tv Good Morning America ABC March 15, 2014 4:00am-5:01am PDT
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good morning, america. we have breaking news this morning. deliberate action. malaysia's high minister now saying what happened to flight 370 was no accident. so who took control of the plane? was it a hijacker. police are intensifying their investigation of the pilots overnight plus the brand-new air and sea search for the missing plane, where they are looking now. also this morning, person of interest. it's a man arrested in west virginia connected to serial killings in a neighboring state. the possible break in a case that made resident as parade to even open their front doors in the d.c. suburbs. new developments in a notorious kidnapping this morning. did this woman play a role in snatching paul fronczak from a hospital in chicago 50 years ago? a fresh clue to a decades old
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mystery. and going ape. a rare c-section brings this tiny baby gorilla into the world where vets are keeping a close eye on her after medical problems. we'll tell you how she's doing right now. hey, good morning. as we come on the air there are late breaking developments in the mystery of flight 370. malaysia's prime minister making his first comments about the plane saying the investigation has now entered a, quote, new phase. according to the prime minister, the latest information confirms that whatever happened on board was adeliberate action. he said the aircraft communications systems were intentionally disabled which is why investigators are looking into whether this was a car hijacking on plane or a rogue pilot whose motivation remain
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unclear. >> initially there was word the plane had been up in the air for four hours leaving search crews with a 2400-mile radius to search. now it's up to eight hours expanding it to 4,000. crews are concentrating are two corridors, first the border of pakistan to northern thailand, the southern the indian ocean. a huge parameter. earlier this morning in hi news conference we turn to abc's david kerley. good morning. >> reporter: good morning, bianna. this does confirm our reporting which narrows the theories of what happened. it now appears it was taken over either by a rogue pilot or it was hijacked, as you mentioned and did stay in the air much longer than we thought. it's now clear say investigators communications gears switched off shall the changing direction of flight 370 appear to all be done on purpose by someone at the controls.
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>> this movement consistent with deliberate actions by someone on the plane. >> reporter: this is the latest, a 12:41 departure from kuala lumpur to beijing but just past 26 minutes in, a data signaling system is shut off. then 40 minutes in at 1:21 in the morning, the 777's location transmitter also shut off now confirmed, the plane does turn around heading back across malaysia and is last seen on radar at 2:15 a.m. but this morning, we know because the jet was signaling a satellite each hour it turned again, either north or south and flew for another six hours at least. 3600 miles. a source and experts tell abc news the southern route is the most likely uncovered by radar putting the malaysian jet somewhere off australia. why and who did this? one unnamed malaysian official is quoted as saying it's
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conclusive it's a hijacking. the prime minister, however, did not agree. >> despite reports that the plane was hijacked, i wish to be very clear. we are still investigating all possibilities as so what caused mh 370 to deviate from its original flight path. >> reporter: and that includes the possibility that one or both of the pilots went rogue turning off that communications gear and turning around. we only know how far it flew because of the satellite pigs and we and the world's pilots only learned a couple of days ago that that system cannot be shut off by a pilot. so the search of the south china sea which is north of malaysia has now been called off. no reason to look there. a new search will undoubtedly begin off australia, but even though we know when the jet last pinged the satellite, it could have flown for another hour or so so there's still a bigger
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area to search, but not as big as what it could be. dan? >> huge area to search and this mystery just deepens. david kerley, thank you for your continuing coverage. this new information gives new urgency, of course, to the investigation into the pilots. if fact, just hours ago they arrived at the home of the plane's captain and abc's bob woodruff is in the malaysian capital of kuala lumpur with the latest. bob, good morning. >> reporter: well, good morning, dan. you know, this news is just sweeping across this country of malaysia right now. this has been going on for seven days now, the people have been criticizing the police for not searching through the homes of any of the pilots or crew members. well, that's changing today. while search teams continue looking for the plane, the police here are trying to learn more about the crew members and passengers including the pilots. so far for the first time this week they searched the home of the pilot, captain zaharie ahmad shah. abc's gloria riviera was there at his gate watching the search. >> it was just after 2:42 when a
