tv Dateline NBC NBC July 15, 2016 10:00pm-11:01pm EDT
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>> ben: daniel will be between 90-92, slider. a little mix and a change-up every now and then. they had to make the pick with joseph. that was the arm of the catcher right there. >> ben: haven't really had a chance to watch tommy throw, but freddy acknowledging, man, that had air on it. tommy does so well here, he creates a throwing lane, being right-handed. you have to space yourself out. he catches and goes right at it. he steps inside and throws a rocket. >> tom: wasn't even close. >> ben: no!
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that is a feel good for tommy. >> tom: caught stealing, goes 1-3-6. outside, 2-1. daniel stumpf, the same as tyler goodell. a rule five selection out of the royals organization as we mentioned. he has to stay on the major league roster the entire year or be offered back to the royals. he would first have to go through waivers and another team could pick him up. phillies still in the process of accumulating inventory. you can see by that, 92 miles an hour fastball. it can get hotter than that. foul ball, 3-2.
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broken bat looper towards center field. freddy galvis, can't get it. so a base hit for de aza. he is 1-2. >> ben: he hits one ball about .395 to right center. has nothing to show for it. it disintegrates the bat. gets a single. >> tom: reyes is batting right-handed for the first time. he is 0-4 but at an rbi. his last at bat that brought home the assurance run for the
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>> ben: perfect example of what we were talking about earlier, not getting down to the ground at the same time with each knee. one hits first. you're going to expose the five hole. ground ball, right side. cesar to his left, has it, another inning is over. so daniel stumpf's first appearance since april is in the books. he picks off a runner and gets through the ninth. last chance for the phillies against familia.
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>> tom: time now for the wb mason delivery of the game. let's go to the sixth inning. >> ben: it is starting to heat up when balls like this get out. neil walker, the three run homer in the sixth inning. that is your wb mason delivery of the game. >> tom: so now we go to the bottom of the ninth inning. familia will take over for the mets after addison reed goes an inning and a third scoreless. familia 31-31 in save opportuniti opportunities. he was perfect back in 2008. familia now with 31 consecutive
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saves without blowing a save. i don't know if anyone will touch him. he is a starter. you couldn't wait to get in the batter's box. as a closer -- the number of pitches he has thrown. >> tom: familia has been outstanding. he was supposed to close the all-star game if the national league got the lead which they never did, so he just took a trip to san diego. familia will face cody asche to start it out. bullpen for the mets, see what they've done tonight. three strikeouts.
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asche takes on the outside corner. it is 0-1. cody tonight is 1-2. walked back in the fifth inning. it is one ball and one strike. >> ben: it can not be fun to catch. it is 96 and 99. it is not a move he is able to get on the baseball. it is frightening. sometimes he will go straight down, sometimes he will go side ways. the last thing you can do is give a pitcher too much credit but this guy can be tough. >> tom: 87 on that one. slider and it is 1-2.
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that one may have been a cutter and that one may have been a slider. three miles an hour difference. two balls, two strikes. >> ben: there is the movement down and away you talked about. exactly what i'm talking byte the pitch is 97 and almost bounces. so at some point, this comes out, even though you're seeing cody aschie saying i have a bead
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on this pitch and then it goes down and side ways. 97. >> tom: now galvis is 0-3. grounded out, struck out, popped out. chose bunt, takes low. i wonder how long familia can sustain that. the max effort sort of theory. it doesn't look like there is a lot of effort that goes into it. if that makes any sense. >> ben: it is a good three outs. all depends on how he conditions himself. >> tom: that is foul. a piece of d'arnaud. 1-2. or 1-1, excuse me. tomorrow we'll be back on nbc 10 at 7:00. the phils and mets, game two. photo game tomorrow here at citizen's bank park.
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we talked about it before. they don't have the normal starters but what major league team does and that is relied on the long ball tonight and a strong bullpen. 3 1/3 scoreless. they're chevrolet players of the game. familia with his 32nd save in 32 opportunities this year closes this one out. bartolo colon gets the victory for the mets. 5-3 the final score. we'll be back to philadelphia to wrap things up after this.
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independence blue cross. live fearless. learn more at ibx.com. final score tonight from citizen's bank park, it is the mets, 5, and the phillies 3, with the win. bartolo colon is now 8-4 with the loss. jeremy hellickson falls to 6-7. 3 37th save for familia. jared eickhoff will take the mound. the producer of phillies baseball. and tonight's director was jraquilla. for ben davis, gregg murphy, and our entire crew, i'm tom mccarthy. phillies post game live can be seen on csn. stay tuned here on nbc 10, date line nbc starts right now.
