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tv   Fox News Live  FOX News  December 11, 2022 9:00am-10:00am PST

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>> awaiting the splashdown this our auch nasa's unmanned capital, artemis one after it wrapped up its historic voyage and journey around the moon but we will tell you about american justice. no terrorist will go unpunished. the stunning arrest from a shocking attack against america more than 3 decades ago. welcome to fox news live.
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alicia: and libyan official linked to the 1988 bombing of pan am flight 103 over lockerbie, scotland is in us custody, this is 34 years to the day after the terror blast killed nearly 300 people, almost 200 of them americans. david spunt is live at the white house without us went down. >> reporter: this is massive news, almost 30 years in the making, december 21, '34 years since the tragedy that killed 270 people when pan am flight 103 exploded over lockerbie, scotland, the suspect who was in jail on unrelated charges is in federal custody, on his way back to the united states to face these charges in washington dc tomorrow in federal court. his name is abu agila mohammad masud kheir al-marimi. he was in jail for unrelated
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crimes but after a 2-year negotiation the us was able to get him in custody back to the united states. it was december 21st, the flight was headed to jfk airport in new york city and then to detroit, up over lockerbie, scotland, 270 killed, 190 were americans, many were students at syracuse university. he is accused of making the bomb, 2 others were charged in this horrific crime over the years but never extradited to the united states, a new statement from syracuse university, today's news is a significant milestone in a decades long process to bring those responsible for this despicable act to justice. syracuse university community stands with all the victims, family, friends and loved ones who continue to seek justice for 3 decades. we remain steadfast in our commitment to remember, honor and reflect on the legacy of the lives lost.
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the late libyan leader qaddafi accepted responsibility and restitution was paid to some of the victims families but he denied that he specifically ordered the attack. 2 years ago attorney general william barr announced charges against abu agila mohammad masud kheir al-marimi in december 2020. >> let there be no mistake, no amount of time or distance. the united states and scottish partners from pursuing justice in this case. this is forever seared in our memories. >> no question the pan am 103 attack was aimed at the united states. >> it took 2 years to get the suspect to the united states to get him extradited here, something that started with the trump administration and ended with the biden administration. you see a lot of politics tween those administrations but one
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common goal, we reached out to the white house waiting to hear any reaction from the president, national security team, because this is significant news today especially for those victims families. alicia: thank you. eric: fox news will be live in washington dc when abu agila mohammad masud kheir al-marimi appeared. this shows we will hunt you down and bring you justice no matter how long it takes. one of the passengers that day was tommy amarin who was coming back to new jersey from a business trip enter since this day his brother bert has fought for justice for the families and the killers to be brought to account. he's the president of victims of flight 103, i have interviewed you for decades. you and your family, your families have never given up.
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your reaction this morning that abu agila mohammad masud kheir al-marimi is back in this country and will be in court tomorrow? >> satisfaction, and more importantly, this is the key one. what is next? we have to find the truth, the truth has not completely come out so we've got to move and move a little more quickly. wahl what do you mean the truth hasn't come out? their thoughts the bombing was in retaliation for the us attack, downing of two the begin warplanes. what would you like to see? >> former attorney general william barr made a comment no people did not pick up on, let's make no mistake about this. this was an attack on the united states. i said that to bush 40 one on april 3rd, 1989, when i met with him for 90 minutes in the oval office but he said to me
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this is state-sponsored terrorism, we will retaliate militarily. then we go to the obama administration, they said it was on compassionate aid. i said that was for oil, 6 months later the government admitted it was for oil. this is not partisan, this is republican and democrat. i believe if we had handled this appropriately then, we might not have had 9/11 because what we showed the world with pan am flight 103 is america was soft on state-sponsored terrorism. i want to find the truth and this is a step forward but more than just libya, no question in my mind that iran was involved and if we could use intelligence information all along, we would have come to this conclusion.