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white van came up to the gates, was carrying two officers in plainclothes. said they were from malaysia's police headquarters after that a police car with two in uniforms came in spent two hours here. upscale neighborhoods and neighbors say it's a tight-knit community. >> reporter: in his home he has his own flight simulator. also on the manifest is fariq abdul hamid, now engaged to be married. i visited his house yesterday. no one answered the door. everyone i spoke to said nice things, especially this malaysian singer, one of his closest friends. she grew up in the same hometown in panang. >> he is a nice guy, truly young. i don't think he's involved. >> reporter: as the prime minister spoke today, family members watched it closely hoping for good news. this father's 29-year-old son is on that plane. his hope now is that he is still
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alive. one of the questions this morning is why did it take so much time for the government to reveal this kind of information? well, it's been told by many people that if they did, people around the world have an idea where the plane may be and they can stench. they could look for any signs of it. today the prime minister said that is the reason why they did finally release it today. bianna? >> a lot of people probably saying that's not good enough. thank you. despite all the new information, there are still many unanswered questions about what happened on board flight 370. and for that we turn to abc's pierre thomas who has more on the investigation and how it's proceeding from washington. pierre, good morning to you. does it surprise you it took this long, eight days, for investigators to search the pilot's home? did they waste valuable time? >> reporter: sources are saying they clearly do and the pilots would have been focus number one, something you needed to jump on early in the investigation and quite frankly this is the quandary that u.s. law enforcement finds itself in. the fbi is not on the ground in
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nevaeh and have no capacity to investigate. >> so what is us airways law enforcement going to encourage them to look at? >> reporter: i expect them have them focus on the mental health of the piles and crew. they are the people that had easy access to the plane, control of the plane so they want to know was there something going on in their personal lives, mental health issues that needed to be resolved? that would be job number one. >> reporter: the prime minister called it a deliberate act. what are your sources telling us? >> reporter: so far they found nothing like that and one source pointed out a number. the plane had ample opportunity, the pilots were -- whoever was in control of that plane had ample opportunity to hit a populated area with a plane fuel of fuel so less concerned about that. on the other hand, they say the fact this plane was in the air
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so long and we still don't know where it is, huge problem. >> a huge mystery and, of course, ovr our thoughts and prayers with are the family and loved ones of those passengers, not knowing what happened. we appreciate your time this morning. pierre. >> dan? >> let's bring in john nance who is a former commercial pilot and joins us from seattle. john, good morning to you. we're now looking at a huge swath of the planet earth that needs to be searched here. even though they've narrowed it down to two corridors we're still talking about huge, huge sections to search. how can they begin to do this? >> you do this like eating an elephant. one bite at a time, in other words, you're going to have to basically decide what your search grid is and they're going to have to go at it just slice by slice by slice and the opportunity to be able to find this airplane, if it really is in the water, dan, is very, very small. >> if it's in deep water in some points of the social several miles down even if they found it how would they retreat it? >> it's going to take a lot of
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special equipment. there's not all that much of it on the planet. you'll have to go down to 14 though thousand, 15,000, 16,000 feet and retrieving it will be quite a project akin to finding the "titanic" and be able to bring some stuff up. first of all they'll have to locate it, a needle in the haystack. >> you have been in the aviation business for decades now. does your gut tell you anything about what happened here? >> yeah, with these supposed facts as long as they don't change about the sequence and the shutting off of radios and so on, did this is a hijack but probably an internal hijacking, in other words one of the pilots. it could be external but whoever was in control of the airplane after the turn knew what they were doing. they took it up to 45,000 feet. the chilling possibility there is it was for the purpose of killing the passengers. >> killing possibility, indeed, and we keep saying this but it remains true, this is a mystery and an unprecedented one. john nance we really appreciate
