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tv   Chasing News  FOX  August 2, 2017 12:30am-1:01am EDT

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>> here is to making the skies a little more friendly. >> can i get a fist bump? >> he wants a fist bump. >> guy's mom told us he learned to fist bump when he was 18 months old and he does it to everybody he meets. that's "inside edition." >> wasn't just the noise in the street, was the noise inside the building. >> is suing the building manager for more than $114,000. >> huddy spent two days in the emergency room for noise? were his ears waiting? >> don't like the noise, head back to the suburb. >> what are you doing? it's not you hear on the news every night. >> the seal is going to be in by shark. >> another confused liberal wonderinwandering around.
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>> and another lonely conservative with nobody to to talk about. >> ashley, if noise gives you anxiety, you know where i would not move? hell's kitchen. >> joe, former senator from new mexico recorded audio from inside his rented apartment at riverbanks weston health kitchen on 11th avenue. >> he lived there for one month in june and says it was pure hell. >> the next morning i wanted out. it wasn't just the noise of the street, it was the reason size the building. the jackhammering the floors next-door, upstairs and across the hall. >> the former senator, now playwright associate fed up that he is suing the building manager for more than $114,000.
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he said the noise was so bad he ended up in the er for two days. >> i walked into urgent care and they said you have to see me outside the emergency room. my whole body is exhausted. at the end of the day i went in there and i slept for five hours. at the end of the day was complete exhaustion. >> he was similar turned back to the city after spending a month in new mexico to get back to good health. he said the building claims he's on the hook for his six month lease. he paid a security deposit of $1000.1 month of rent for more than $2500. he says he picked to live there because he had a great view of the hudson. but then he said the building the debate and switch. instead of on the 43rd street side which she was guaranteed, he ended up getting an apartment on the 42nd street side.
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that's not what he agreed to. >> when it turns out we found out later they did rented up. they couldn't rent the other one up. said they can rented out anybody. but we can't rent that one. so let's talk them into that one. >> so i reached out to the building manager at riverbanks weston have yet to hear back. >> i also reach out to america psychologists about how extreme noise can take a toll on someone's physical and mental well-being. >> unless that person has some sort of anxiety to begin with, maybe was traumatized in the past by something that caused that we don't see something that extreme we have to go to the er. >> i can't leave them hearing this. as a native new yorker neighbo s
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part of the landscape. he wants to live in that area it comes with the territory. it's a concret jungle. the sky was guaranteed a certain apartment which window had been as noisy. he got a different apartment from what he signed on his lease. i want to be clear about that. >> i'm sure will come out in court, he signed specifically for a specific unit? >> yes. >> honestly, if it was a bait and switch, he's right and he ought to sue. >> new york either breaks or makes you. if you don't like the noise had back to the suburbs. >> if it's in the heat get out of hell's kitchen. >> by one pick one is back starting at 1299 at olive garden. c can enjoy family time one more time. >> why, in the city of thousands of great restaurants, of all types, even cheap restaurants what a human being choose to eat
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at a place like the olive garden. >> what part of human psychology compels us to seek out the bland, mundane and boring. even when were on vacation in the greatest city in the world. >> the olive garden and why people eat there? i'm going to find out while people eat at the olive garden. >> white people do it at the olive garden, you're right about that. >> i used to live in arizona and that's just the only place that i know. >> and the best is that we brought an italian from room for the olive garden. >> this is a better story. come over here. >> i was the food?
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>> it's a known commodity, here new yorker whatever state, you know what you're going to get. >> i pay higher taxes and but i've never step foot in and out of garden because i live in a place with 15 awesome i telling restaurants that are mom-and-pop joint. they would never set foot in olive garden. >> to be either? >> i don't know. >> what did you do? >> i went to the bathroom. >> convenient. not knowing about other restaurants isn't an excuse. there's people standing here with signs directing people to better restaurants. >> better than the olive garden probably. >> i'm not the first person to ask this question. there is a long fascinating thread on reddit about this.
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the post went viral. in just over a week it has gotten more than 11000 comments. >> it started out as a cosmopolitan snarky question. and then something interesting happened. a lot of heartwarming stories poured in. stories about people meeting their grandparents who lived in new york city love the place. 9/11 first responders came here the day after the attack to get free food there dishing out. anecdotes from people who grew up in households where they cannot afford to go out to eat so they would save up for that one special dinner at the olive garden. so they fell in love with the place. these are the kind of things you learn when you start to look into people stories. they turn your sumption's on your head. so you know what, i to go eat at the olive garden for the first time in my life.