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wahl he was released on compassionate release suffering from cancer and a few years later died. you talk about iraqi. talk about us not doing enough to try to end this and potentially stopping 9/11. what can the biden administration, what should we do now? what message should we send to tehran and others who want to do is fill? >> i have been saying for the last 10 years that our governments will react when leaders and people die, the reaction will be this is history. it was awful when it happened 34 years ago but the people that were involved are all dead but we can learn from this. what i don't want to hear from politicians which we heard in the preview is we will never arrest until we find the truth. that would mean a lot of politicians suffer from insomnia. what has to take place is libya has turned this person over, should get as much information as possible.
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if there is a connection to iran, mister president, let us not keep that quiet. you were a senator senator in 1988, you know the story more than anyone else and i do believe you should come out in front of the american public, sometime today and lay out a specific plan, not to say that i'm happy we followed through and kept our promise, what is happening next? and what would be the results if iran is implicated in this cowardly act. you're on the time clock. you are democrat. republicans dropped the ball on this also and it is up to president biden. don't deflect this to a statement from the state department. you know the issues. you lived the issues with me and i would love the opportunity to discuss this. eric: this is a direct way to
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the president of the united states to lay it out and show that iran was involved in this. >> you have intelligence information, available to you like obama had or clinton had, just like bush 43, just like trump had, you haven't had this all along. william barr came out before he left because he was involved in it when he was attorney general in 2,020. eric, just connect the dots. the only way we are going to get the truth, and i believe this, we are 34 years later, front page news, that is because of the dedication of the families who always told politicians you are in it for power and wealth, we are in it for our families. you can't win, so do what is right, mister president. step forward, don't give political speak, tell it like it is. you know what is going on. tell us when the intelligence termination will be made available.
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eric: don't do it for the uranian nuclear deal, some would say, to try to make nice with tehran and those other terrorists. finally, we will see what the white house says about this. tell me before we go, about tommy, carolyn, two daughters, 6 and 4 at the time. what has it been like for your family, for them who lost your brother and their father and husband. >> i can make it clear to all people listening. i heard just this morning from another network that was interviewing the. how much closer is this bringing you to closure. don't ever use the word closure because it never gets to closure. there will always be a hole in your heart from what took place. especially when you think that all your loved ones were blown up at 36,000 feet and fell to the ground and one of them we
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know at least lived to impact. yes, you care and that is what you should say. we live our lives, move on. i have a wonderful family, 7 wonderful grandkids, four daughters. our family has been lucky in all other ways but this changed us for life. 10 days from now, 34 years from now, i was in lockerbie scotland to identify the remains of my brother. that doesn't change. it doesn't change what has taken place over 34 years. the only appeal i can make, we will live day today, month to month, year to year. we will live our lives out but now is the time that the president has the ability to get directly involved in this and make sure that everything comes out, everything. eric: president biden, a heartfelt flea from bert a ammerman.
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our thoughts are with you and will be 10 days from now. >> thank you so much. alicia: we will turn the corner to another story we are watching. nasa's unmanned kappel -- capital, artemis one splashing down in half an hour after wrapping up a 25 day voyage around the moon. we are tracking that in los angeles. >> reporter: the weather in california is unstable. a cold front and 12 foot seas. they moved the recovery site 300 miles south of san diego off of the mexican baja coast. 30 minutes away, two navy helicopters in the air to assist in recovery. this is the first of four artemis missions this decade. the goal is building a human base camp on the moon in hope of reachinging bars in the late 2030s. this is a stepping stone, returning to the moon 50 years after apollo 11 in 1969.
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no humans aboard this craft but there are 3 dummies that spent 26 days orbiting 80 miles above the moon's surface conducting several tests. one, to measure radiation that future crews are going to face. the dummies are wired with 5,000 sensors, one is wearing an anti-radiation vest. no food aboard but there are four biological samples to measure how space affects the nutritional value of seeds. can fungus be used to repair dna. can we grow yeast and algae and space. amazon's alexa in the cockpit to see future crews can video conference with mission control and use voice commands to text status of things like water and battery power. also board, 10 small satellites looking for lunar ice and hydrogen on the moon's surface. >> artemis one has had extraordinary success and has
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completed a series of history making events. >> reporter: a key objective is to test the heat shield. it is moving 24,000 miles an hour, 7 miles a second. the heatshield will get 5000 °. they are trying to skip reentry. the capsule will enter the's for, bounce back up, to reduce the heat and the g forces on the astronauts on reentry. 11 parachutes are going to slow this thing down to 20 miles an hour before it hits the water. recovery vessels, several navy ships, are there to bring in the orbiter if you will. the cost of this about $93 billion for all four of these missions. in 2,024, four astronauts will go up. the following year they will land on the moon. by 2027 we hope to have a lunar lander up there to prove we can live and work in space for a longer period. alicia: this is also cool. thank you.
