tv America Reports FOX News March 10, 2025 11:00am-12:00pm PDT
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>> three and a half years ago, isis terrorist killed 13 american service members and countless others in the abbey gate bombing during the disaster is an incompetent withdrawal from afghanistan. tonight i am pleased to announce that we have just apprehended the top terrorist responsible for that atrocity, and he has right now on his way here to face the swift sword of american justice. [cheers and applause] >> john: a promise kept by president trump. live look at the u.s. district court in virginia where any moment now the alleged mastermind behind the abbey gate bombing will have his first attention hearing. so begins our second hour. i'm john roberts in washington along with our special guest today. >> aishah: nice to see you t too. i am at aishah hasnie and for sandra smith. charged with this attack which came during the biden administration's chaotic
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withdrawal from afghanistan. >> john: 13 service members and 170 civilians were killed. the deadliest attack in the decade. now three and a half years later the trump administration is looking to serve up just as. >> aishah: fox team coverage begins with mollie hemingway standing by to react. first justice correspondent david spun his live at the courthouse in virginia. what can we expect from today's hearing? >> well, good afternoon. this is a detention hearing. should maybe go about an hour tops. mohammad sharifullah and the court room getting ready to appear before this federal judge. what's interesting about this case, eight days ago, he waived his miranda rights and pretty much spilled the beans on the story according to court documents on federal sources, so it's possible we may hear of a guilty plea today in court, although we don't know exactly what's going to happen until it happens. we know that he did arrive on
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american soil a few hours after president trump address the nation in the joint address to congress. he landed on american soil. you see him right there. kash patel, attorney general pam bondi, tulsi gabbard all on hand. he was one of the masterminds behind that suicide bombing in 2021 that killed 13 u.s. service members and nearly 170 civilians at the international airport. as u.s. troops were pulling out of afghanistan. federal prosecutors say he worked for isis and spend the rest of his life behind bars of convicted. waived his miranda rights just eight days ago. authorities say he helped others look for american and alabama checkpoints. told other members that the route was clear and the suicide bomber would not be detected. authorities say he helped inspire others who carried out attacks in 2016 which killed ten people at the canadian embassy
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in kabul also had a city hall outside of moscow in a suburb there of russia where 130 people were killed. again, facing charges here. not expected to be let go. he will likely remain in detention until trial happens unless there is some sort of plea deal -- not plea deal, guilty plea that happens today in court. >> aishah: david spunt left for us in virginia. thank you. >> john: joining us now, mollie hemingway. maybe throw this out to both of you. during the biden administration, on the lamb. 50 days into the trump administration, he is appearing in court. >> that shows he is a very big difference in how the two administrations handle things. when this attack took place that killed 13 service members, more than 160 civilians, we held no one accountable. no one was held accountable for
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their failure to detect or prevent this. instead we did the missile strike that killed ten innocent people, falsely claiming it was in retaliation. it does take time sometimes, but the trump administration seems more laser focused on actually holding people accountable. >> yeah, go ahead. >> i was a bit surprised it took us many years to get this guy here, especially in light of the fact that ame merrick garland ws passionate about x traditions. change in leadership here at such a good example of what the fbi does best, which is why they should not be engaging in political investigations. i think it's a great opening act for director kash patel. sets the tone i think for this is the fbi. what they should be doing. >> this was such a stain for the biden administration.
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right out of the gate this happens, and he could not get away from it for the rest of his term. it boggles my mind that they would not want a political win. if they have the intel, which it sounds like they had the intel, knew they could get this guy with the help of the pakistanis. they had it, and they did not go after it appeared. >> they were laser focused on prosecuting domestic political opponents instead of people who murdered 13 american service members. though withdrawal was something people widely supported the idea of leaving afghanistan. the manner in which it was done was not something that the public likes. poorly planned situation and the moment when people started turning on the biden administration. we were told that he was the adult in charge and he would bring in an army of people who are adults, and instead we had disasters like that and people now say they would like to return to what they saw in the first trump administration,
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holding our enemies accountable, not letting people get away with murder. >> john: the protocols have changed. sebastian gorka illuminated how the protocols changed with jesse watters. >> i have been told by the intelligence community, special operators they had been surveilling bad guys across the planet for four years and the biden administration just did not care. we said well -- we told the president, and he said find them and kill them. >> john: different attitude from the top but also as we mentioned before, we got cooperation from pakistan this time around whereas with usama bin laden we did not. >> i just think it reflects a change in the white house. i think people take donald trump seriously when he says what he is going to do, and priorities mean something to him. you're the leader of the free world, and something really matters to you, you can get it done. great example of that, referring
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to the fact that they were so involved in these political persecution prosecutions for so many years. not going after people who cause great harm to our military, to civilians, jeopardizing national security left and right. >> walk us through the legal process because this guy has confessed. he is not denying. >> john: waived miranda rights. >> seriously. any potential hangups or hurdles that they may face in trying to convict him? >> no, this is a dream case. the u.s. attorney's office that traditionally prosecutes these high-profile terrorism cases. probably the third most powerful office in the country after washington, d.c., and new york. i don't really see any given that he just laid this all out. that's why we know everything we do. the judge is going to determine whether he will remain.
