Transcripts For FOXNEWSW Americas Newsroom 20150602

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doug mckelway starting coverage. what changes can we report, doug since this embarrassing report went public? >> reporter: lots and lots of changeses are headed our way bill. whether or not they work or enagain der confidence remains to be seen. this is latest embarassment for long line of embarassments for tsa. a recent report hundreds of security badges weeks ago were loss at the atlanta airport and san diego airport. this is much more serious. this new internal report shows out of 67 out of 70 attempts to pass contraband material through tsa security, screeners did not detect the contraband. in the aftermath of this, dhs secretary, jeh johnson tried to put the best face on it with a statement last night which read in part, these numbers in this report never look good out of context but they are critical element in the continue evolution of our aviation security. we take these findings very seriously and efforts to enhance capabilities and techniques as threats evolve. in addition to that, johnson took the immediate step reassigning interim administrator of tsa he is sending sending that man whose name is melvin carraway to a different role. in addition to that, requiring tsa leadership to immediately revise standard operating procedures for screening to address the specific have anotherrabilities. secondly he will saying brief results testing at security directors at every us air port. thirdly, new training for all tsa officers in all airports to address this specific threat. fourth, he is asking tsa to retest and reevaluate all screening equipment and fifth, he wants more random screening to test whether these new measures will work. lastly he is appointing a team of senior leaders to oversee the implementation of all of these actions. for the traveling public none of these changes will likely end gender anymore confidence. here is james carafano of the heritage foundation. >> it is not much better it was before 9/11. it is meant to be deterrent. not the great wall of china. it is not what is going to stop the next 9/11. >> reporter: martha, these kind of red team tests have been done in the past without very much success. whatever measures were made to change for the better, this kind of problem has with no success whatsoever. bill: got worse rather than better. you're right. >> reporter: got worse yeah. bill: reagan national there. martha. martha: here is what the tsa is dealing with. it is responsible for 450 airports with the help of 47,000 tsa officers. back in september i spoke with the then tsa administrator about the challenges that they have identifying these threats. >> it is an enormous task. agents screen around 640 million passengers and 1.5 billion bags a year. >> we've tried to adopt a rule we call basic security approach to move away from one side fits all. if we're looking for proverbial needle in haystack, if we reduce size of haystack more would be able to identify a terrorist getting on the plane. martha: this shows that those efforts have failed. bill: we have much more throughout "america's newsroom" today. congressman jason chaffetz chairs the house committee and oversight government reform. here at 9:45 eastern time. we'll speak with dan coats from the senate intelligence committee as well on this topic coming up next hour on that. a lot of issues. someone went through the magnetometer martha with a fake bomb strapped to the top of their back and they did not catch it. it does not get much more obvious. but your water bottle, your lighter gone. martha: forget the water will go. artificial hip is also a problem. but people, this isn't the first time they have done this. they did tests years ago at newark. people got through with guns and got through with knives. what the tsa says we'll never be 100% perfect but part of layers what you have to go through are designed as deterrent. not that it's a stopgap but it will make it more difficult and hopefully deter people from doing it. that is the argument. we'll test it a number of different ways. bill: we have some work to do. martha: this fox news alert this morning as hundreds of people are feared dead after a cruise ship capsizes off the coast of china. it happened late last night during the fourth day of a 10-day pleasure cruise. 450 people were onboard the ship. most of them believed to be elderly. so far only 10 people have been rescued. the cause of the crash remains under investigation. bill: meanwhile u.s. officials getting to meet our top allies in paris today in our fight against isis. that comes amid signs that the current u.s. strategy which relies heavily on iraqi ground forces is faltering. isis tear university ares have captured as many as 2,000 u.s. military vehicles from iraq's troops as they retreated from various battles. meanwhile new video out of iraq allegedly showing fighter planes bombing isis targets near the town of ramadi. that is key city the terrorist army captured just last month. martha: hillary clinton making friends and influences people on the campaign trail. the democratic frontrunner catching flak after a devoted fan approached her in new hampshire, very important to hillary clinton. looking to catch a snapshot with the former senator and secretary of state. clinton's reply? here we go. >> if you go, go to the end of the line okay? why don't you go to the end of the line. martha: oh, my. why don't you go to the end of the line. byron york joins me, chief political correspondent for "washington examiner" and fox news contributor. this will be get played over and over and elsewhere not good for hillary clinton regardless what the circumstances exactly were. >> zillions of times. it has already gone viral. the problem for hillary clinton, it kind of plays into this image of her as a school marm and disciplinarian. she is a teacher who told you to go sit in the corner. doesn't help. i should say that some people have looked at the whole video the whole event. mrs. clinton was trying to accommodate the people who had lined