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keep it right here. we will bring you live coverage when the orion capsule splashes down, that is set for 30 minutes from now. eric: last night some scary moments for singer patti labelle who was in milwaukee when during a concert look what happened. the r&b star was in the middle when security rushed her off stage right in the middle of the show. at the riverside theater in milwaukee, someone called in an apparent bomb threat. she didn't even know what was going on, she was talking with the audience. she was let out, the audience was escorted out of the theater. they had to leave. no bomb or device, authorities say, was found.
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alicia: more revelations in the fourth batch of internal twitter communications. the files show how top executives sought specific policy changes to justify banning donald trump from the platform. trump's account was suspended 2 days after the january 6th capital riot. live in washington, alexandria has more. >> reporter: we heard about what executives meeting with federal agencies at a small leadership group accounting for all the content in this latest threat, focused on the discussions taking place in the company until january 7th of 2,020 over the decision to band donald trump from the platform. for this installment documents released by you on musk were provided to michael shellenberger who reported that jack dorsey was being pressured to allow policy change, he shared this, progress, exclaims a member of the safety team,
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exchanged with colleagues, makes clear they were pushing jack dorsey for greater restrictions on a speech that twitter allows around elections. the company's former head of trust and safety, it is unclear how closely dorsey was involved in this, shellenberger writes that he was on vacation but on january 7th, jack dorsey e-mails employees saying twitter needs to remain consistent on its policies including the right of users to return to twitter after temporary suspension after roth reassures an employee the, quote, people who care about this aren't happy with where we are. the documents show prominent figures including michelle obama also pressured the company to remove trump. the day after that e-mail from dorsey trump was removed under a new 5 strikes policy. and documents a singular junior employee expressed concern this
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may be a slippery slope. or documents will be dropped today. eric: today marks one month since those four university of idaho students were stabbed savagely to death on their off-campus house. police still have no suspect, they don't have the motive, no murder weapon and warning students to be vigilant as the winter graduation festivities looking for the right alondra. alexis is live at the police station with the latest on the case, in light of the horror four weeks ago what our students and families being told as they are assembling for graduation? >> reporter: it should have been time to celebrate but it was a somber mood but on the morning of winter graduation yesterday, investigators put on
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alert telling them to travel in groups and be vigilant. not a message a lot of these people wanted to hear but something police had to tell others is the killer is not behind bars. look at the crime scene, one month since the brutal murder in northern idaho that rocked the university of idaho campus as they investigate this quadruple murder, still covered in crime scene tape. these innocent college kids were stabbed to death. one month ago, no arrest in the case. the families left with more questions than answers. we know the victims got back to the house at 2:00 in the morning. investigators tell us they were killed sometime between 3:00, and 4:00 in the morning. what happened inside the house still under investigation. the police chief tells me they' re looking for a fixed blade knife. until they have an arrest they are talking to everyone. >> just because someone has been cleared does that mean
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they might be reinterviewed? >> many hours have gone into that. several investigators have looked at information the comes in and they verify those people can be cleared. i want to assure them we are doing everything we can and taking our time to do it. >> look at this hyundai a laundry, the people who were in that car spotted near the crime scene at the time of the murders, they believe whoever was in the car has vital information that can craft the case. eric: that car could be vital. alicia: the number of migrants crossing the border sets records which it is expected to get a lot worse with the end of title 42.
