of the astros-yankees series. the astros of 2-1, in this town of 50,000 behind me. turkish artillery coming over game 4 tomorrow night on fox the mountain and crashing into sports. those houses. while these high-level talks are if you did not see it last still going on, there are some night, that was amazing baseball. st. louis has a great franchise, terrifying nights going on for but when he ran into the these people as artillery shells nationals this year, it was crash through houses. crazy. the corner of wall and broad, >> seven minutes after 10:00, you see that, not too bad. steve harrigan on the ground. has the old saying goes, when thank you. stay safe. the news unfolding in our news breaks out, we will break nation's capital. in. i'm trace gallagher in new york. now it is "your world with neil cavuto" right now. the secretary of state senior ♪ adviser re-signed last week. >> you don't have any regrets house democrats continue their
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impeachment inquiry into for giving or due on the green president trump. all that as the president meets with congressional leaders from all the journalists of fox news. light to invade? >> you know when you make a this is fox news reports. statement like that it is so depressed the next -- deceptive. with the freestyle libre 14 day system >> neil: the president says just scan the sensor with your reader, there was no green light for iphone or android and manage your diabetes. turkey to invade syria as he with the freestyle libre 14 day system, defends his decision. a continuous glucose monitor, the president meeting with you can check your glucose levels any time, congressional leaders as we without fingersticks. speak. some of who voted against his ask your doctor to write a prescription for the actions. any of the leaders defending freestyle libre 14 day system. that meeting, you know the drill, we will go there live. you can do it without fingersticks. welcome, everybody. busy day. learn more at freestylelibre.us i am neil cavuto, to kevin and what he is hearing about the meeting. and now a doprevagen is the number oneild wimempharmacist-recommendeding? memory support brand. you can find it in the vitamin aisle in stores everywhere. prevagen. healthier brain. better life.
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a live look at capitol hill where one of the top aides continue into the impeachment inquiry into president trump. michael mckinley served as senior adviser to secretary pompeo before he re-signed last week. we have fox news chad pilgrim and catherine herridge live on capitol hill. >> this witness bringing more than three decades of diplomatic experience with his last posting as a senior adviser to mike pompeo. he spent 37 years in the foreign service. previous p
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previously, he served as an ambassador. he can compare and contrast the trump administration's approach to foreign policy to that of other administrations and whether the independent investigation by rudy giuliani into corruption in ukraine is out of bounds. mckinley arrived on capitol hill. he remained behind closed doors inside the house intelligence secured facility. by changing the designation of most witness interviews to depositions, the house democrats have more control over the public release of these transcripts. the american ambassador, gordon sondland appears. he sent text messages defending the president saying there was no quid pro quo. democrats argue it is necessary
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so future witnesses can't gain their testimony. republicans say it goes against long-established practice and the spirit of fairness, trace. >> trace: the feds have not rested another defendant in this campaign finance case. this is with the two individuals linked to rudy giuliani. >> the fbi attorney's office says that david korea was arrested in new york city as he was turning himself in. he was indicted. a fourth man in san francisco was also. rudy giuliani told them he enlisted their help to investigate the firm that joe biden's son sat on. they were engaging in a scheme to conceal the source or exceed the limit on political contributions.
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this was alleged it was a work-around to hide foreign money in american politics, trace. >> trace: team fox coverage continues. let's go to chad purgum. explain where we stand in the fight of holding a formal vote on the impeachment process. >> there were some rumblings. some democrats think it would be a good idea. the administration has been resistant to comply with any document requests or witnesses saying this hasn't been formalized as was the case with appreciate in 1974 and nixon. i posed that question to nancy pelosi. >> you hear from your caucus we are not ready to have a vote. why not call their bluff? >> we are not here to call bluff. this is not a game for us. this is deadly serious.