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your guidance. thank you. we want to check the other headlines and for that as always it's mr. ron claiborne. ron. good morning. >> hi there dan. good morning, everyone. there were no megawinners in the huge mega millions lottery. the numbers drawn friday that no one picked were 7, 20, 40, 54, 69 and a megaball of 12. however, you have a shot to win, even bigger with tuesday's jackpot at an estimated $400 million, the odds, 1 in 259 million. california fire crews are battling a raging wildfire that torched nearly 150 acres of bone-dry land about 50 miles northeast of los angeles. nearly 200 firefighters were called in to battle friday's blaze. that is still not under control. two super scooper planes drew water from nearby lake -- a nearby lake to keep the fire from reaching nearby ranches. luckily, no one has had to be evacuated. and take a look at this new source surveillance video that shows the moment that the deadly
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explosion leveled two apartment buildings her in new york city. you see grocery flying off store chefs inside the store, a block away. the bodies of eight people meanwhile, who were killed in the blast have been pulled from the debris and investigators discovered natural gas underground which supports the theory at least the powerful explosion was caused by a gas leak. and in tennessee, teenagers on a recent fishing trip reeled in a little more than they expected. well, a lot more. call this the catch of the day, two bags filled with $10,000 in stolen cash. the money was colored red from a dye pack that exploded in the bag. police believe the loot was stolen during a bank heist back in december. the suspects in that robbery told investigators allegedly that they dumped the money in the lake and that's exactly where the fishermen found and pulled up that sack of money. and finally on a personal note, just want to congratulate my colleague, just five feet away, dan harris on the
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publication of his new book. >> oh, thank you. >> "10% happier" but want to reveal my new book is copping out later this week, as you see there, "11% happier." you can buy both books but if you only buy one, you do the math. figure it out for yourself and for a limited time only, if you buy my book, you get this collectible mug, i'm 11% happier. >> because of what -- >> you get the first collectible mug. >> legal papers will be arriving soon. >> amazing to witness. the covers look very similar, don't they? yeah. allegedly. here, you give this to dan. >> congratulations. are you going to sign it for him? >> thanks, ron. accomplished author indeed. >> thank you, plagiarism. there is a new development in a high-profile serial murder case. police are investigating whether a man in custody on a weapons charge has a connection to the series of shockings killings in alexandria, virginia.
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his resemblance to the man police are looking for is uncanny. take a look and abc's linzie janis is here with the details. they really do look alike in the sketches, linzie. >> good morning. these murders inside -- they're hoping police have their man but authorities are stressing that this is still an unongoing investigation and that the people of alexandria should continue to be aware of their personal safety. alexandria police tell abc news while investigating the three brutal murders haunting the suburban d.c. community, anonymous tips led them to this man, charles severance, a convicted felon he was arrested in west virginia fry for weapons violations. >> they're trying to put together the pieces of the puss toll directly tie him to the murder of one of these three individuals. >> reporter: in a news release alexandria police stress it is premature to name him as the only possible suspect.
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but many here in this d.c. suburb are pointing out that severance's booking photo bears a striking resemblance to this sketch the man responsible for the shooting death of ruthanne lodato. in february lodato was gunned down after opening her door to a strange man. her caretaker was also shot but survived. >> the caretaker may end up being a direct eyewitness to the case. >> reporter: in fact, it was the caretaker's description that helped police create this sketch. in a february news conference, alexandria police linked lodato's murdering to the slay of ron kirby, a local transportation official and the 2003 of a police chief's wife, nancy dunning. >> the similars and unusual nature of all three shootings occurring in alexandria require the police department to consider the possibility that all the cases are linked together. >> everybody is talking about it. i mean, that's the only thing that it's really affecting
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everybody and nobody knows the facts. >> reporter: well, here are the reasons police think that the murders are connected. the victims were all involved in the community, all were shot in their hopes during the day and within two miles of each other. finally, the bullets used in all three murders are similar. dan and bianna, the man that they have in custody, severance, one interesting thing about him. he ran for mayor twice in the community so he's known to the community. >> well, if this is closure at least the residents can sleep better. >> but again police stressing still not have connected him. >> linzie, thank you. >> i'm 11% happier drinking out of this mug. >> we are going to shift gears away from math. to a medical story involving this little girl, the tiny baby gorilla with a knitted hat on. a special delivery at the zoo in san diego, born by c-section which is extremely rare in the animal kingdom and abc's sara haines is wearing a matching dress this morning is here with the story.