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eric: board of regents on the southern border struggling to keep up with the ongoing migrant surge. customs and border protection sources tell fox news that over 485,000 migrants have crossed into the country since 1 october.
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they expect to reach half-million by midnight tonight and that is just from october 1st the surge they fear will only grow larger when title 42 border protections expire in 10 days. bill meligin, this is continuing with no end inside it seems. >> reporter: good afternoon, that is exactly right. not just people coming across the border but also deadly drugs including fentanyl, case in point we take you to arizona. cvp officers at the port of entry in no gallus seizing 211,000 fentanyl pills and 2. 4 pounds of keep your fentanyl powder hidden a drug smuggler's vehicle, hidden in the backseat of his car. cvp set 60,000 of those fentanyl pills were the new rainbow colored pills the dea's
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warning is marketed towards a younger audience. we will talk about migrants coming across, look at the second batch of photos, border patrol in tucson arizona reporting they recently encountered 5 separate groups totaling 300 migrants from all around the world. this group of migrants, 17 different countries they were coming from from 3 different continents all over the planet and we will take you to california, border patrol in california reporting they just arrested in ms 13 gang member who crossed illegally. you can see his tattoos. in fiscal year 2,022 border patrol arrested 312 ms 13 gang members after they crossed illegally. to arizona we talk about criminals coming across the border. this is a convicted child sex
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predator, in the tucson arizona sector, a guatemala national convicted felon with previous conviction for aggravated child molestation out of georgia in 2013. he was sentenced to 5 years. he has been arrested trying to cross into the united states. criminal arrests so concerning when you consider last month we had 73,000 known got aways. alicia: the us border patrol chief and deputy commissioner, thank you for being here. we know that as of right now title 42 is set to expire on december 21st. can you paint a picture of what to expect after that?
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>> report shows no we've been seeing the last 2 years a border that is out of control. it is complete chaos. we have never seen the kind of numbers reported just now for the first quarter of the fiscal year which started in october. closing in on 500,000. you have an entire year to go. this will approach 3 million or more. title 42 allows the work flow to be easier. they can adjudicate these cases much quicker and expel a certain part of the population they encounter back to mexico under the title 42 provisions. once that is taken away the migrants will know that it is game on. they are queuing in mexico to come across the border. some are trying now. the reporting bill did about the got aways, 74,000, that should be everybody's concern.
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without being able to expel people back it is going to crumble under its own weight. they are overwhelmed. this time last year, it is incredible the dereliction of this administration putting us all at risk. inside these numbers are ms 13 gang members, criminals who do us harm and this chaos at the border. unbelievable how bad they are, they refused to call it a crisis. at the men and women at the department. alicia: nbc news, requesting $3 billion in anticipation of what happened after december 21st. they are reluctant because this
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request was sent to congress. there was a need for resources down there. they focus more on security. >> the administration should have augmented before they are up. that is a lot of money. border patrol budget. they started this fiscal year, what kind of hole we are in operationally. of congress will write a check with submental funding to solve this problem there better be conditions attached to that money. we can't keep doing what is happening. during the dependency of this presidency, we can't keep doing this. they need resources. the system is overwhelmed and has been overwhelmed for some time. let's provide resources, put
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conditions on those resources to solve this problem. alicia: we will watch for the next couple weeks and beyond, we will be right back.
