tv News4 Midday NBC July 5, 2016 11:00am-12:00pm EDT
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we are following a developing story. a man shot and killed near the deanwood metro station by a metro transit police officer. what we're learning about that confrontation about the officer and the man killed. we're following a large rally this morning involving d.c. fathers and mothers. they're emotional appeal to lawmakers. we have a little sunshine back in our skies. it's getting warm and humid out there and there's the heat wave coming our way between now and the end of the week. details coming up. news 4 mid
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>> this metro station is constantly having issues. i've seen transit police here. that's not even helping. we don't know what to do. >> reporter: many are expressing frustration about what they call an escalation in violence. the shooting happened within the community center door where young children are showing up for summer camp. this mom says she may not bring her kids back. >> this is a frightening place to be and had i known i was going to walk into this this morning, i would have went the other way. >> reporter: police came here after getting a report of suspicious activity. that's when the metro officer shot the suspect. the center is also across the street from the deanwood metro, the station has been the scene of a fatal shooting of a 15-year-old and the fatal stabbing of another 15-year-old two weeks apart. >> i don't know if it's the kids or the area. i don't know what it is, but
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out here going crazy. >> reporter: at this point police have not released the name or the age of the person who was shot and killed. that information is expected to be released at some point later today. we're live in northeast, news 4. we're going to take you live now to the fbi director james cuomo making a statement about hillary clinton. >> on that personal system. our investigation looked at whether there is evidence that classified information was improperly stored or transmitted on that personal system in violation of a federal statute that makes it a felony to mishandle classified information either intentionally or in a grossly negligent way or a second statute make tg a misdemeanor to knowingly remove classified information from appropriate systems and storage facilities. we have already investigated to
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of computer intrusion by nation states or by hostile actors of any kind. now i have so far used the singular term e-mail server. it turns out it has been more complicated than that. secretary clinton used several different servers and administrators of those servers during her years at the state department and she used numerous mobile devices to send and receive e-mail. as new servers and equipment were employed older servers were taken out of service and decommissioned in several ways. putting that together in gain the ways e-mail was used for work has been a painstaking undertaking requiring thousands of hours of effort. when one of secretary clinton's servers was
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2013 the e-mail software was removed. that didn't remove the e-mail content but it was like removing the frame from a jig saw puzzle and dumping the pieces on the floor. the fragments ended up in the slack space of the sever. we searched through all of it to understand what was there and what parts of the puzzle we could put back together again. fbi investigators also read all of the approximately 30,000 e-mails that secretary clinton provided to the state department in 2014. where an e-mail was assessed as possibly containing classified information, the fbi referred that e-mail to any government agency that might be an owner of that information so that agency could make a determination as to whether the e-mail contained classified information at the time it was sent or received or
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classify it now even when it was not classified when it was first sent and received and that's the process referred to as u up-classifying. from the 30,000 e-mails returned to the state department, 110 e-mails in 52 e-mail chains have been determined by the owning agency to contain classified information at the time they were sent or received. eight of those chains contained information that was top secret at the time they were sent, 36 of those chains contained secret information at the time and eight contained confidential information at the time. that's the lowest level of classification. separate from those, about 2,000 additional e-mails were up-classified to make them confidential. those e-mails had not been classified at the time they were sent or received.