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whether they are a flight risk or danger to the community. given what he is accused of, i don't think they will be releasing him. we can get an arraignment today. we can't have the judge present the charges and this individual could even plead guilty, but we will see. >> john: this could be the first of many she is to drop in connection with afghanistan. the alleged mastermind behind that horrible abbey gate bombing. an investigation going on at the pentagon to find out -- was going to go with chuck yeager screwed the pooch when it came to afghanistan and whether they will be held accountable. >> that is what most americans were shocked and appalled by when this happened. it was a disaster. u.s. military had overseen some of the things here, and no one was held accountable. no one was fired or even
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disciplined. we did not have a really good handle on even what had happened to allow this. not just allowing the bombing to happen but the missile attack that killed innocent people. >> john: which they say was a righteous attack. >> took them a while to admit. people need to be held accountable for that. americans would like a military that is laser focused on winning wars quickly, having top brass who actually care about results. >> aishah: i appreciate the administration is going all the way back four years ago to deal with this because i was so frustrating. like you said for a lot of americans to watch this. hearing after hearing on capitol hill, and for nothing to happen. >> large budgets given to the military. there needs to be more responsibility and accountability. >> john: we will see what comes out of this hearing today. >> aishah: federal trial underway in new york for the men accused of trying to kill an
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iranian dissident and journalist on behalf of the republic. live outside the federal courthouse for us. what is happening in court today? >> they are accused of an iranian assassination plot right here at home. a trial that prosecutors say exposes the tentacles of the global terror and network of tehran. brooklyn-based activist and journalist who fled iran in 2009 and has become a leading critic of the iranian regime. they say that's why tehran wants her dead. an iranian revolutionary guard and agents are now charged with trying to kidnap and kill her to shut her up. believed to be in iran, but jury selection has begun. described by authorities as members of a russian mop group hired by iran to carry out the killings. prosecutors say another man
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staked her out at her brooklyn home for two days, seen lurking on her porch by her ring doorbell camera, then nabbed by police with an ak-47 and rounds of ammunition in his car. set the plan was to execute her at her house or snatch her and then take her by speedboat from new york harbor all the way down to iranian ally venezuela and flanker from venezuela to tehran. >> it is a trial that is going to bring shame and humiliation, supreme leader, and his gang of killers. and that is why i am so happy. >> has a history of foreign assassinations of regime opponents. they plotted to bomb a rally of one of the largest opposition groups, national council of resistance of iran while former new york mayor rudy giuliani was
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speaking. they have also targeted president trump. john bolton. former secretary of state mike pompeo all in retaliation for the 2020 assassination of the top general. iran's president has claimed that his country has no plans and will not assassinate president trump, but there is no word if that holds for bolton, mike pompeo, and the others. back to you. >> aishah: live for us in new york. thank you. >> john: were from los angeles. nathan hochman now laying out a pathway for the menendez brothers to potentially get out of jail. listen here. >> requires them to finally, after 30 plus years, fully acknowledge and completely accept responsibility for the entire br of crimes, including t they set a trial.