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we are on a path that is taking us to a path to truth in a timetable that respects our constitution. >> there are some in the democratic caucus who think this vote could be weaponized republicans. you could have them put on the spot having to say they are against opening up an inquiry to impeach the president or saying they are for it. that could draw the ire of president trump and also elicit a primary challenge that's very dangerous for republicans. republicans have to walk a very thin line. the house majority leader, steny hoy hoyer, how soon could this be wrapped up? he said months, i hope sooner than later. maybe by the end of the year. that's the timetable. the other issue is that there has been a privileged resolution
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introduced to try to censure a formal resolution. adam schiff, the chairman, that probably will not come up until tomorrow. the democrats will work to table that and there will not be a straight up or down vote it censure adam schiff. >> trace: the house approved a measure to end action in syria. >> the vote was 364-60. there were four members that voted present. chuck schumer said he hoped that mitch mcconnell would take that resolution and put it on the senate floor. there is a lot of consternation about whether they should support the president when it comes to syria. the last time they had one of these meetings at the white house was in may with top democratic natures. that's when the president browbeat the democratic leaders and stormed out of the room. this is the first time they have
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had a session like that. republicans are besides themselves how the president has handled this. in particular, lindsey graham, who has been the liaison to the president. here is something that he said earlier today. he is making the biggest mistake of his presidency, by assuming the kurds are better off today than yesterday. imagine what republicans would say if president trump had followed in these footsteps. that's a problem for republicans. i tried to pin mitch mcconnell down. he said, i disagree with what the president is doing. i said, is it enough to just disagree? don't you need to do more? how much sway do they have with the president of the united states on this key issue? i was struck by mitch mcconnell's words, he used lines about the kurds in the past tense. they have been a good ally. there is a question right now about where we stand with the kurds. >> trace: take it a step further, chad, you have some republicans say, we are talking about sanctions.
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the president has not offered a plan on how he is going to stop isis from reemerging in syria. >> jason crow is a freshman democrat from colorado. he said the united states handshake has to be worth something. he questioned whether that is still resonating as much with our allies overseas. >> trace: chad pergraham, thank you. details on a major issue holding up an agreement and the supreme court hearing arguments on whether to uphold the life sentence for one of the beltway snipers. he was a teenager when he and another gunman made people in the d.c. area frightened to go outside for fear of being shot at random. his lawyers looking for a resentencing. all that and more just ahead.
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only with xfinity xfi. download the xfi app today. british officials and the european union have two weeks to reach a deal. a summit set to begin tomorrow. boris johnson ran on the promise of delivering brexit with or without a deal. according to the "associated press," he compared brexit to climbing mt. everest and told lawmakers britain was nearing the top. benjamin hall reporting live in london. benjamin? >> reporter: hi, trace. they are trying to get to the top. they are scrambling up there. they cannot seem to reach the summit. we had been optimistic all day long. we are hearing that a deal will not be sealed tonight, meaning they have to negotiate through the night with the hopes of reaching that deadline for tomorrow. there has been optimism all day,
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even from presidents merkel and macron. major issues are not agreed on. time is running out. an agreement is needed by all 27 leaders tomorrow at thal summit or it won't be ratified by the deadline on the 31st of october. it is no longer the eu that are going to be hardest to deal with. it is the british parliament. if the eu does agree to a deal, their vote is scheduled in parliament this saturday. still, there are many mps that want to remain as well as many that want no deal at all. all day today,boris johnson has been trying to sell this deal to try and get consensus across both sides of parliament if he doesn't pass it on saturday if we do get a deal. it is likely he will have to write a letter requesting a three-month extension. it could be over very soon and drag on a while longer. >> what do we know about the final sticking points of these negotiations? >> trace, one is you mentioned the northern ireland border, been talked about for three