up to see her but it points to really to a bigger problem which is that she is not having actual campaign events, actual big events with the public like other candidates are. martha: yeah. i mean this is not one of those loose moments where you're smiling and talking to people and sure, i will take a picture. sure i will sign an autograph. maybe this woman was really out of line and needed someone to tell her she needed to follow whatever procedure they were looking for, but that image and that voice that is going to stick with people. her numbers are not good. there are new numbers out today in cnn -- orc poll, a couple of different polls she is at the lowest favorability she has had in 14 years, byron. these do not inspire confidence all in the mid to low 40s. >> numbers are really terrible. in this new cnn poll you mentioned she is pretty deeply underwater in really two key questions. one, do you believe secretary clinton is honest and trustworthy? underwater in that. two, do you believe that she cares about people like you? that is a hugely important category. she is 15 points underwater in that. which may have something to do with this, these reports we're seeing that she is going to sort of relaunch her campaign. she is going to have a second launch of her campaign on june 13th. she will have a big event on roosevelt island in new york city. and, it may be her actual first big event where there are members of the public there even though roosevelt island is kind of hard to get to. martha: you have to take a tram, it is an island for starters, across from another big island where it might be easier to gather people together. one last question for you byron. people looking at these gop candidates and want to support them is this necessarily good news for them? should they takeaway that this will make their job easier? >> well we've seen actual some improvements in head-to-head matchups between say, jeb bush or marco rubio or scott walker and hillary clinton. she is still a very strong presence in national polls, in head-to-head matchups with republicans, but if she continues to have numbers like this especially in the honest and trustworthy question, especially on cares about people like you question, that is actually going to be good for republicans because they have been trailing her in those one-to-one matchups ever since the campaign started. martha: you're at front of the line this morning, byron. at the top of the show. better behave. >> thank you, martha. martha: back of line next time you never know. >> don't send me tote corner, martha, thank you. bill: june 30 tenet, is the new date. chipolte stop was not good enough. redo. martha: restart. bill: senate leaders looking to give a version of the patriot act another try and they will do that today but rand paul already declaring victory on our program right here. >> the government is no longer going to collect all of our records all the time. this is big rebuke to the president. the president is now going to have to obey the law. bill: the kentucky senator saying that the nsa program is unconstitutional and simply doesn't work on that. former cia director james woolsey on that in a moment. martha: the obama care spike. major health insurers now asking for big premium increases. wait until you see these numbers, into the double digits some of them. neil cavuto here on that. bill: also an american woman mauled to death on safari by a lion. >> the lady was busy taking pictures of it. the lion then, sort of lunged at the car and it bit the lady through the window. usaa makes me feel like i'm a car buying expert in no time at all. there was no stress. it was in and out. if i buy a car through usaa, i know i'm getting a fair price. we realized, okay, this not only could be convenient we could save a lot of money. i was like, wow, if i could save this much, then i could actually maybe upgrade a little bit. and it was just easy. usaa, they just really make sure that you're well taken care of. usaa car buying service. powered by truecar. online and on the usaa app. ♪ ♪ when you're living with diabetes steady is exciting. ♪ clinically proven to help minimize blood sugar spikes. so you stay steady ahead. martha: we take you quickly to orlando where rick scott, the governor there, is holding an economic summit today. most of the top names in the gop contender pile for 2016 are going to be speaking there. we understand marco rubio will be stepping to the podium moments away. we'll talk to neil cavuto. he is there for this event in orlando. we'll speak to him coming up in the meantime. bill: another fox news alert. because the senate will try to again in a few moments to save most of the patriot act. they will try to move forward with a bill that would reinstate some of the expired tsa powers after kentucky senator rand paul proved to be a success changing the law so far. ambassador james wool sir, former cia director, chairman of and founder of defense of democracieses. sir, welcome back to "america's newsroom." >> good to be with you, bill. bill: essentially if this goes forward they still collect the data. it's a question whether the government holds or the phone company holds it. is that big of a deal? >> there is more difference than that at least one big phone company already told the government that it is not going to cooperate not going to retain the records. since the phone companies don't have to under this revised bill, there may be no retention of records. it is up to the phone companies. bill, it is important for people to realize that the government has been looking at the outside of the envelope it has the right to look at the outside of the envelope in a first class letter, addressee, person who wrote it, the time it was sent, for over 3/4 of a century, back into the '40s and '50s. and what has happened, after 9/11 is that the government utilized that authority to do the same thing with, let's say emails. they are not reading your emails. they are not looking into the substance. they are only being able to keep track of who sent it who receive it and when this