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if they do that unequivocally and they do it sincerely, ultimately the judges see the final arbitrator. >> john: exhausted all appeals and have no hope of freedom until a new california law made a resentencing hearing as possible. any reduction in their sentence could make them immediately eligible for parole. >> aishah: plus a desperate search is underway for a university of pittsburgh student who vanished while walking on the beach in the dominican republic. we are going to ask the sheriff from her hometown about the latest on the search efforts. >> john: plus rfk jr. meeting with top food leaders to make america healthy again. he is meeting about a shocking number of chemical dyes and additives that we allow into so many of our foods. we will break it down with to dr. marc siegel coming up next. just to see if you qualify for a home loan. yet, some lenders charge
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>> john: well, it's a bad day on wall street. down more than 800 points. below the psychological barrier of 42,000 shows no signs of heading back north. but it might by the end of the day because i think some folks might look at that and say there is a few to be had but all of this because of the uncertainty surrounding president trump's tariff regime. how long it is going to last, exactly how much of an affected is going to have in terms of igniting a trade war. we will keep an eye on this and see which way it goes for the rest of the day, but if you're in it for the long haul, don't panic yet. [laughs] >> aishah: good advice. health secretary rfk jr. is meeting with top food industry leaders today.
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executives from general mills, pepsi, and many more are going to be there in attendance as kennedy continues his efforts to get dyes and other additives out of our food supply. let's bring in dr. marc siegel. good to have you on the program today. some of the senior leaders were told here at fox news that they may even talk about adjusting u.s. regulations for additives and thighs to meet european standards. i want to pull up on the screen the difference between what is in our food here and what people in europe eat. in the united states we can have 3,000 plus food additives allowed in our food. in the e.u., it is just 300. a fraction. doctor, how much pressure can rfk put on these food companies today? >> i think he can put a lot of pressure, for two reasons. first of all, he's been on this and studied it very strongly.
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this should be a bipartisan response to this because everybody knows our food is unhealthy, and as you just pointed out, we have ten times more additives than the european union has, and they have additives they should not have. we have hops in our beer that has been directly linked to cancer. methylene chloride in certain things. even food dye number 40 in europe is being questioned because of a few different things. i want to use the word inflammation because inflammation is what we worry about. a mega six fatty acids which are an ultra-processed foods that are in seed oils has been linked to colon cancer. omega-3 fatty acids decrease the inflammation in your body. high fructose corn syrup and stuff that is an ultra processed foods not only links to inflammation but has been linked to attention deficit hyperactivity disorder that is affecting at least 7 million of
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our kids, if not twice that, so the idea of taking a stand now and going head-to-head with big food is courageous. i interviewed him last week. i got the distinct sense he is not going to back down here, aishah. >> aishah: we have a sound bite from that interview, so let's plan for our viewers during. >> we are going to make sure americans know what they are eating. we don't want to deprive anybody of choice. we want to get the really bad stuff out of the food as quickly as possible, and we are going to do that, but we also want to make sure people are informed about what they are eating. and that, you know, that we have this chronic disease epidemic. >> aishah: that starts today. he has been really outspoken about those seed oils, getting rid of them. i want to end with this. utah has become the first state in the nation to ban fluoride and public water systems.
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doctor, how important is that, and do you see a domino effect nationwide? >> i think it will be. the governor of utah does not feel strongly about it because he says half of his counties already do not have fluoride. the epa says up to 4 milligrams per liter is safe. but the problem is we are also getting it in her toothpaste. a study out of the university of southern california says that pregnant women get too much of the stuff, it does lead to developmental issues in children. on the other hand, fluoride protects us from cavities. 25% less cavities if you get enough fluoride. so we have to juggle this. how much are you getting in the toothpaste, the water, which counties get the most. we need this to be strictly regulated because it is of huge benefit but also risk. >> aishah: maybe we just don't need to be chugging at. that is the point. dr. marc siegel, thank you for
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joining us. have a great week. >> great to see you. >> john: that dow is even further down now. compare that to what it was when donald trump took office on january 20th, at 43,487. so we are below the level when he took office after soaring past 44,000 towards 45,000. so, this is maybe some of the temporary effects, as president trump would like us to believe from his imposition of tariffs like china, mexico, canada. but that dow does not like this at all. now just a few points off of 900. we will keep watching and see where it finishes the day. >> aishah: i would think that he addresses the sometime this week sooner rather than later. >> john: maybe he might like to address it later today. elsewhere the country is going with all the tariffs.al we will see.l keep watching.
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did they just hop from a baseball game to a show on max... without leaving directv? it's like all their apps and channels... are connected. oh, it's allll connected... shows, movies, sports, cooking shows. — oh my god cooking shows! — is she talkin' to us? tell me, how does directv put all your favorite stuff on one home screen? uncanny content suggestions based on your watch history? or mind control? were you recently electrocuted? well i for one, am intrigued!