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thousand work-related e-mails that were not among the group of 30,000 e-mails returned by secretary clinton to state in 2014. we found those e-mails in a variety of ways. some had been deleted over the years and we found traces of them on servers or devices that had been connected to the private e-mail do main. others we found by reviewing the archive government accounts of people who had been government employees at the same time as secretary clinton including high-ranking officials folks with whom the secretary of state might normally correspond. this helped us recover work related e-mails that were not among the 30,000 that were produced. others we recovered from that review of e-mail fragments dumped into the slack space of the sever that was decommissioned in 2013. with respect to the thousands of e-mails we found that were n
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agencies have included that three were classified at the time they were sent or received, one at the secret level and two at the confidential level. there were no additional top secret e-mails found and finally none of those we found have since been up-classified. i should add we found no evidence that any of the additional work related e-mails were intentionally deleted in an effort to conceal them in some way. our assessment is that like many e-mail users secretary clinton periodically deleted e-mails or e-mails were purged from her system. because she was not using a government account or a commercial account like g mail there was no archiving of her e-mails so it's not surprising we found e-mails that were not on her system in 2014 when she produced those 30,000-some e-mails to state. it could be
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additional work related e-mails we recovered were deleted as personal by her lawyers. the lawyers doing the sorting for secretary clinton in 2014 did not individually read the content of all her e-mails as we did for those available to us. instead they relied on information and they used search terms to try to find all work related e-mails among the more than 60,000 that were remaining on her system at the end of 2014. it's highly likely their search missed some work related e-mails and we later found them, for example in the mailboxes of other officials or the slack space of a sever. it's likely there are other work related e-mails that they did not produce to state and that with he did not find elsewhere and that are now gone because they deleted all e-mails they did not produce to state and the lawyers then cleaned their devices in such a way
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preclude complete forensic recovery. we have conducted interviews and done tech al examination to attempt to understand exactly how that sorting was done by her attorneys. although we don't have complete visibility because we're not able to fully reconstruct the electric record of that sorting, we believe our investigation has been sufficient to give us confidence there was no intentional misconduct in connection with that sorting effort. in diaddition to our technical work we interviewed many people of staff members with whom she corresponded with and finally secretary clinton herself. we have done extensive work to try to understand what implications there might be of compromise by hostile actors in connection with that personal e-mail system. so that'h
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found. although we did not find clear evidence that secretary clinton or her colleagues intended to violate laws governing the handling of classified information, there is evidence that they were extremely careless in their handling of very sensitive highly classified information. for example, seven e-mail chains concern matters that were classified at the top secret special access program at the time they were sent and received. those chains involved secretary clinton both sending e-mails about those matters and receiving e-mails about those same matters. there is evidence to support a conclusion that any reasonable person in secretary clinton's position or in the position of those with whom she was corresponding about those matters should have known that an unclassified system was no place for that conversation. in addition to this highly sensitive information we also found information that was properly clfi
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the u.s. intelligence community at the time it was discussed on e-mail. that is excluding any later up classified e-mails. none of these e-mails should have been on any kind of unclassified system, but the presence is especially concerning because all of these e-mails were housed on unclassified personal servers not even supported by full time security staff like those found in the united states government or even a commercial e-mail service like g mail. i think it's important to say something about the marking of classified information. only a very small number of the e-mails here containing classified information borrow markings that indicated the presence of classified information. but even if information is not classified in an e-mail
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investigation we developed evidence that the security culture of our state department in general and with respect to the use of unclassified use of systems in particular was general lilacing in the kind of care of classified information that's found elsewhere in the u.s. government. with respect to potential computer intrusion by hostile actors we did not find different evidence that secretary clinton's personal e-mail do maine was hacked successfully. given the nature of the system and of the actors potentially involved we assess we would be unlikely to see such direct evidence. we do assess that hostile actors gained access to the private commercial e-mail accounts with people of whom secretary clinton were was in regular contact with her personal account. we also assessed that secretary clinton's use of a personal e-mail domain was known by a large number of people and readily