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good morning. >> in honor of our baby little girl, she was a very special delivery and hard fought one at that. although c-sections account for one in three human births in the u.s. they are practically unheard of when it comes to gorillas. it's the incredible video that's captivating people around the world. the birth of this baby gorilla, a miracle in the animal kingdom. the video filmed by the san diego zoo showing an emergency c-section performed not on a human, but on a gorilla. a mommy san diego zoo's first-time mother in labor for 12 brutal hours when unexpected complications forced doctors to take drastic measures in an attempt to save both lives. >> the c-section was the right decision. we think that the health of the fetus would have been compromised if we delayed the surgery any longer. >> reporter: c-sections may be an ordinary procedure for humans but they are extremely rare for gorillas and this is the first ever for san diego zoo. the baby girl gorilla barely
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survived and is not out of the woods yet. just two days into her fragile life after struggling to breathe, one of her lungs collapsed. doctors rushed to save her in a grueling surgery. the procedure considered a success but she remains in critical condition. doctors are monitoring her around the clock. >> she's extremely strong. she can grasp. she kicks. she looks around. she could hold her own head up which is pretty amazing. >> now she's showing a lot of progress although still getting oxygen and she's starting to breathe as her lungs get stronger. >> so cute. >> absolutely cute. >> i love your matching dress. >> thank you. >> very appropriate. >> dressier story is my suggestion. >> time now for air check of the weather and welcome her back eri erica mart i6789 z, good morning. >> right now we are tracking a low developing in the southern states. now this is of interest. it's been all the buzz on social
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media simply because, of course, it is st. patrick's day weekend and how is this system going to behave. come monday when everybody wants to grab a cocktail or two and have a good imtoo. we are seeing some rain developing in the south. but we do have some colder air in place here. so by monday or sunday into monday rather we may see some slight snow moving across the mid-atlantic and then the system continues to push offshore. so really it's all about how this system will behave within the next 24 to 36 hours. otherwise, for today and tonight severe weather across texas including hail and some strong winds. an isolated tornado or snow. right now tracking that severe weather but more importantly warmer weather across california, conditions are getting warm out there. feels more like summer than spring. that's your national outlook.
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>> well, that was your local weather and now back to ron. >> i've never seen ron do this well. >> yeah. >> you're five feet tall. >> ron is standing -- >> very tall. >> he's a lot smaller this morning. >> little people. >> on a roll this morning. >> ron is killing us this morning. >> all right. [ laughter ] >> i got a lot more stuff. >> we don't have much more time. another story to bring you. a new way advertisers are trying
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to atact our attention. sexy ads no longer aimed at men. hunk sters are hawking products to women and it seeps to be working. how hard is it to be that guy? we sent nick watt to learn the tricks of the trade. >> i heard you need it now. >> i only have ten minutes. >> i only need seven. >> reporter: some people say this ridiculously salacious commercial is empowering to women. >> ooh. >> good morning. >> reporter: and this too. >> so tight. >> reporter: these innuendo laden spot with unsavory products are hunkvertising. >> there's a paradigm that's been made geared toward men. >> we're saying, like, you know what, it's okay to make a woman laugh. >> reporter: underwear is supposed to be sexy. salad dressing? >> whoo!