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>> aishah: we are watching a lot of news for you this hour. a search is underway for a student who mysteriously disappeared while on spring break in the dominican republic. what the investigation has uncovered so far, we will ask the sheriff assisting with that case coming up. plus any moment now vp vance taking the stage at the congressional city conference. we are going to dip into that live when we get it. president trump now meeting with the tech ceos ahead of signing a few more executive orders. comes as has power faces a new test in a government funding battle. plus that dow continues to plunge. fox business' taylor riggs has more. hi, taylor appeared. >> hard on days like this to take a deep breath, but that is what i am urging people to do.
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really everything and sell off mode today. part of this certainly is fundamental. we've been talking a lot about the big nasty r word, recession, and some of the soft data with all the consumer sentiment surveys are certainly showing us that the consumer is not good, the economic activity is soft. we are in this purgatory period where we have not really seen it show up in the hard economic numbers that we are getting every day. we have not seen that show up there, so we are sort of in limbo, waiting to see when the consumer sentiment weakness is going to start to show up in the data. certainly another aspect to this is technical. i will not get too wonky on you, but i will say days like this, selling begets selling and a little bit of a fire sale. hold your breath and let see if we can turn things around in the coming days. >> aishah: has ashley webster told us, sit on our hands a
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little bit. wait it out. >> john: it is a sad day here at fox news as we mourn the loss of a beloved colleague and an absolute rock star of the cameraman. craig savage. he passed away yesterday after a courageous battle with cancer, again from us too soon. he was a fox news original who joined the network in 1996. that was four days before we launched. for the next 30 years, he was a force to be reckoned with. consummate professional. behind the camera on groundbreaking events like our very first interview with president clinton. the secret trip to iraq in 2003, and president trump's secret trip to afghanistan in 2019. when there was a major story, he was always there. i traveled around the world with crag as part of her white house coverage. we were caught up in a whirlwind of presidential diplomacy and
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some very trying circumstances, but any time you saw crag behind the lens, you knew that everything was going to be okay. he was a kind and generous man and even in the face of enormously stressful situations and deadlines always had a positive attitude and a smile on his face. most recently he became a leader in our drone pilot programs, bringing us breathtaking images from the skies as he covered the border and national disasters like hurricanes and floods. if there was a big story, he would be at the tip of the spear. craig was not just a member of the fox family. he married into the family. his wife is one of our stellar producers in the washington bureau. crag will be missed by all of us. in particular anne-marie, his sons, jake, andrew, maxwell. his stepchildren, and his grandchildren. we hold that man him in our
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>> john: well, a disturbing scene at a high school track meet in the commonwealth of virginia. one competitor can be seen bashing ones head with a baton, not once but twice. the injured runner, kaelen tucker, eventually falls to the ground welding mother runner keeps going. tucker said she did not see it coming. "as we were coming up we were pumping a lot, so i got a little more on the outside of the curve to go around earth. when i finally pushed through to get in front of her, that's when she hit me in the head with a baton." seems like she was hit pretty hard as well, but the athlete who appears to hit her, alaila everett, because i was not on purpose.
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>> i hit her with my baton. got stuck behind her back like this and that rolled up her back. i lost my balance, and when i pumped my arms again, she got hit. i would never hit somebody on purpose. >> aishah: okay, so everett was disqualified, and they sent a statement, saying "hsl does not comment on individuals or disciplinary actions. the actions taken by the director to disqualify the runner were appropriate and correct. we thoroughly review every instance like this that involves player safety with participating schools. the membership was always made a priority to provide student athletes with a safe environment for competition." our team reached out to both parents and students but have not reached out. what do you think? >> john: as we used to say, we report. you decide. can we run the video one more time and have a look? it may take a second to get it
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back up. here we go. we are going to be quiet. [crowd noise] >> aishah: i don't know. i don't know. i don't know if i buy it. you decide. >> john: we report. you decide. was that intentional or did she lose her balance, trying to regain her balance, and when she came back down with her hand -- she accidentally hit the girl. all right, now onto this. the deadline to fund the government just days away, but has democrats taking and refusing to support a temporary funding bill. jonathan, former communications director, so here's what democrats, jonathan, are saying. listen. >> i need to have the peace of mind as i guarantee that if i vote for a bill on friday, all