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♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ very good. pretty good. >> alice, your chasing a story that has all of the workings of what could be a great spy novel. luxury condos, russians, a special counsel, and the president of the united states. >> special counsel robert mueller is expanding his investigation into russian meddling into lester's election, to include trumps business
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dealings with russian nationals. this includes soho, a luxury hotel open in 2008. i came here to find out more. trumps partners on this 370 million-dollar deal were two russian immigrants to the u.s., one named felix. he has long had ties to the russian mafia. that didn't help when he allegedly stabbed again that with a broken margarita glass. that led to a guilty plea and a cooperation agreement with the fbi. trader who ran a company was one of the two partners of this condo development had business cards that listed him as part of the trump organization and advisor to trump for many years. he and his partner suffered the president trump a fantastic deal. put his name on his building which they would sponsor and he would get 18% of the prophet of a stake in it. not just naming rights like other buildings. he's also been investigating money laundering. that's with the national review and that can be connected to the fact that trump soho and other
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companies allow people to anonymously buy apartments. that could be a tactic to turn dirty money clean by converting it into real estate. i spoke to former fbi agent who worked money laundering cases to find out more about the nuts and bolts. >> congress with a money-laundering law has brought up -- it raise money laundering so if you engage in those and use the proceeds subsequently. >> now they said prosecutors will need to prove both that the russians wanted to launder their money for an indictable purpose and that the trump organization you about it. >> anything is possible. it's very unlikely for my view. >> he said he doesn't think that will get through. even if it does get proven it's all in the realm of civil fines, not jail time for someone who
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unwittingly participates. the president and his companies been unwitting unknowing accomplices to cleaning dirty money? sure, they could but really trump soho to me is like the rush investigation. even if the russians interfered in the elections, even if the campaign about it or could present trump and in the dark the entire time. >> seems to me the media grabs onto anybody with a russian lessening. anybody who has anything to do with the president. they kind of leave it to the imagination of the viewer to link them together. this is so far-fetched, something that happened in 2008. >> as someone who has the kind of russian saudi last name i will take offense to that. where were you? >> i don't remember where i was in 2008. >> it jersey city police and ems showed up to the crystal point luxury condo on the waterfront to find five on conscious mail. >> will the first mistake you
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made is to
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dude, you were right, these wait...what? the gold fish, man! you said i should buy some. no! i said you should buy gold fish, the new scratch-off from the pennsylvania lottery... with top prizes of $25,000. ooohh.... are there really...?
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25,000 of them? yeah. want more changes to win? go to palottery.com and enter your non-winning tickets for the gold fish second-chance drawing with $10,000 prizes. >> i thought i was brave when i went skydiving, but -- has may be jumping 15000 feet at 101 years old. he had no idea this jump would be record-breaking.
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he now holds the world record for oldest tandem parachute jump. he was given military guard of honor to mark this huge record-breaking jump. >> it's one thing to have alligators as pets, it's another thing to have feed them alcohol and expect them to smoke. check out the video. it was captured off of snapchat by fox nine viewer. needless to say, the fda is on it. >> the opiate crisis is out of control. as a matter fact, in new jersey,
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three times the number of people die of heroin overdoses than the national average. so much so, there are groups acting all over the place to try to combat this. politicians of course are poll of promises and soundbites. they will stand at a candlelight vigil, but will actually do anything? then you have to asked the question, no matter what the politicians do, isn't this all about coping skills? isn't it about overcoming adversity? we'll talk about it. i want to introduce our panel. daniel it's good to see you, and desiree from csc and john c. thank you. were joined by skype, tony junior's with the and sue harrison from kings to say. before you weigh in on what many think is a controversy oh take in terms of coping skills and personal responsibility. >> jersey city police showed up to the crystal condos to find five on conscious males in the building early cinnamon o sunday morning around 5:00 a.m. two were dead at the same. their identities have been released. one is 33-year-old and the other is a 32-year-old.
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according to social media, patel was a graduate apace university, the other was also a pace university graduate. they have night determined the cause of death yet or the through that overdosed and survived. from what we have seen, heroin kills and kills fast. we can guilt and say for a fact that it was a heroin overdose. the prosecutor's office came out to say it's an isolated incident the public shouldn't worry. but is any drug addiction or heroin straight isolated? >> i want to start with you. you heard what ron said. there's a luxury high-rise. what about this being an isolated incident people should be worried? >> the first mistake is to think that addiction doesn't hit every social area because it does. the problem is they don't talk about it. that's exactly what i started
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this, families are only whispering about it in room. they don't tell you the truth. the don't want to admit that there's a problem. >> on that note, i said at the top of the segment we've had this conversation on the radio, i feel that in the ongoing discussion there's a lot of finger-pointing of blame to go around. very little conversational coping skills and how people deal with adversity. >> every decade and era has a social issue they're dealing with. this is our social issue. we are the cookie-cutter generation. our parents struggle. we have an economy crash, the rise of technology, a lot of things come socially into our world at a rapid rate that we don't how to cope. we are not taught the coping skills. >> our parents were supposed to teach us in the problem is that everybody wants to blame someone else for their children's problem. not my child, see education system, such as they were the around, or their environment.