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and become a st. jude partner in hope for only $19 a month. christen: i think it's the most worthwhile place to put your money, when it comes to childhood cancer. eric: new revelations from twitter raising or criticisms about how top executives decide to limit, suspend, or ban people from the platform. the first batch of files last week showed twitter executives did much of that without telling jack dorsey about it, telling congress under oath the social media company did not shadow banner sensor conservative users. >> looks to be they are censoring people and they out to stop it. are you censoring people? >> no. >> twitter shadow banning prominent republicans, is that true? >> no. eric: joining the is
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congressman scott fitzgerald, member of the house judiciary committee as well as education and labor. you remember the judiciary, you heard dorsey testify under oath they did not banner shadow ban or suppress conservative voices. the you by that? >> no i don't. it is a problem. if you lie to congress you will be held accountable. what we are seeing is what many of us suspected including the other side of the aisle, as each of these comes forward over the last four weeks, it is becoming clear what is going on and as a result of that, we are in new territory where section 230 which we talked about, making changes and some members want to do a repeal on it. there was an ad hoc group
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making arbitrary decisions along the way and it is in a first amendment area. eric: what do you think needs to be changed? >> there are journalistic standards that, there's a whole new area of social media that quite honestly has looked the other way when it came to those standards. four people at twitter arbitrarily making decisions on what should have been suppressed edit crosses into government agencies interacting with social media companies, not only do you have suppression of the first amendment but could be into something i would consider criminal but with the new majority republicans are going to be willing not just judiciary but oversight, look at this and dig deeper because
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we need answers to what happened not only in the presidential election but when it comes to hunter biden and the subjects that need to be reviewed. eric: it was proper oversight, they are concerned about lies and misinformation. they are trying to not have lies and propaganda and misinformation spewed out on their platform, they are trying to be corporate responsible citizens. your reaction to that? >> i don't buy it. if you look at the interactions especially in the last 2 weeks of what emerged as a result of what elon musk has exposed, interaction with governmental agencies that congress has oversight over.
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it perplexes me that this goes on in such a loose manner and if you don't think this had an impact on our elections i don't think you're treating in a serious manner. it is something congress should revisit. eric: analysts interact with government officials all the time. how do you separate that from what may have happened? >> it is clear when a journalist has to go back again and again to make sure they qualify statements that there is not a squelching of that, certainly that is something social media has not been held to at all and as a result that is what congress is concerned about. if you don't have this fourth estate, journalists doing their jobs in an appropriate manner the system could unravel. if you have governmental agencies as well that is
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troubling. eric: we will see if the new majority takes over. congressman from wisconsin on the judiciary, good to see you. and we have breaking news. here it comes. artemis, the nasher -- nasa orion spacecraft back on earth in baja, california after artemis one had a mission. we are looking at, this looks like an onboard camera. we can see all the stuff. isn't it amazing? since neil armstrong was on the moon, we can ride with the astronauts and ride with the spacecraft. here's the shot as artemis slowly returns to earth off the coast of baja, california after this historic mission. it brings -- amazing when you
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see space travel and what we can do and how we can bring them back to earth. you are seeing the artemis one mission around the moon returning safely so we will continue with this this afternoon here on the fox news channel. we got that, maybe we can drop the banner. remember the splash with gemini years ago when they would splash in the ocean and aircraft carriers would pick them up and the crane would get the capsule? here it comes. there is. artemis one safely back home. pretty cool, right? alicia: that is pretty cool. we are looking at progress. nasa always brings their ingenuity and experiments and we get to witness the senate is an honor and pleasure to see it
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right here just off of mexico's baja peninsula as we watch the parachutes drop into the water. will we bring in former nasa astronaut clayton anderson talking to folks in the control room? we are. mr. anderson, can you discuss with us the significance of the latest mission? >> artemis one, landing, splashing down successfully, the first phase of trying to go back to the moon. congratulations to nasa and all the folks involved in this. i look forward to what happens next. alicia: explain as we watch out here off the coast of california exactly what is we expect, this is a long journey for us eventually to start