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of a sudden on saturday, elon musk won't show up and shut the agency down that i just agreed to fund its. >> until i see some assurances that whatever we passed next week is going to ensure that the money is spent the way congress intends, i am going to withhold my vote until i see that. >> john: they say they are standing on principle, but are they going to be responsible for shutting down the government after the mess they created since january 20th? is that the prudent approach? >> certainly. this is what happens when you have to negotiate. republicans could pass this all on their own in the house. in the senate, they need democratic support. my old boss joe manchin is smiling pretty widely when he said we would have to preserve the filibuster and a lot of those progressive democrats should be thanking him. you have to compromise. democrats have been frustrated with the fact that the president has decided he's not going to listen to what congress has done
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when they have passed pieces of legislation funding bills. he has just decided he's not going to spend that money, and elon musk have said i don't care what you're doing great i am cutting this funding. i don't care that democrats tell that congress has the power of the purse. that is what happens when you have divided government or not super majorities in government. republicans did that for the first two years of the biden administration. the reason kevin mccarthy is no longer speaker of the houses because he compromised with the bite and white house and democrats to get bills passed. that is just how this works. >> john: the principal goes all the way back. but you may not even have unity among republicans because listen to what thomas massie said on x. "i'm not voting for the continuing resolution. why would i vote to continue the
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waste and fraud that doge has uncovered? here we are in march hunting again? "he says he will vote for it but maybe massey does not. >> is not with the majority, we have to get very close, but the pressure on democrats, whether it is a small number in the house. certainly the senate, because let's face it, democrats left to try and defend the federal worker. they are going to put those workers on furlough if they have their way to shut down the government. none of this is possible if republicans don't stick together and put pressure on the democrats. >> john: they don't have a great track record of sticking together when it comes to the budget. >> did an amazing job of getting everyone but massey. >> john: something else we need to talk about. the down down 171 points.
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uncertainty because of tariffs. you speak a lot with the canadians. where is this going? >> i think the world, wall street, a lot of corporate people are very concerned. there is no certainty. i think w what the markets like the most is certainty. that's what they expected out of this second trump administration, and they are not getting it. if tariffs are such a good idea, why does he keep putting them on, taking it off? canadians would just like to know what you want us to do to lift the tariffs. you cannot put them on on saturday, take them off on monday. this is what happens. the markets react. they are crashing right now. if you have different people in the administration giving different messages, the commerce secretary and the president are having different messages on the same day. that is not giving the market any sort of ease or certainty or investors, so i would not be surprised if we have an even
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greater crash. >> john: the markets come back 50 points if jonathan keeps talking. obviously the doubt is 1500 points below where it was when donald trump took office. that is not a good look. >> the american people and members of congress -- i think it's really important that the trump administration make really clear what they are doing and speak with one voice. overcommunicate. members get shaky. we saw this in 2018. they go back to their districts and it is important to overcommunicate to tell them exactly what to expect and what's going on. >> john: started talking again because i went back down. >> we see the stock market going down. what people at home see is their 401(k) plans, pension plans, their retirement, their kids college fund. that is stuff that will impact them. that's why they don't want to do these town hall meetings. that is really going to hurt
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them, and they are going to have to go home for congressional recess. if they are home for a week or two over easter and they don't want to do town halls, that is not a good sign. >> john: are ready to drop the gloves apparently because -- thanks, guys. appreciate it. aishah. >> aishah: a race against time in the dominican republic after eight university of pittsburgh student disappears during a late night walk on the beach. the sheriff found that students hometown will be here to shareil the latest in the ongoing search the latest in the ongoing search effort ease you back in to the dating scene. of course, that also includes having a smile you feel good about. fortunately, aspen dental specializes in dentures and implants made just for you, with affordable options and flexible ways to pay, and now, they■re 0 dollars down plus 0% interest, if paid in full in 18 months. helping our patients put their best smile forward. it's one more way aspen dental is in your corner.