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survivor remorse until today. >> reporter: when kevin learned ten children and teenagers were killed in the attack and dozens more hospitalized he put his holiday on hold and see if he could help. you see he is a doctor, a newly minted facial trauma surgeon. >> i realized, all right, i need to offer my services. i ended up first going to the children's hospital. >> reporter: as it turned out, the hospital didn't need his help but invited him in to see what they were up against. >> they had received 15 patients throughout the course of the night. two of them unfortunately died overnight. three are in critical condition. one of them remains unclaimed. meaning his parents are either dead or still in the hospital and the remainder just had either minor cuts or bruises or bad psychological damage. >> reporter: what was your sense of how the staff was doing, how they were handling this? >> they seemed poised and composed.
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everybody seemed a little sleep deprived. there were some family members waiting in the lobby who looked hysterical but that is to be expected. >> reporter: in a few days he will be leaving france, moving to his next stop but he says he leaves fearing in today's world, no place is ever truly safe. >> i spoke with my parents about that earlier. they said you need to come back to the u.s. and i said the u.s. is no safer than anywhere else. >> i was in dallas a week ago. >> there you go. >> reporter: it sounds like you have embraced what everyone calls a new normal, the expectation that these things can happen wherever you go. >> i never expected it to be that close. i felt had it been closer i wouldn't be sitting here right now, but life goes on. you can't live in fear. with my moderate to severe crohn's disease,... ...i was always searching for ways to manage my symptoms. i thought i had it covered. then i realized managing was all i was doing.
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the driver was known to be a loner. the question now is was he a so-called lone wolf, an angry man with a grudge, or was he operating as part of a larger terrorist organization? here's josh mankiewicz with the latest on the investigation. >> reporter: tonight, french investigators are examining data from the phone and computer of mohamed lahouaiej bouhlel, a 31-year-old delivery driver and
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small-time criminal, who was born in tunisia, and then became first a french resident, then yesterday a mass murderer. police identified him from the i.d. card he left in the truck. this morning, they raided his modest apartment in a working-class suburb of nice, trying to learn more about a man who apparently never made it on to the french anti-terrorism radar. >> translator: he was totally unknown to the intelligence services both internationally and locally. >> reporter: he had no terrorist history but had a criminal rap sheet that included theft, vandalism and assault on another driver in a road rage incident. he was married, the father of three children, and he was also separated from his wife in a way that's been described as bitter. investigators are looking at all of that. >> they will be going through every aspect of his digital life on-line, his phone, his
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computers, anything he had that might give them information. >> reporter: tim clemente is now retired from the fbi after spending much of his career in counterterrorism. >> who did he meet with? where did he go? >> reporter: what phone kales did he make? >> absolutely. and thankfully technology will give us some answers to that. they will be able to recreate some of his activities but not. >> reporter: it won't tell you what was going on in his mind? >> we'll never know that. >> reporter: his neighbors describe him as frightening, depressed, unstable and isolated, but not a radical extremist. >> all i know is this man has nothing to do with islamists, al-qaeda or the islamic state. >> reporter: despite that many terrorism experts believe he fits the profile of the modern, self-radicalized islamic terrorist. terrorism expert brian jenkins.
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>> a lot of these young men, street thugs, petty criminals become radicalized, some in prison, some from charismatic people on, in the neighborhood. clearly the ideology is a component of their beliefs. the most common attribute we see is personal crisis. >> reporter: like a troubled marriage. add to that a truck, a few weapons and the perfect soft target. you don't need much money. >> you are looking at low rent terrorism. what does it take to rent a truck, he put a credit card down and now he doesn't have to pay the bill. almost zero up front cost. >> reporter: he had only one weapon, assault rifle and handgun in his trucks were fakes. the grenade he carried was disabled. he had no other explosives. his wife was taken in to custody and questioned by investigators, who hope to learn more about her husband. >> she may have known associates he was dealing with, those are
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directions you want to go. i don't care if he says he was hanging out at the bar with this guy on thursday night. that is a person that needs to be spoken with and interviewed because you never know what the recruitment efforts or or the support structure might be. it could be anybody. >> reporter: isis? al-qaeda? clemente says if that is what it is any link with an outside group could be difficult to prove. >> did somebody provide him with weapons, financial support? was anyone directing him at that target on this day. >> reporter: or was this all his idea? >> that's the thing. we may never find answers to this. communications could have been done in person and therefore since he is not followed or surveilled in any way we may not know about it. >> reporter: bastille day in france is a holiday and typically a celebration in france. and french suspected something like this maybe coming. >> just days before the attack,
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the director of the french internal intelligence safs service made a public warning, which was actually quite grim. he said that they were expecting further terrorist attacks, terrorist attacks that would be more serious than the ones they had seen thus far. >> reporter: in fact, the french intelligence services have recently come under fire. just last week, a parliamentary committee, set up to investigate last year's terrorist attacks in paris, cited widespread failures and called for a streamlining of a cumbersome system, just as the u.s. did after 9/11. evan coleman is an nbc news terrorism analyst. >> certainly there are measures france could take to improve security but to suggest that france has worse security than italy is ridiculous or even germany. there's a recognition on the part of the french government they need all of the intelligence and information