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oh. >> reporter: 1 million moms objected to kraft's sexy contents. others think it's sexist. >> it's condescending to think women need hot guys to lure them into buying their household products. >> reporter: okay, we are a high-brow tv show not a toilet cleaner and asked james and chris to make a hunkvertisement. our point, to grab women it must be about more than just beefy products. >> make love to the camera, nick. i don't know. i think you need a real beefcake to make this work. [ applause ] >> nick watt once again proving he will do anything to be on television. you can see much of more of his report on "nightline prime" which premieres tonight on abc at 9:00. this is one of my other jobs at abc, one of the co-ang chorus of
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"nightline." we are super excited about this new show and have incredible stories coming up so tune in tonight. >> yes. all right, well, coming up on "good morning america," the police under the microscope at the oscar pistorius trial. did they bungle the crime scene contaminating crucial evidence and what does this mean for the fate of the blade runner? >> 50 years later a man pointing fingers on who stole a baby from a chicago hospital in a notorious kidnapping case. does his story about little paul fronczak hold up? that's next. time for a pop quiz. weir word was added to the oxford english dictionary. cyberslacking, whackadoodle, jeggings or bajillion. >> jeggings. >> jeggings.
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oh, it's the bear who belongs in a circus. hanging and a high-wire act as he tries to get a little one left for him. it is now going viral. i can't get enough of that. look at him. >> how far you'll go for food. >> you know what that feels like. >> sara haines, always a great reaction. that's why we keep her here. also coming up a fascinating new development in a decades-long mystery that involves paul fronczak. you may have heard about this case. stolen from his mom at the hospital, this morning the new witness coming forward to say, he knows who did it. but first this morning a fresh twist in the blade runner trial. playing out in a courtroom in south africa. >> we've seen an emotional oscar
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pistorius cry and get sick in court. now lawyers for the olympian are aiming to show the investigation into the killing of model reeva steenkamp was bungled to the max with it taking place right in the middle of murder scene, a theft. matt gutman is there. matt? >> reporter: good morning, dan and bianna. every day here behind me in that courtroom dozens of people showing up just to watch oscar pistorius walk out. south african tv has called this the trial of the century. every day delivering some shocking twist or turn. but the admission by the lead investigator that his men mishandled the possible murder weapon may be even stole pistorius' watch could change this trial. marching out of court friday the blade runner seemed confident for the first time in ten days of testimony. his defense team had spent the afternoon verbally bludgeoning the lead investigator in his murder trial who, get this, admitted his team handled and
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moved the murder weapon without gloves. >> i asked him what are you doing and then he turned to me and was looking and then he realized there was no gloves on. >> reporter: he even suspected his own men of stealing not one, but possibly two of pistorius' luxury watches. >> i can't believe it. we were just there. how can this watch be gone? >> reporter: oscar pistorius is fighting murder charges but all week he's been unable to fight back the emotion. nearly each time forensic photos of his blood smeared bathroom were shown he became physically ill. heaving in his front row bench thursday delivered this bucket on monday and almost every day covering his head and eyes with paper or just his hands. the olympian is accused of murdering his model girlfriend reeva steenkamp last year in his bathroom saying when he realized she wasn't an intruder he used a cricket bath to smash down the
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door. using that same bat and the same door, the prosecution has tried to demonstrate that he was lying about his version of events that night. now, that hasn't exactly worked for them. and right now what we're seeing is pistorius' defense going on the offense doing something i've never before seen happen in a trial before. they're of course aing the prosecution to bring to the stand the first cop on the scene who they say will reveal even more police bunk 8ing. dan, bianna. >> they clearly see an opening here. matt gutman thank you very much. another look at the top stories with ron. hi again. good morning, everyone. in the news malaysian authorities say the disappearance of that jumbo jetliner with more than 200 people on board now missing more than a week was the result of a deliberate action and not an accident. investigators are looking into the possibility the flight was hijacked possibly by someone on board that plane and maybe even a rogue pilot. new information also reveals the plane flew more than seven hours after its last radio contact and