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while outside the united states including sending and receiving work related e-mails in the territory of sophisticated adversaries. given that combination of factors we assess it is possible that hostile actors gained access to secretary clinton's personal e-mail account. that's what we found. finally with respect to our recommendation to the department of justice, in our system the prosecutor's make the decisions about whether charges are appropriate based on evidence that the fbi helps collect. although we don't normally make public our recommendations to the prosecutors we frequently make recommendations and engage in productive conversations with prosecutors about what may be appropriate given the evidence. in this case given the importance of the matter i think unusual transparency is in order. although there is evidence of potential violations of the statutes regarding the handling
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judgment is that no reasonable prosecutor would bring such a case. prosecutors necessarily weigh a number of factors before deciding whether to bring charges. there are considerations like the strength of the evidence and responsible decisions also consider the context of a person's actions and how similar situations have been handled in the past. in looking back at our investigations into the mishandling or removal of classified information we cannot find a case that would support bringing criminal charges on these facts. all the cases prosecuted involved some combination of clearly intentional and willful mishandling of classified information or vast quantities of information exposed in such a way to support an inference of miss conduct or disloyalty to the united states or effortsto
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obstruct justice. we do not see those things here. to be clear this is not to suggest in similar circumstances a person who engaged in this activity would face no consequences. to the contrary those individuals are subject to add strattive sanctions but that's not what we're deciding now. as a result although the department of justice makes final decisions on matters like this, we are expressing our view that no charges are appropriate in this case. i know there will be intense public debate in the wake of this recommendation as there was throughout the investigation. what i can assure the american people is that this investigation was done honestly, competently and independently. no outside influence of any kind was brought to bear. i know there were many opinions expressed by people who were not part of the investigation, including people in government, but none of that mattered to us. opinions are irrelevant and they were all
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investigation because we did our investigation the right way. only facts matter. the fbi found them here in an entirely apolitical and professional way. i couldn't be prouder to be part of this organization. thank you very much. and. the fbi director saying here that the federal government's policing agency, the fbi, will not recommend to the legal folks, the department of justice, that they filed a case against hillary clinton as a result of the e-mails that were sent and received during her time as secretary of state. we want to continue now with the special report and turn it over to nbc news. >> she was the secretary of state. as he mentioned there generally the fbi makes a recommendation to the department of justice. in this case it is usual as i turn to chuck todd because loretta lynch has recused herself saying last week she
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recommendation of the fbi was and her they decided not to prosecutor but they don't give a free pass to hillary clinton. >> it was an extraordinary -- this was an extraordinary 15 minutes in the history of this presidential campaign and maybe in the history of presidential politics because what was extraordinary was that the director felt he had to do what he had to do today which is walk people through this extensive -- we live in such an era of mistrust that he felt he had to spend half of his time going through everything. if you're hillary clinton it is a clean legal bill of health. she does not have a clean political bill of health. this cloud is not going anywhere. it's not going to dump rain. it's not going to dump sleet or dump stuff on her, but the cloud doesn't go away. this e-mail story brought back every negative ster type of her thought she thought her four years of secretary of state wiped away. >> it doesn't end her presidential camn
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indictment but as i turn to andrea mitchell i mean there's no question there's a lot of material in here for her political opponents to mine. james cuomo did not give her a free pass and saying it was extremely careless for her to have had a home sever that had classified information on it. >> reporter: indeed. he also said that he could not rule out the likelihood that hostile actors penetrated not only her e-mails but certainly the e-mails with those whom she was communicating. he described a careless procedure at the state department under her management and the fact that she was as careless as he described in his basically there was a political indictment of the way she handled her e-mails. it discounts all her explanations she has made for the course of more than a year as to the security of this e-mail system. and it would be fodder for her critics and frankly for a lot o