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it's never that individuals problem. there's no accountability. >> what he gets in? >> i think there's a lot of people who do not want to admit this is in their town, their schools, i know for a fact that it's in the middle school. i know how young the issue start. whether with marijuana or pills. >> tony, our thoughts and prayers are with you, you lost a son. i want to ask you, the sides will tell you it's not officially gateway drug. now you have a person running for governor new jersey, phil murphy, whose the odds on favorite to win. one of the first things you will do is sign a bill that legalizes marijuana. to the government it's only about the revenue. >> i'm not an expert of what's a gateway drug to what is not. what i do know is that when anyone, child or an adult becomes an addict, gets addicted to pills, heroin, or anything else, there's a deep psychological problem that's going on.
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there's something there running ray from. we need to concentrate on the psychological portion of addiction, and why they keep getting involved in the first place it might affect so many people. >> is this a failing on the part of our society and government? you have dozens of group popping up all over, competing for resources that are limited, few of our between? >> it people who have lost, were all working together networking to help one another. there's a lack of funding and a lack of responsibility on the part of the government and what's going on. >> i think people are going to solve this instead of looking for a politician or government to solve it. the problem with government politicians in the making of the federal laws to help us is the fact that the have an issue. the issues that people are dying of overdoses. they keep driving money to that.
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at this point time you have to overdosed to get help in the state of new jersey. they're encouraging people to overdose, the only way you will get treatment. that's how the grant money is. during treatment is 1% of what recovery is. what is a person to when they come home? >> it's what happens after treatment. it's a lifetime of recovery. >> i appreciate your time today. thanks for being here. it's not an easy conversation. >> anymore coca-cola. >> at 84 years old, ray is a staple in the east village community. serving up anything that can be community. serving up anything that can be fried. from fields and factories they came looking for opportunity. they worked hard. we helped them work harder. they are the students of strayer university. for 125 years, we've supported as they've rewritten the future. and to all who seek their true potential, we say,
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let's get it, america.
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>> at 84 years old, ray is a staple in this community. where he has worked for 40 years.
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>> take a look at this video that was posted to facebook by someone in killing him in the u.k. police say they were responding to a disturbance in the road, one of the police cars comes up
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fast and furious spins around 180 degrees. as of now, the guys that were arrested have been released in charge. this video is under investigation. >> it might look like your average deli in new york. but not all delis -- >> i need more coca-cola. >> at 84 years old ray is a staple in the east village community where he has worked for 40 years. seven days a week, and only at night. >> retired? >> not really. nobody wants to work nights. so i'm here. and i do must my business at nighttime. in the daytime it's quiet. that on amy. >> he prides himself in serving up the best hotdocs, ice can,
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candy, and anything that can be fried. >> fried -- one minute in the morning and then you fried again. >> if you don't see him working your betters back here? >> you might want to check over here on the floor, or as he says, his bed. >> that's my bed question. >> that's really where you sleep? [laughter] that is not a bed. >> in case you have not noticed, ray is a character and a well loved one. seven years ago regulars raised over $3000 to keep them in business. one year later, another regular help to become an official u.s. citizen. >> i like your american flake.
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>> yes. ray is original from iran and moved to the states on his 31 years old after serving in the iranian navy. he then jumped ship and came ashore to america. >> is now looking ahead to his birthday, that is a look at one party from 2016. his next one, it will be in 16 years for his 100th birthday. >> my birthdays going to be really crazy. we will have 100 dancing naked. >> i can't say i will be in attendance, how about you? tweet me her thoughts. >> goodbye.
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>> bill, are you afraid of heights? this bridge in brooklyn is not for the faint of heart. this is the world's longest suspension foot bridge. over 1600 feet long and it is 270 feet above the ravine. i would not walk on that thing if it was 2 feet on the ground. >> check out the video firefighters in colorado with a swift rescue monday night. there were storms causing flooding and the fire team was able to rescue the passenger and her dog from the car before anyone was hurt. >> another great night of chasing news. thanks for watching. the countdown to governor
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♪ take that, kite-eating tree. (exclaiming) (school bell ringing) morning! (whistle blows) (yells) (beeping) (playing the blues) (playing the blues) (tires screeching)

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