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years. there does seem to be a solution to that. northern ireland will remain more closely aligned with the eu than with the uk. that is unpalatable to some but it is palatable to most, looks like a solution. one of the other major issues we are hearing about is that europe is worried about them deregulating. they fear this would undercut europe by making the uk a low-tax, low-tariff country. they are looking for safeguards. the key difference between boris' deal or the one he hopes to get and theresa may's deal is that this one allows the uk to negotiate its own free trade deals. boris johnson has repeatedly talked about a deal with the u.s. that is a big selling point. the deal we have negotiated only covers the next two-year transition period. it only sets out the rules for future negotiations. even if we do get a deal here, there remains a long way to go about the future relationship
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between the eu and the uk. we hope to find out if a deal can be reached. we will be up all night checking. >> benjamin hall live in london. lawyers for one of the beltway snipers responsible for killing ten people in 2002 are arguing for the supreme court to allow the shooter to be resentenced. lee boyd malba was 17 years old when 41-year-old john alan mohammed terrorized the d.c. metro area for targeting strangers. it went on for weeks. mohammed got the death penalty. malba got multiple life sentences without parole. he deserves a sentencing due to more supreme court rulings, one that ruled that juveniles could not face mandatory life sentences and another that applied it retroactively. those cases did not address
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nonmandatory life without parole sentences. we just learned the punishment for the tenth defendant in the college admin scandal. marjorie clapper sentenced to three weeks behind bars. she admitted she paid $15,000 to rig her son's act exam. her lawyers say she regrets being involved in the scheme. molly lyon reporting outside the courthouse in boston. molly? >> reporter: this information just breaking now. marjorie clapper who was waiting to hear her fate. three years in prison and 250 hours of community service, a fine of $9,500. she is a california mom, the co-owner of a jewelry business. she had asked for home consignment. today, the judge made the call saying she will spend three weeks behind bars. the judge saying a few minutes ago there is no question in my mind as i look at this defendant that they thought they were doing what was good for their children but the offense of cheat tog put your child in
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better circumstance remains a serious offense despite the circumstances. she did apologize saying she knew what she did was wrong and illegal. in my heart, i wanted to help my son. that is a sentiment that many of the parents who have admitted guilt, the defendants in this case, that have made plea agreements with the government, sentiments that they have expressed they were out to help their children. in this particular sense, the government had talked about this particular offense being egregious, because they argue clapper not only spent the $15,000 to facilitate the cheating on the exam but worked with the mastermind to lie about her son's race and ethnicity background. prosecutors wrote that she purposely sought to portray her son as a minority and the child of parents who did not attend college, despite the fact that he was neither because she thought that would bolster his college prospects.
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they talked about how this could displace another applicant that was a minority or parents didn't attend college. they are arguing that the efforts did not originate with her. upon information and belief, mrs. clapper believes the co-defendant, one of the associates made those decisions. clapper denies that she ever asked singer to imply that she or her husband had not been to college. there we have it. yet another defendant in in case sentenced to a period time behind bars. trace? >> trace: interesting felicity huffman got two weeks and marjorie got three weeks. that seems to be the sentencing. president trump meeting behind doors with congressional leaders after defending his decision to pull american troops from syria. why are we protecting syria's land? we will go live to the pentagon next. we're oscar mayer deli fresh and you may know us from...