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supporters it's going to be troubling for the key voters and independent voters who are so h. the fact also the timing is so extraordinary because she was -- she's supposed to be heading her to charlotte today on air force one embraced by barack obama. how difficult is this. the other thing we should point out which it is amazing it that the fbi director would never in an ordinary case reveal this much about the case as chuck was saying in advance of his recommendation to the justice department. >> he gave a lot of information about what exactly that investigation had found and we should fence mention we're looking at a live picture of hillary clinton right now on the campaign trail. chuck i thought it was very interesting because how many times have we heard when we asked secretary clinton about this those same words i never knowingly sent or received classified information that was marked classified at the time and cuomo took that on directly saying even if something is not marked classified,
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know or should know have a duty to protect it. in other words, he's saying she should have recognized how sensitive this information was whether or not it had a marking that said classified. >> he took it to a point of essentially said i've got two examples where she should have known better. it wasn't just a blanket she should have known better, he walked through two specific examples of e-mail chains where she both sent and received that she should have known better but let's talk about the big picture. we're nine days -- we're nine days from the first convention and then a week later philadelphia. this could have created an entirely different chaotic situation in the democratic party. so today is a sense of relief over there in brooklyn. there's a whole bunch of people watching on tv by the way they had no idea what was coming. they thought it felt good considering saturday, they thought that was the sign of a good thing, but they
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of suspense. this is unusual that james cuomo came out and said what his recommendation was but walked everyone through the thought process and the investigatory steps. >> they've been thinking about whether do this if no charges were filed and they said the fbi director was going to be making this announcement, a couple of things are important to point out here. the first is the fact that she used a personal e-mail sever really is irrelevant to the question of how classified information was handled. it would have been the same problem if she had used the unclassified state.gov system. that was the problem putting classified information into an unclassified system. the fbi director said using her personal e-mail worse because it was less protected but the main problem was putting classified information on a non-government,
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was sloppy but it wasn't criminal. he said the justice department didn't know what he was going to say. i can assure you that's true because i was trying for the last hour what it was he was going to say and they didn't know. i've been talking to people at the fbi for weeks now saying if you don't file -- if you don't recommend charges, how are we going to know you're done? within the last couple of weeks they were saying well we're discussing that now. so the fact that he did this this morning i don't think is a surprise, but you're right, it's extremely unusual for a director of the fbi to lay out what the recommendations to the justice department are. now, it's not over. justice will still make a decision but the attorney general said last week that she will be guided by the recommendations of cuomo and the career people at justice so i would be very surprised if this goes any way other than no charge
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had a personal sever is not directly relevant to whether she mishandled classified information but there was another part of this investigation and that was whether any hostile actor or nation state had been able to access this information and and addresseea let me put that one to you because i thought it was remarkable he said the fact that she had this private e-mail was known to a large number of people that she used this private e-mail over seas. he said we didn't see any direct evidence of interference by the nature we probably wouldn't. i felt he was saying it's likely there was some intrusion there. >> reporter: exactly. the fact she used her device overseas in hostile territory. in other words most likely in russia and china and places where they would have such access so he said it is likely it was penetrated although he had no evidence of it. pete is a better expert on one piece of this but i think it's also justice department rules
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very close to a presidential election or influencing a presidential election and i think in that case they were getting close to that moment. so they had to say something before she is officially nominated. it would have been that much worse in august after the democratic convention. there is a down side here. there is no criminal prosecution because as he points out in all of the past cases and i know a number of them personally as do you where we've had a former -- two former cia directors who were accusations of mishandling classified information. it was intent and the quantity of the information in those cases that led to prosecution. >> no question about it. whether to prosecute for this fbi director seemed to hang on that issue of whether there was evidence of intentional mi
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conduct. he's made his recommendation that criminal charges not be filed. we'll continue to follow this. this has been a nbc news special report. that special report covering the breaking news this morning that the fbi has recommended to the justice department that they not file any charges, not file a case against hillary clinton as it relates to her e-mail sever during -- severs we learned today during her time as secretary of state. >> not good political news for her. m we'll see