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>> john: authorities in the dominican republic desperately searching for a u.s. college student who vanished while walking on the beach early in the morning. investigators questioning a man they say was seen with her right before she disappeared. the student's hometown sheriff with the latest on the search and just moments. first two steve harrigan with the latest. >> this has been an intensive five-day search in the air with helicopters on the water and on lance as well through sudiksha konanki. she is a 20-year-old college student, a junior pre-med student at university of pittsburgh. she was on spring break in the dominican republic with five of
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her girlfriends last seen thursday morning just after 4:00 a.m., headed to the beach with a group of friends. she remained on the beach with one young man adam has not been seen since. indian nationals but permanent u.s. residents. her father spoke to her the night before she disappeared. everything seemed to be going well on the spring break trip. >> my daughters said that everything was going okay. she was really happy. >> so far, no arrests, no charges against anyone have been filed. john, back to you. >> john: thank you so much for the latest on that. aishah. >> aishah: let's bring in the sheriff from loudoun county where sudiksha konanki is from. her family lives there. the medic and officials are apparently sort of hinting or leading towards that this might have been an accidental drowning
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that perhaps if she went swimming in the middle of the night and went under a big wave, but you are pushing back on that. you are not ready to make that conclusion. tell me why. >> i think it's too early to rule anything out. dominican authorities are working hard, conducting interviews, trying to get the best information that they can. we are working with our office down there, u.s. embassy down there. the fbi and others. that have all been a part of this thing since this investigation began from our side, so we are not ruling anything in or out. turn over every single rock before we come to any conclusions. i think we are making progress, interviewing the right people, but it's going to take a while to get all the accurate information we need. >> aishah: she was on this girls trip with five other gi girls. they were not alone, though.
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there were some other folks with them on the beach before she goes missing. you are talking to you someone. authorities are talking to a young man who was last seen with her. what can you tell us about this person? >> well, it's an ongoing investigation, so i cannot really tell you much about the interviews that are ongoing. i think there is information out there that maybe social media misinformation or just incorrect information. we w make sure that before we release anything, because this is important. not only on the circumstances very difficult for everybody, the family. my heart and prayers go out to them right now, but we want to make sure that we have all the information correct. that is why we are working with are folks down there at the embassy. the indian embassy as well. our folks from the dominican republic to make sure we are not giving any wrong
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information, so before we comment on exactly who they are talking to you and what of information we are getting at this point, we do not want to come to any kinds of judgments or conclusions. >> aishah: it is hard not to think about natalee holloway and what happened in aruba. just the horrific situation that her family went through and the whole country was watching along with her family. obviously it is so sad to see an american family send their daughter off for a vacation, a fun trip and to never get her back. are you hopeful so that you are going to find some answers quickly turned back these situations, time is of the essence. >> time is of the essence. we were on this right away as soon as we found out. contacted our federal counterparts that have some presents down there to make sure everybody was engaged as quickly as possible. working on a lot of things that
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i cannot really talk about. but believe me, there is a lot of information that is being looked at right now. a lot of different things when it comes to electronic communications, all these other things, but you're right. time is of the essence. we want to make sure we are doing everything in our power. dominican authorities are doing what they can with the helicopters. they are doing everything they can out there. we are doing everything as well, and we want to come to some sort of resolution. >> aishah: maybe you have a new tech that natalee holloway's case did not have, so hopefully that will help in your investigation as well. sheriff, we've got to let you go. just out of time. appreciate it. >> john: president trump's tariffs shaking the stock markets. he from is threatening more of . that's coming up next. ♪
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>> laid a check of the dowel, this one continues down more than 1000 points now. down 2.4%. and the overall not a whole lot. what's driving this? fuelled by an escalating trade war and how president trump is threatening new tariffs on canada. fox business mac scorin has the details. what are these latest tariffs? >> reporter: he is proposing reciprocal tariffs on canadian lumber and dairy under the u.s.-mexico trade agreement a limited amount of american dairy products can be shipped terra free but once that amount is exceeded steep tariffs kick in. but it has to be noted the u.s. has never exceeded the quota set by canada so u.s. dairy goods have yet to be hit with these high tariffs. canadian dairy is a significant import into the u.s. and the president has been reeling against these duties. take a listen. >> president donald trump: our country has been ripped off by everybody and that stops now.
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i had it stopped in my first term and we will really stop it now because this has been very unfair. >> reporter: when it comes to lumber tariffs we could look at tariffs as high as 51.8% and builders are warning a higher price of imported wood will lead to an increase in construction costs. >> we will see were all this goes. max gordon for us. thank you. the fundamentals of the economy are still strong but uncer uncertainty. >> sometimes sell-offs beget sell-offs and it turns into a frenzy and you never know. like ash webster said the president could come out today during an executive order signing or this roundtable he's about to go to and make a few comments and turn this around. >> simply the words, i am not going to do tariffs. but we will see. thank you for being with us today. >> thank you. >> the story with mark mark martha picks up from here. >> martha:
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