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they can get and i think, as well, there's a recognition on the part of the u.s. government that our security is inherently tied in with french security. >> reporter: french investigators say security video shows the truck parked on the street for a day before the attack. he rode on a bike to retrieve it shortly before the attack began. >> apparently he had just gotten his license for heavy vehicles. is that a coincidence. >> i heard he had been a truck driver or is a truck driver, recently employed as a truck driver. maybe he got the license to get employment or the employment to get experience to do something like this. >> reporter: france just finished hosting the european soccer championships, an event that went off without problems, despite or maybe because of heavy security. one question now is whether the french let their guard down too soon? >> once they cleared that hurdle, i'm sure there was an easing of tension and the
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president was planning within the next few days of relaxing the state of emergency in france. clearly that will continue for months now. it is unfortunate the relaxing may have led to people feeling more comfortable. >> reporter: tonight the short-lived calm has been replaced by chaos and fear, but among isis supporters the attack in nice is being played as very good news. >> even if there is not an official statement of endorsement from isis there are a lot of pro-isis sites celebrating today. >> this is cause to celebrate for them. this is a big victory for them. this is a big target, a western nation that is grieving again. >> reporter: all because of mohamed lahouaiej bouhlel, who prior to this was just a nobody in nice. but today one of his neighbors quotes him as saying last night something haunting and prophetic. >> reporter: one day, he said,
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you are going to hear about me. as the number of attacks grows around the world and at home, what's being done to keep the home front safe? find out when we return. when it's summer you can just feel it. but it also leaves your feet feeling rough. amopé keeps you sandal-ready with the pedi perfect. it buffs away hard skin to reveal salon pedicure smoothness. feel the difference for yourself. amopé. love every step. now save $15 at coupons.com.
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impact on security here at home. >> you are going to see law enforcement when they are doing public events take in to consideration the possibility that large-scale vehicles or even vessels could be used as weapon systems. >> reporter: former military counterterrorism and intelligence officer and msnbc terrorism expert malcolm nance. >> we have already seen changes. as a matter of fact, we were discussing the republican national convention that's going to be occurring in cleveland this next week. we've seen them shift from metal barriers to concrete jersey barriers. >> reporter: it is a security tactic new york city has used for years. according to nypd commissioner jon miller. >> we have tons, tons and tons of concrete and barriers and we will lay those in configurations so a vehicle can't get through but basically we will put a ring of concrete around an event if it is going to be heavily attended. >> reporter: in 2010, the department of homeland security warned american law enforcement
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of the possibility of a vehicle attack, like what happened in nice. specifically citing events like street festivals and farmers markets. >> should people be afraid to go to street fairs and events that have crowds in light of what happened? >> if you look at the sheer statistics of it, the likelihood of being caught in a terrorist attack, particularly on u.s. soil is extraordinarily low. but each of these things gets a lot of attention. >> it is amazing we haven't had a major terrorist attack here in a very long time. why do you think we have been able to avert that? >> i think we have put an enormous amount of resources in to this this nationally. new york gets $180 million every year from the federal government to help pay for the enormous cost of counterterrorism. >> reporter: in rio, where the olympics are just three weeks away, officials say they are beefing up security in light of the attack in france, including increasing the number of check
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points and traffic restrictions. i would have to imagine that some people are on edge who are going to rio. >> the olympics are a global-level security event. hopefully the brazilians have put in to place all of the same security structures, which are standard at most olympics. i wouldn't say that there's any known threat in, you know, south america at this point. >> reporter: former executive assist tent director of the fbi and nbc national security analyst sean henry says terrorist tactics are changing. how are the methods shifting of the way these attacks are carried out? >> the attackers will look for the place of least resistance. they will, and we've seen them move to soft targets because they are easier to attack. they require less planning, they require less resources and they can have maximum impact. historically, we have seen them look at iconic attacks. when we look at al-qaeda and
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their attacks on the world trade center, u.s. navy ships, we are seeing attackers look at more targets that are part of the american day-to-day life, restaurants, movie theaters, that sort of thing. >> reporter: these attacks are changing the way that we think and go about our daily life. >> i think people are absolutely adapting the way they live their lives. s what important is they don't become fearful and disrupt their lives because that is playing in to the terrorists' hands. >> reporter: henry says everyday citizens can play a valuable role in preventing attacks. >> i think it is important for people to be alert and aware. because they have the potential to help provide critical pieces of intelligence that would be valuable to law enforcement and the intelligence agencies to mitigate these threats. if they have an awareness and are alert and can inform law enforcement they can help to thwart these attacks. >> reporter: he says the good news is the u.s. is at a lower risk than europe.