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right now nasa is learning everything it can about jupiter. these engineers were at the laboratory. they launched the spacecraft to jupiter five years ago and it's arrived in orbit overnight. it was only one second off schedule. that's pretty good. juno will examine how jupiter formed and developed and could tell us horror about the history of the solar system. >> reporter: i'm the live desk with a developing story this
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motion to dismiss charges against the next baltimore police officer facing trial in the freddie gray case. lawyers requested a number of motions, including asking the judge to dismiss the charges in the whole case. in fact but the judge said no. the 42-year-old lieutenant did opt for a bench trial like the two other officers before him. those trials ended with acquittals. he faces involuntary tear manslaughter. he was on bike patrol on the day of freddie gray's arrest. a man dealing with an amputated leg after he stepped on an explosive in new york city central park. that accident happened over the weekend and now investigators are trying to figure out where that device came from. craig melvin has mor
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park. >> reporter: sunday's blast creating panic and confusion in new york's central park. >> we don't know. we don't know. >> reporter: this 19-year-old man was walking with friends when he climbed down a large rock and stepped on a plastic bag that was holding explosive material. >> we should probably get in the ambulance. >> reporter: doctors amputated his left leg below the knee. his grandmother says he's celebrating his 20th birthday this sunday. >> i get sad because i think does connor knowwbju what's hapd to his leg? certainly his father and mother do, but does he know? >> reporter: police now searching for clues and witnesses. investigators believe the blast was a result of someone experimenting with fireworks and not a terrorist act. >> we would not categoryize th
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was not placed there to have somebody be hurt. >> reporter: investigators believe it was created by an explosive hobbyist. >> we hope they catch the person that did this. >> reporter: the tragedy happening on a holiday weekend known for firework injuries. on sunday several people were injured in kentucky when a firework misfired and in massachusetts last night a barge caught fire cutting the show short. fortunately no one was hurt. in new york monday police were out in full force to protect the more than 4 million expected for the fourth of july spectacular. tourists were being careful. >> we have new york's finest taking care of us. we're safe. >> that was craig melvin reporting. the results of testing on the explosive material will be released tomorrow. two children will grow up without their f
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murder in northern virginia. it's the fourth time within a year they've investigated a killing in the west old town $n route 1. we spoke with the mother yesterday. someone shot and killed her youngest son on saturday. she blames police for drawing attention to him while investigating a separate homicide last month. >> the way they hounded and came in my home and all that, word got out and this put -- it puts him in harm's way. >> other residents have a different response to the killings. the president of the neighborhood's citizens association says city leaders need to take a stronger stand against violence. prepare yourself for metro's next safe track surge. it starts tonight at 8 o'clock. blue and yellow lines will not run between reagan international airport. the metro will send extra buses to help o
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carry the usual load of commuters. we may see the impact on busy roads in fairfax. the first three will effect service at nearly a dozen stations. look at your screen. we're listing them for you. all the stations here will experience closures, reduced train service or crowded trains. metro officials are encouraging riders to find a different way to get around during this next phase of the emergency repair work. our app is a good resource to find ways to get around where you need to go. search safe track. after the break a fourth of july celebration benefitting the west virginia flood victims still struggling to recover. the nationals are back in oox against the brurs tonight. many players will be thank you so much. did you say honey? hey, try some?
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storms passed through eastern kentucky leaving behind a lot of damage. tornado like winds moved through last night. you can see significant damage to the walmart there and cars in the parking lot too. nobody was hurt though. a benefit concert was one of the ways people in west virginia celebrated the fourth of july. effected by the historic flooding in that state. west virginian native eugene murphy headlined the event. he said he would donate all his july sales to flood relief efforts. the red cross and other organizations collected donations from people who attended that event. are we going to hear fans and lemonade. >> get that lemonade stand ready to go. >> you bet. you ice is going to be a favorite come moddies as the week comes to a conclusion. it looks some of our mid summer
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sizzle is going to move back into the area. our coolest fourth of july in 75 years. made it to 74 degrees yesterday. the last time we had a cooler fourth of july was 1941. outside right now partly to mostly cloudy skies in place. 82 degrees already and winds out of the west averaging 10 miles an hour. 85 warrenton. so it's a warm and humid afternoon to be outside. we're going to peak at 89 degrees. a fair amount of sunshine. we will see a little bit more in the way of cloud cover today. rain chances are below 30% but they're not all the way down to zero. a few sprinkles in southern virginia. those showers may get over the blue ridge here. they may carry in little chances for rain over the blue ridge. maybe a stray