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made more than one direction turn while airborne. air and sea search crews are now searching a 2400-square-mile radius for any sign of it. in ukraine, tensions are high ahead of tomorrow's referendum vote in which crimea will decide whether to break away and join russia this after secretary of state -- u.s. secretary of state john kerry and russia's foreign minister failed to find common ground on friday. kerry said afterward the international community will not recognize the outcome of the vote expected to be in favor of secession. finally take a look. dramatic video of a horse being air-lifted to safety after a hiking accident in california. this after the horse and its rider fell 50 feet into a ravine at the angeles national forest. it was tranquilized and hoyted by a helicopter for the three-mile air ride. he suffered only cuts and bruises and vets expect him to fully recover. the rider is also going to be okay. so happy ending to that story. >> the horse has quite a story
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to tell. >> if he could talk. >> right. >> tranquilized. >> unless he's mr. ed. you've heard of mr. ed. >> i know. >> '60s. >> sorry. my fault. thanks, ron. >> you got it. time for another check of the weather and meteorologist erika martin from wtnh in new hampshire. >> good morning. this is all about st. patrick's day weekend and we want to know how cold will it be? nasty out there. will we have a good chance to party? the good news at least it will be warmer for today getting colder by tomorrow and into monday, so new york city seeing 20s by monday. to start the day eventually topping out in the 30s. d.c. also seeing cooler temperatures so a warm trend to colder air unfortunately and we're just five days away from springtime so something to keep in mind but we do also have severe weather going on across the southern portion of the country, some rain anywhere from 2 to 3 inches locally. that is your national
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perspective. here is a look at your local weather. >> this weather report was brought to you by target. >> hi. this is adorable. all right. enough said. enough said. change the subject so copping up on "gma," the new clues in the 50-year-old mystery of paul fronczak kidnapped at birth. the man who claims he knows who did it. wait until you hear who he's pointing the finger at. and flexing those legendary muscles during his downtime who went bananas over them. up ahead in "pop news." ♪
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...until we found a connection. you have the power to change your child's life. the boys town national hline can help. (tdd# 1-800-448-1433) we turn now to trying to solve the most famous kidnapping since the lindbergh baby. in 1964 paul fronczak was snatched from a hospital by a woman posing as a nurse. police pursued hundreds of leads until over a year later a little
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boy was found abandoned in a busy shopping area, 800 miles away in newark, new jersey. the fronczaks had their baby back, or did they? almost 50 years later paul took a dna test to discover he really wasn't paul fronczak at all. so who was he and what happened to the real paul snatched from his mother's arms a half century ago? abc's chief investigative reporter brian ross with the next shocking part of the story. >> reporter: do you know who stole this baby? >> yes. >> who stole the baby? >> my mother. >> his name is johnny harbaugh and what he told us about his mother may seem far-fetched. but it most definitely is not. his mother's name was linda taylor, a notorious figure in chicago in the 1970s and '80s. dubbed america's welfare queen and vilified by president ronald reagan. >> the name is linda taylor. the alleged illinois advisory committee on public assistance investigated, came up with 82 charges of welfare fraud,
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perjury and bigamy. >> reporter: we began to look for her after our "20/20" tip line provided this clue, the baby was stolen by a lady known as the welfare queen. linda taylor died 12 years ago but we found her son living in a chicago suburb, harbaugh said he was a teenager living in this house in chicago when he came home to discover a new baby. was your mother capable of stealing a baby? >> my mother was capable of anything. not only stealing a baby, but she could steal you. >> reporter: harbaugh said his mother was a master of disguise, could pass as white or black, porter rican or hawaiian. in her schemes to collect fraudulent welfare payments. sometimes posing as a doctor or a nurse. >> she had a room with nothing but wigs and nurse dresses and shoes. >> reporter: at the time that paul fronczak was stolen from the hospital, police put out a sketch. >> yes. >> reporter: do you think that's your mother?