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launching missions to mars, can you explain that? >> that is correct, the first step was a vehicle that could get to mars or the moon because the moon is the great practice spot. it is close, 3 days away, to get to the lunar surface and test technology we need to survive and live and work on mars, that's a smart way to attack the problem so this was phase 1, send a vehicle to the moon. it orbited the moon, stayed in a longer orbit so we could test all systems to understand before we put new ones on board so those are the things that didn't involve people and that will be phase 2. artemis 2 will send humans into orbit around the moon and they will test things like the food system, exercise the toilet and all the things humans need to survive and they will go on with artemis 3 which happens
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later, that hopes to put astronauts into the gateway space station and then the surface of the moon. alicia: i have to thank fox news's alan who correctly when i pronounce the orion capsule. we would like to thank former nasa astronaut clayton anderson for this information and guidance. we will be right back. kevin, where are you?! kevin?!?!?.... hey, what's going on? i'm right here! i was busy cashbacking for the holidays with chase freedom unlimited. you know i can't believe you lost another kevin. it's a holiday tradition! earn big time with chase freedom unlimited. ♪ ♪ the winter play was really coming together. until disaster struck. luckily, replacement costumes were shipped with fedex. which means mr. harvey could picture the perfect night. we're ready for the holidays,
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alicia: sam bank superman-fried will testify at a hearing this week on the crypto firm's call's is the doj and federal prosecutors are possible fraud charges against him. >> reporter: good afternoon. the department of justice is
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closely investigating whether hundreds of millions of dollars from ftx or improperly transferred to the bahamas by sam bank superman-fried and others at the time of the crypto currency exchange filed for bankruptcy. that according to bloomberg. that amid a slew of investigations by federal prosecutors in new york and the securities and exchange commission bankman-fried will testify in front of the housley on financial services on tuesday. in a suite, spf says, quote, i still don't have access to my data professional or personal so there's a limit to what i can say and will not be as helpful as i like but if the committee thinks it is useful i will testify on the 13th. the money was sent to bankman-fried's other company, crypto trading firm named alameda research that disappeared.
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>> we need more clarity on the timeline of events that led to the collapse. the business practices of the entities involved in the situation. more about senior leaders of these entities. >> reporter: in an interview with the wall street journal bankman-fried insists he didn't know him. >> i was trying to do the best i could. it was not as good as i thought it was. honestly, it's not what i am focusing on. it's about customers at the end of the day. there's one of me, there's millions of them. >> reporter: the hearing begins at 10:00 am. alicia: we will be right back.
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eric: we just saw nasa's unmanned r comes one splashing down off the coast of california replicable 25 day voyage around the moon setting the stage for us to go back to the moon within two years. that was some splashdown. >> reporter: at least from the
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west coast, this was a textbook landing according to nasa. we have live pictures off the deck of the uss portland, two helicopters in the air report no damage at all. nasa tried something different, the reentry skip maneuver, they try to slow it as it came into the atmosphere by popping in, popping out, popping back in and reducing the g forces on the astronauts. 3 more missions planned for this decade. all of those are manned missions with four astronauts aboard. the next one in 2024, into 25, there's the parachutes. it did deploy perfectly 11 parachutes in total, reducing speed from 300 miles an hour to 20 just before splashdown. they said the buoys aboard all inflated correctly. they are looking at the
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temperature of the heat shield and how it stood up and temperatures inside the module itself to see how long astronauts in the future missions would be able to stand inside the module, temperatures there and whether or not the cooling system, when it reentered, it reached 5000 ° on the bottom of that module. obviously they've got things aboard to try to keep that cooling down for the astronauts and that is one thing they are looking at. they will bring that into the uss portland shortly and a lot of additional studies will be done. eric: all set to try to get outposts, we are going to have outposts on the moon within a decade. we will see. alicia: see you back here at 4:00 pm eastern. and an available 400 miles of range on a full charge.
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vehicles come in all different sizes. yet ordinary windshield phone holders are one size fits all. does that make sense? no. but this does. the adjustable windshieldfone from weathertech. it extends and retracts for a perfect fit in any vehicle. plus, a quick release tab for easy one handed in and out. and for kids, use it in the back seat too. comes with short, medium and telescopic arms, to fit any vehicle. order the american made windshieldfone at weathertech.com. even makes a nice holiday gift.
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[coughing] hi, susan. honey. yeah. i respect that. but that cough looks pretty bad. try this robitussin honey. the real honey you love, plus the powerful cough relief you need. mind if i root through your trash? robitussin. the only brand with real honeyand elderberry. can access changed us for life. ten days from now, 34 years ago i was in lockerbie, scotland to identify the remains of my brother. that does not change. it doesn't change what has taken place of the 34 years. mike: insert the fox news alert the bombing of pan am flight 103 is now in fbi custody. the bombing and killing 270 people including 190 a

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