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by 8:00 maybe down into prince william counties. most of the area will be missed. slightly better rain chances from washington southbound and lower rain chances up to the north. it will be in the mid to upper 80s. if you're headed to the game tonight the first pitch is at 7:05 tonight temperatures will be in the mid 80s and it will be warm and humid. here comes summertime. 91 tomorrow and 94 thursday and 97 on friday. might have to start concerning ourselves with heat advicesorad. could have a heat index of up to 105 degrees. start talking nice to neighbors with pools. >> thanks. weather did actually cause several places in our area to postpone their fourth of j
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green belt will hold their fireworks shows tonight and gathersburg will hold off until friday. despite a little cloud cover the fireworks show on the national wall went on as planned last night. there were smaller crowds this year than in previous years most likely because of weather. security was tight. there was one incident of a suspicious device in a bathroom but security cleared the area and determined there was no threat. this morning pbs is defending its broadcast of fireworks last night. the network run footage from previous years showing clear skies. pbs apologized for the footage and said we showed a combination of the best fireworks from this year and previous years. viewers were not having it and they sent a frenzy of tweets calling out the network
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the #fakefourth. we're going to find out whose in and who got snubbed for the major league all star game. the game will be played a week from today. fans had a long time to vote and we'll find out who they picked to start the game. three national hitters have a good chance. pitcher steven strausburg and matt shuzer could make the team. making your next grilled meal a little safer and healthier. changes you may n
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congress returned to work today for the first time since the democratic sit in for new gun legislation. to start the day off moms and dads for d.c. gun legislation march in had to the capital building and they're asking for gun legislation that includes background checks. they want to stop interference with d.c. gun laws. >> when i hear about congress people from kentucky or somewhere else trying to change the laws so that guns are allowed in my kids' schools and we have no say in the matter, it's infur rating to me. d.c. council member participated in the rally. lawmakers are expected to vote on an
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acknowledge. apartments are shrinking. the average size of a new apartment is down from a decade ago. rent cafe.com found the average apartment in the northeast is about 856 square feet. in our area the average studio was 480 square feet. a one bedroom had a 717 square foot average and baltimore had the smallest rental units in the county. now here are changes coming to amazon. >> the online retail giant is dropping any mention of a list price or what a product originally costs versus what amazon is charging. that move comes as discounts online and in stores are coming under scrutiny for being less than they seem and as amazon shifts from selling one product at a time to a major retail ecosystem. you can get your used car delivered from anywhere in the countries. a new
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delivery system this week regardless of where the car is but it will cost you. from new york to dallas is $899 plus the price of the car. the car market is growing twice as fast as sales of new cars. here's something to think about as your grilling this summer. cancer causing chemicals can form on your meat when they're cooked at high temperatures. the american cancer society has identified steps to reduce those chemicals so your meat is not ruined. joyce brought some ingredients we should consider. let's talk about the grilling. many people if the heat's too high you wind p burning your meat and we know that's not good because of these chemicals. >> absolutely. they're cancer causing agents so we want
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those when we're grilling. >> one of the main things the american cancer society says you can do to prevent the formation of those chemicals is to use mar nad on the meat. >> right but specific ingredients can help reduce formation and some of these are ingredients you may have in your pantry such as rosemary, garlic and beer. >> and you've brought those. >> i have. >> i also see olive oil. >> yes. so you want some kind of fluid there to help create the mar naid so you can use vinegar, olive oil, honey, mustard, about two table spoons and then add in spices or beer to use as a liquid and that will reduce formation of these compounds. >> here i see honey and mustard wand lemon. honey is sweet and puts a glaze over the meat. >> that's right. >> does it apply these chemicals do they apply only to meats to
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does this include fish and poultry. >> it includes fish, poultry, beef, anything of a protein substance. so basically all meats. fruits and vegetables get a free pass so load up your grill with lots of good healthy fruits and vegetables. >> can you give us a quick recipe for using these ingredients. >> this is a honey mustard and what you want do is two table spoons of honey and two table spoons of mustard and salt and pepper to taste and a quarter teaspoon of rosemary and then a little bit of lemon and apply that to the meat about 15 minutes prior to grilling and enjoy. >> does it help to precook meat. i know my mom used to cook the ribs in the oven for a little while and then put them on the grill. >> absolutely. there's other techniques that you can use to help reduce formation. that's a perfect example.