happened and that has been very useful to them in finding patterns of behavior and some of the terrorist groups and that -- bill: senator paul and other was argue that there is no proof of one case being stopped. is that true or not? >> you aren't trying to stop one case. you're trying to find a pattern that you can utilize so that if someone blows himself up, you can look and see who he was sending emails back and forthwith and see if somebody else might have been part of that let's say conspiracy. bill: so you support this program and you want it to stay? >> yes. bill: as is? >> effectively been abolished. the, it is not going to work with the telephone companies being custodians of the data. bill: hmmm. you think the senators are aware of that? if so, how does that affect the outcome? >> i don't know. all they had to do is read the papers. one major telephone company will not cooperate. there is no reason for any of the others to. if they cooperate it might be a week a month, whatever they want. bill: are you suggesting this program is going to die today or now? >> it is effectively dying, yes i think that's right. bill: from an intelligence standpoint, what do you believe the effect of that is then? >> i think the effect is that the people who support destroying this program, and when there is another terrorist attack if they have the guts to sit down and meet with the families of the people who have been killed, they may regret this vote. bill: hmmm. well here is rand paul with us yesterday. he is declaring victory. listen. >> i actually want more collection of records on terrorists. i just want less collection of innocent americans. i think we sometimes get distracted by collecting so many records of innocent americans that we're not spending enough time actually following the potential jihadists in our country. bill: i mean, i don't know what your view on that is, he says go chase the bad guys. don't chase everyday americans. hire one how more fbi agents, that will take care of the problem, not what we're doing down the road and we'll regret this? >> that is not a sensible approach. in order to get any advantage out of patterns of communication between terrorists or people on the edge of terrorist groups and the like, one has to be able to dot metadata, look at the again, just the outside of the envelope par little to a first class letter. and if you can't do that, even though the constitution law on it is clear that it is all right, even though the court decisions are clear that it's all right if you can't do that, you lose a great deal of the ability to follow up when something terrible happens and to see who might have been responsible and to pursue things. the, by talking about this the way they do, a lot of people try to give the impression that the government has been reading your emails. that is not true. bill: what about your phone calls? what about your phone records? >> the phone records, same way. it's a little more complicated because they can't use some aspects of cell phones which have to do with the positioning -- by the way amazon knows a lot more about your interests than the federal government. if you bought a tom clancy novel, they will right away send you something saying hey here is the new david ignatius spy novel. you may want to read that because you like spy novels, right? they're far more into understanding what your tastes are like and how to market to you than the federal government. bill: i have to run. out of time. very important topic. 15 seconds or left what is the effect of the out come? >> i think it will weaken us in trying to deal with terrorism and people who support this will some day rue the day that they did. bill: james wool sir, thank you for your time. out of washington d.c. we'll wait to see what the senate does top of the next hour. thank you, sir. >> thank you. martha: health insurance companies say you need to get ready for your costs and your premiums to go way up, double-digit increases they say are on the way. neil cavuto will join us coming up next. bill: two american soldiers today receive the military's highest honor nearly one one years after heroic actions on the battlefield. martha: big story here today. health insurers are requesting huge premium hikes for their obamacare plans in 2016. among the largest, blue cross-blue shield of north carolina says for individual plans it says, it will go up roughly 26% in the coming year. a lot of people think that will trickle down to other plans as well. high mark insurance in pennsylvania, they will ask for 30% increase. nothing goes up like this in this kind of increase in that period of time in your life or anywhere else in your life. joined by neil cavuto host of the new show, "cavuto: coast to coast" on fox business network. it is on 12 noon eastern. and host of "your world." it is 50 degrees in new york and somehow you find yourself in orlando on assignment today. nice job buddy. >> by the way it is 90 degrees and 140% humidity. i wouldn't be boasting right now. holy cow. martha: i know you like that kind of weather. i want to talk to you first about this health care story. it has to be making an impact. you're at an economic summit. businesses across the country are talking about all the time about how much their premiums are going up and going up and going up. >> yeah. you know it is basic math. you know, you can't expect everything for nothing. i mean the simple rule is, and we were following this as it was being cooked up on capitol hill. i remember i spent so much time in washington at the time, martha that i should have bought a condo down there. when you start guaranteeing coverage for everybody. you cover all preexisting conditions, bring your kids on the policy and they can stay until they're 50 i guess i'm exaggerating but my point is all this stuff costs and very few would argue the merits and the decency of covering those with preexisting conditions but you are demanding insurance companies do that and they're going to charge you for that. we have seen this again and again and again. now are there some potential