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>> the united states is far safer from acts of terrorism than most other parts of the world. france right now is being dragged in to a -- how can i put it -- a philosophical clash. a belief that europe and the west and the middle east, particularly islam, are at war. there's a massive, massive national infrastructure of protection around the united states and around american citizens. the armed forces, the intelligence agencies of the united states, department of homeland security, the united states has one of the largest police forces in the world. >> have terror attacks become
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a day on the french riveria, paradise for 11-year-old texan brodie copeland and his father sean. last night, fireworks on the promenade, and then the perfect family vacation came to a nightmarish end. the horror and heart break that occurred along this formerly idyllic waterfront washed ashore 5500 miles away upon lake travis in the small city of lakeway, texas, home to the copelands.
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aaron cable, a family friend who coached the copeland's youngest son is still trying to come to terms. >> it still hasn't set in. just shocked. very small world. you don't think it will happen to somebody you know or someone you are close to. >> reporter: the copelands had come to the riveria as part of a dream vacation. sean and his wife kim were celebrating her 40th birthday. they brought along his older kids, megan and austin and their 11-year-old son brodie. this is brodie in the water in nice. a picture his family sent out yesterday afternoon. >> the family was very excited about their trip. i was envious for them to go on the trip. they went and did the running of the bulls in spain. >> reporter: last night they watched the bastille fireworks. minutes after the show ended, all hell broke loose and this american family was trapped in the truck's murderous path. sean copeland and 11-year-old brodie were killed.
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the family is devastated. the dream vacation now turned a living nightmare. relatives back home posted grief-filled messages on social media. one tweet said "i just want my couskouz cousin -- cousin and u back. >> everyday american child. >> reporter: baseball brought father and son together and this haunting image was posted today by kim copeland. >> sean copeland, all around great father, great guy. in my experiences with him, extremely supportive of not only our organization but everybody in our organization. 100% family man. >> reporter: at brodie's school, his teacher remembered a popular student known for his intelligence and sense of humor. >> i had told him on the last day of school, when you 2k3we9 your academy award, i hope you remember me.
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so it's heart breaking that wonderful talented child is not going to be finishing what his dreams were. >> reporter: brodie was one of ten children killed in the attack, at least 50 more young people were injured. the attacks seem to be coming on an almost weekly basis, each one so shocking. the world has changed. have we? here's keith morrison. ♪ >> reporter: and so another one. another outrage, another shock to the system. there's a cadence to these things now, lately up tempo. paris barely eight months ago, and then brussels and then just four weeks ago orlando, and then baghdad, istanbul, and now here in nice, of all places. in this european playground,
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among relaxed, happy people on a great beach. once again a president goes on television to reassure us. as president hollande put it, france is in tears and the freedom celebrated by great victories of the french people begun on that very day, bastille day, are narrowed again for the sake of public safety. state of emergency extended, reserved called up, troops on the streets, fear, fear everywhere because it could and does target the innocence everywhere, corroding good will, punching holes in first world bucket lists. a texas father and son watching fireworks as were vacationers from all over europe. so, do we travel, see the world? stay home and hide?
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of course not that, they tell us, and hen the terrorist win. thus, the world seems,er is, different, darker, though there's nothing new about this. terrorists have been with us since long before any of us were born and the aggrieved and disaffected like the one in nice from whatever imagining that slaughtering innocence, little children in the streets they somehow serve a cause, there's a poem that tends to circulate at times like this. a haunting thing to hear some of the opening lines. waves of anger and fear circulate over the darkened lands of the earth, obsessing our private lives. world war ii was starting when w.h. outen wrote that and then 15 years ago it started in ernest again. so we know about waves of anger and fear. seemed like the center wouldn't hold then but it did and will
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again in france. so besieged this year by terrorism. back then, after september 2001, we settled in to something we called a new normal, not a pleasant one. and yet, last night after that truck plowed through the innocence in nice, and the gun fire broke out, neighbors, all along that road, opened their doors to perfect strangers, offering sanctuary, just as neighbors had done after the attacks in paris. and overnight, the police in orlando tweeted "our hearts are breaking for the people of france again." #pray for nice. because of course there's good in the world, oceans of it inextinguishable. >> some of the most memorable images from a day many people in france and around the world wo ♪
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