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boiling the clihicken in the microwave. it reduces the charring from the grill. you don't want to have burnt meat but that's where those cancer causing agents reside. use a plank. a lot of people don't think about putting planks on the grill. >> i see you have foil too and that's nonstick. >> absolutely. you're reducing exposure to the flame and less charring so the plank, the foil, those types of things, it's about reducing exposure but still getting the flavor. >> any good grill cook will tell you put the meat on the grill and forget the foil. my husband has used foil and we've fussed about that because i want the grill marks and he says we have to do it on foil. so his way is healthier. >> it is. you can use lean cuts of meat because there would be less fat drippings so less smoke and fame and less of the cancer causing agents. >> do you have any other tips for healthy
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>> on my website you'll see some of these recipes that will include these ingredients to help reduce formation. fruits and vegetables. try using a plank. it brings out great flavor. soak the plank in beer. >> don't burn the meat. >> don't burn the meat. >> thank you so much. >> you're welcome. >> happy summer and happy grilling. thanks lady. what it takes to be an olympic athlete. the man: hey baby, how are you? woman: i have a surprise for you. man: you have a surprise for me?
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en they're away, they miss out on a lot. but they won't miss out on financial support. because we cover any difference between their military pay and their dominion salary, and continue benefits for them and their families. why do we do it? because our vets sacrifice enough. "dominion. depend on us for more than energy." ♪ stand by me.
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a recap of breaking news that we brought you at the beginning of this news cast. the fbi will not recommend criminal charges against hillary clinton for her use a private e-mail sever while secretary of state. the announcement was made by the fbi director. clinton will be headed to north carolina later today to campaign for the first time with president obama. donald trump will also be campaigning in north carolina today. the fbi's announcement trump called the system rigged on twitter. the republican candidate said clinton crooked saying she compromised national security. tonight marks one month to the opening of the olympics in rio. there was an oil slick coating the boat and that comes on top of other concerns like
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virus and rising crimes. the hopes are narrowing for the athletes that will earn a spot in rio. it was a dramatic day in track and field. sam kendricks took the top pole vaulting spot and alecia broke down after she tripped in the final 200 meters which ended her chance at an olympic spot. whether athletes make it to the olympics or not there's a lot of training and hard work they put in for a shot at competing for the gold. we'll see what that looks like. >> reporter: training for the olympics is a grueling commitment. each athlete has their fair share of horror stories. >> most hellish painful workout i can remember. >> we trained with the navy seals. >> we'd swim hard for about 30 minutes and we'd get out
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squats. >> they have climbing walls and rowing boats. >> we'd get back in and swim for an hour and then we'd get out and do bench presses. >> you're sprinting the 2,000 meter. >> sprint for ten seconds and rest for 20 seconds. >> push ups, squats, sit ups, everything you can imagine, max weight. >> after that you're body says you're done but you've only done 800 meters of it. >> i'm sitting there like please coach pull me. i'm hanging on for dear life. >> it's a burning in your lungs. lactic build up. >> the only thing i can do is hang on in the fetal position hoping i won't fall off or the line doesn't break because i might drown. >> your muscles are burning. your lungs are burning. >> my coaches called us a fish. >> you're hopin
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on the whole time. >> that's what it takes to be an olympic athlete. >> wow. >> we see the end results but the work to get there my goodness. >> a lot of burning and a lot of suffering there. how much burning are we going to be doing today. >> it won't be too bad today but you have should have your spf on. sunshine coming back and there's still a slight chance for a shower but rain chances are generally now below 30% for the remainder of the day. forecasthen temperatures in the low to mid 80s here at noon time and rain chances 30% or less up through the evening hours and then we dry out again in a warm and humid start tomorrow morning and tomorrow likely above 90 degrees. today warm and humid. not the best pool today. we won't have a delay for the game and the ride home looks like it will be a dry ride home.
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as we get into thursday a slight chance for a shower. 94 thursday and 97 friday and 95 on saturday, especially friday and saturday we may be having to talk about heat advisories and heat indexes over 100 by the way it looks. >> thank you, chuck. one more thing, $449 million, this is among the highest ever megas jackpot and the drawing is tonight. you have an impossibly small chance of winning the jackpot. one in 259 million roughly. so good luck. >> we wish you a lot of that. that's it for mid day. thanks for being with us this morning. we're back on the air at 4:00 this afternoon. >> we hope you have a great day. see you back here tomorrow. >> stay cool and dry. see you later.
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