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>> except for the nose but she could do anything with her face or her hair. >> reporter: in the 1970s when linda taylor was put on trial for welfare fraud -- >> miss taylor, can we talk to you a moment? >> reporter: she actually came under investigation for stealing the fronczak baby. from one newspaper account, one of her ex-husbands told agents that miss taylor appeared one day in the mid-1960s with a newborn baby although she had not been pregnant. >> so fascinating and barbara walters spent a lot of time covering the case, as well. such a mystery. >> the story is not over. tune in to "20/20" at 10:00, 9:00 central tonight for much more. coming up on "good morning america," the kitten who is still learning her table manners. the unusual way she loves to chow down. up next in "pop news."
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♪ stakes are really high for this "pop news." you're really promoting it. >> i heard a kitten is involved. >> there's a kitten. it will end one. j. lo's new video is getting buzz for its depiction of men and we love it. apparently fed up with the objectifaction of women in videos she's drowning herself with semi flaked men for i luv you papi. her famous dress from the grammys. >> i find the whole objectifaction of men unfair. >> you wish. >> are you going to write a book about it? >> you sit there and see these women. people don't look like that. now men can go, my gut doesn't look like that. >> what if it does? >> oh, nice. >> what if it does, ron?
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>> what are you saying? >> famous last words. >> ron "washboard" claiborne. >> now i'm sure you've heard the term betsy and probably used bathroom break. they are official entries. also making the cup. tp'ing and in iowa we've been using that verb and the act of tp'ing for more than 20 years, wackadoodle, do-over and scissor-kick. >> i thought jeggings would make the list. >> no, wackadoodle was the one in that option. the last one you would have thought of. you know what tping is. >> if you threw toilet paper in tree, that's not nice. >> nice way of calling that verb. i think it's call vandalism. next up, the gorgeous kellen lutz has been showing off his herculean muscles while greeting the locals in thailand. here he is in the aptly named monkey bay.
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the hollywood heartthrob is vacationing for his 29th birthday, so young and still appears to be in incredible shape following his role in the january movie "the legend of hercules." >> i feel like they're objecty phiing him in that movie. >> so is bianna. and this is the one you've all been waiting for a stray kitten has become an internet celebrity thanks to the adorable sound she makes while eating. [ cat noises ] >> it's really making that noise. >> no, it's not thanksgiving. but that kitty is aptly 2345i78ed turkey. the gorgeous kitten has joust found a permanent home where she will no doubt gobble until her heart's content. i mean when i make that sound nobody thinks it's cute. >> animals can get away with a lot more. >> make a sound that isn't cute. >> i'm devastated. i'll have to call my mom. she told me that was decorating
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people tp'ing my house. >> they loved you. >> vandalism. >> oh, bianna. i'm so sorry. >> kidding. >> not 10% happier today. >> no. >> oh, well, we'll be right back. >> with decorating the house. and these little angels build in strength. and that little angel says, "weeeeeeeee!" 60% more sheets than charmin. everything you want and the value you love. angel soft.
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>> please, i can imagine. >> don't forget. his book is real. his isn't yet. >> please bear that in mind. >> don't search for "11% happier." we'll see you tomorrow. harrison harrison. forged out of bravery, sacrifice, and duty. from all corners of the country, a family for life. ♪ but whether they served in lands far away or
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communities close to home, some of these men and women may face difficult times or even crisis. but sometimes reaching out for help can be the most challenging and worthwhile mission of all. thankfully, friends, family, and communities are standing by their service members and veterans now more than ever. ♪ we're all in this together. when you recognize something isn't right, make the call to the veterans crisis line or military crisis line. during times of crisis, reach out and call. dial 1-800-273-8255 and press 1.
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>> good morning, everyone. i'm katie marzullo. we will start off with a quick first look we weather with meteorologist lisa argen. >> we are looking at a clear start. temperatures are cooler. we are in the upper 40s in some locations. low 40s napa. 50 san carlos with 45 on the coast. that is significantly cooler. as much as 9 degrees carolina on the east than yesterday. and livermore a little warmer. it is going to be a warm weekend. today and tomorrow experiencing a slight offshore flow. look at the numbers. mid-to upper 60s coast i'd and mid-to upper 70s around the bay. and perhaps
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