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fox news reporting, rolling on. police say they have two persons of interest in the kidnapping of a 3-year-old girl from a birthday party. are they any closer to finding leads? caught on camera. the search for a woman accused of using a child to help her rip off a liquor store. a us marine walked all the way around lake michigan, more than 800 miles. he started the trip after a combat buddy killed himself. he says he is trying to help other vets at risk. he will join me in a moment. first, president trump meeting with congressional leaders at the white house over the conflict in syria. earlier today, the president said turkey's military move into syria is between turkey and syria, not the united states. in the meantime, vice-president, mike pence, and secretary of state, mike pompeo, are traveling to turkey to meet with that country's president. national security correspondent, jennifer griffin reporting live
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at the pentagon. jen? trace, senior officials tell me we are witnessing a deliberate phased withdrawal of u.s. troops out of syria. they will be repositioned elsewhere in the middle east. they are collapsing control bases in syria and will pull back from one base in northwest syria where they will be airlifted out. it is extreme lly dangerous. >> i view that for the united states as strategically brilliant. our soldiers are out of there. they are totally safe. syria is protecting the kurds. that's good. >> syria is not protecting the kurds and u.s. troops are not yet safe. the president just ordered 2000 troops to saudi arabia. i am told u.s. troops in syria are still racing to troy to
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protect classified materials and valuable military. they had to leave hastily following the president's decision. they have told russia and turkey that if u.s. forces are threatened, they will react with significant air strikes. >> what do we know about the vice-president and secretary of state's planned meeting with erdogan? >> ostensibly, they say they are going there to try to achieve a cease-fire. turkey just received a very different message from president trump who said if turkey goes into syria, it is not our problem. senator lindsey graham says the president has undermined vice-president pence and secretary of state pompeo before they even landed in turkey to try to get a cease-fire. president trump considers the kurds more dangerous than isis, which should please the turkish president. >> the pkk, which is a part of the kurds, as you know, is
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probably worse at terror and more of a terrorist threat than isis. it is a very complicated, semi complicated, not too complicated if you are smart. it is a semi-come pli kated problem. >> jennifer griffin live at the pentag pentagon. police in birmingham, alabama, say they have arrested two persons of interest in the kidnapping of a 3-year-old girl at a birthday party. the charges, including possession of child porn, are not related to the abduction. the search for camille "cupcake" mckinney, continues after her kidnapping on saturday. the persons of interest have not given any information to help locate the missing toddler. according to police, stallworth had child important on his cell
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phone and brown was on probation for a previous kidnapping. on the night of mckinney's disappearance, kids told them they saw a man and woman in an suv luring children with candy. kidnapping by strangers in the u.s. is relatively rare. last year, less than 1% of all missing children cases involved nonfamily abductions. according to the national center for missing & exploited children. jonathan suri reporting live. >> reporter: police are still actively searching for this little girl. several hours ago, the day officers descended on an apartment complex in birmingham to investigate a tip they had received of a possible sighting. it turned out to be a false alarm. >> there was another young lady at that complex that was approximately the same size of the young lady. that was not her. we are still in search of her.
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>> police say they are optimistic they will find the 3-year-old. they are examining an suv they believe was involved in the abduction in the tom brown's village community. they are asking people in the area that evening to come forward with anything they know. even the simplest tip could help police solve the case. >> we also know a number of you have video, cell phone video, and other information that you might have seen that may be helpful in locating this 3-year-old child. >> you can see this case continues to generate a lot of interest in the media and community. trace? >> trace: jonathan, the governor of alabama is getting involved in the search effort. >> the governor, kay ivy, says she is in constant touch with
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the police and we pray for camille and that god will watch over her until she is returned home. over agencies are offering a $5,000 reward for information that leads to this girl coming home safely and a private individual who wishes to remain anonymous is offering an additional $1,000. >> the first 72 hours is always the most pivotal. jonathan, thank you. cops say a woman who walked into a liquor store with two kids and walked out with a stack of cash. it happened in denver. surveillance video shows the woman behind the counter and inside a manager's office. according to the police, the young boy with the woman helped her search for money. the manager told a local fox station she got away with a few thousand dollars. she went into another store and used the kid as a diversion while she stole body lotion and body wash. police asking people for help identifying the woman. some aspiring pharmacists in
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california say they can't get jobs or pay student loans after a cheating scandal forced the state to throw out hundreds of test scores. a spokesperson for the state's pharmacy board told the local fox station somebody leaked more than 100 questions making the tests invalid. the people had cheated are to blame, not the board. people can take the exam again for free next month but for some, that's not enough. one person told the station, i cannot afford to wait another 3-6 months for the board to grant me my license. i do need to pay for my rent, food, and utilities. how am i going to restudy for the cpje if i am constantly afraid of becoming homeless? another wrote, my fiancee and i have been eating into our savings. it is running dry. my fiancee and i have discussed i might have to move away to a different state to work and she will have to stay in california due to her work.
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a retired united states marine walking more than 800 miles around all of lake michigan to raise awareness about veteran suicide. his name, tavis snyder. he served in afghanistan from 2017 to 2018. a member of his unit committed suicide this year. according to the department of veteran affairs, about 20 veterans commit suicide each day. snyder decided to go on a new mission. he set out to spread a message that no one should fight this battle alone. he wanted to make sure all veterans and family members know they have a community. each day he walked 25 miles. he planned to sleep in a tent each night but people heard his story and offered him places to stay every single night. he finished the trek last week. it took 42 days and dozens of people met him in the end of his journey. in his words on facebook, we gave a voice to what was merely a whisper and turned it into a
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roar. travis joins me now. you are a good man. you have my utmost respect. we are proud to have you on the show. you said your mission was to be a healer. explain that to us. >> absolutely, sir. i just wanted to gather some people together, a community of people that were looking for healing and trying to find the light in the darkest moments. when i first set out on this journey, i was hoping to reach a few people. if one person would have been affected in a positive way through this, i would have been happy. the outcome was in a good way overwhelming. the support has been incredible. i am so grateful and thankful for it. >> they should be grateful for you. we mentioned in the intro, travis, that 20 u.s. veterans commit suicide every day. that's a crisis. you want your fellow soldiers to know they have a purpose, a reason to stay, as you say. >> absolutely, absolutely. my veteran brothers and sisters
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alike each day are struggling with a mental health challenge. ptsd, suicidal tendencies and depression. they are not here to fight alone. they have people that care about them and resources available to them as well to overcome this. >> i read where you were saying that you still get phone calls and messages on facebook. it is people who just want to talk, travis. what do they want to talk about? >> they want to learn more about the resources that are out there. they want somebody that they can vent to as well. i might not have all the answers but i am at least here to listen. i am honored and humbled to do that. i have been throughout this whole journey just been honored to share with folks that have stopped along the way to say hello or share their story, their experiences with either losing someone that they love very much to suicide or sharing their experience with depression and mental health challenges.
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>> it was inspiring to me, because i know you made this walk alone. at the end, you were not alone. some of your fellow marines joined you and other people that followed you joined you. what was that like having them take you across the finish line, if you will? >> it was a great experience. it was a great day. the perfect end to an incredible journey. the adventure of a lifetime. that last day really was a blessing. i'm so thankful for that opportunity to share that moment with all those people. >> travis, i just want to put this on the screen. this is the map of the walk you did. this is kind of what it was like. 800 miles. look at this. you look at the places that he went by. 810 miles to be specific on this thing. are there times in this 42 days, travis, you said, you know what, maybe i'm going to cut this short? i don't think i can do the whole 800. >> absolutely not.
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it was the adventure of a lifetime. there was a lot of peaceful moments, you could say desolate. i embraced them and i enjoyed every bit of scenery that i came across. the people that i met every single day have been just awesome. i am meeting new friends every single day and getting to know them and share their stories and their background as well. i would do it again in a heartbeat. >> you talk about meeting a lot of new friends. i want to know, you met a special friend. if we can put this special friend's picture on the screen. you met a kitten, travis. where did you find the kitten and what's happened since then? >> the kitten came about, it was about 6:00 in the morning. i was walking to my hometown of holland, michigan. it had been raining and thunderstorming all night, it seemed like 8 or 10 hours straight. i was getting ready to go live
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with a local fox station. i picked him up and wrapped him in a hoodie and found some food across the street. he nestled up and passed out in my rain jacket that day and walked me to my hometown. >> he is now your kitten? >> since then, yes, hegulliver
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