gougers in the mix? i don't doubt it for a second. are they seizing on an opportunity? i believe absolutely they are but administration and this law provide them the grist to do just that. candidates are talking about at this summit to dial that back provide private incentives, get people to sign up on health care on their own without burdening taxpayers, for that matter, all rate-payers, all premium holders of all health policies across the country. that is what is happening now. martha: there is no way it is not putting a cap on hiring. companies just don't want more and more people that they will have to spend more and more money on to cover their health care. i want you to tell us about the summit. you monopolized pretty much every potential candidate out there. there is the governor of florida who is running this event. we mentioned marco rubio, earlier, neil. we know we had to get back to washington to dot vote there. so his vote is going to be submitted by video. tell us what is going on where you are? >> that's right. the senators are not here by and large. marco rubio was a last minute cancellation because the nsa back and forth and the vote. the fact of the matter rand paul sent his regrets sometime ago as is senator cruz. the three prominent senators in this race are not here. by and largest to governors former governors, those anticipating runs of their own. rick perry of texas comes to mind. he is due to announce thursday. he is going to lay out the broad plans for an economic turn around in this country today. don't hold these guys too much to their specifics, martha. what they are you know, presenting almost to a man is this idea that we've got to lower taxes. we've got to provide more of the entrepreneurial spirit. you heard the buzzwords before that they use. some plan to be a little more specific than you would think in a state like this about social security. chris christie of new jersey was the first out to gate he would means test it, raise the retirement age over some years. that got him solve grief and also got him some headlines. mike huckabee we're told will talk about his own entitlement address that doesn't do as much as draconian as he thinks of chris christie's. they can throw and issue verbal grenades. will people remember a year from now? this is state that is marco rubio or jeb bush's to lose. but the fact of the matter is they're hoping by appearing here, coming here, even if they skip or don't do well in the primary here, floridians will remember them. this is state republicans have lost in the last two presidential elections. last one by just a squeaker. if they think that this is a state that favors them. martha: very important place for them to be no doubt. neil, thank you very much. get inside where it is air-conditioned. >> sure. martha: we will hear from you coming up at noon. thank you, neil. neil's brand new show is "cavuto: coast to coast," live from the economic summit in orlando at noon eastern time on the fox business network. at 4:00 you can switch back and watch him on "your world" where he is every day here on the east coast on the fox news channel. bill: he is always on. my man neil. see you at noon eastern on fox business. in the meantime a new blow in the fight against isis. u.s. military equipment and some of our tactics fall into the hands of the terrorists. the navy seal who killed usama bin laden, rob o'neill is live to react in studio next if you think the drive through is a far think -- martha: if you think driving through safari parks is safe, what a park is saying after a lion reached into a car and kill ad woman. >> they have a piece of paper please keep windows closed. we explain to them why. despite this it seems thed windows were still down. ng red lobster's island escape, three new tropical dishes take me straight to the islands. so i'm diving fork-first into the lobster and shrimp in paradise, with panko-crusted lobster tail and jumbo shrimp in captain morgan barbecue glaze. or the ultimate island seafood feast, with tender crab wood-grilled lobster and two island-inspired flavors of jumbo shrimp. because a summer without tropical flavors might as well be winter. this escape is too good to miss so...don't. ♪ every auto insurance policy has a number. but not every insurance company understands the life behind it. ♪ those who have served our nation have earned the very best service in return. ♪ usaa. we know what it means to serve. get an auto insurance quote and see why 92% of our members plan to stay for life. bill: sports story now. fox news alert. minnesota vikings superstar running back adrian petersen will join his team. first time in nine months today. petersen missed 15 games last year. maybe the best running back in the league. addressing child abuse charges in texas. he is ready to put all that behind him and his teammates have been very the vikings. martha: big concern today in the fight against isis as we learn that terrorists are using our military equipment and our tactics against the united states. the isis army capturing more than 2000 american humvees from retreating iraqi troops in one battle alone. they have also won over a new commander, an officer from tajikistan, who says he received training from u.s. special forces and from blackwater while he was under that jurisdiction. so robert o'neill former navy seal who fired the bull at the time that called usama bin laden. a long-time special forces operator and he is here with us this studio. good to see you. >> thank you for having me. martha: here's the story and it came straight from the president of iraq. he said in mosul we lost 2300 american up-armored humvees and guys in isis are riding around in those with their flags on top. >> they are riding around with them. but more frightening them they're using them as large suicide bombs. vehicle-borne improvised explosives device. because they're armored they can drive them pretty much everywhere. small arms won't effect them. they can get pretty much as close as they want. the bad news they didn't just come with humvees, they got machine guns, weaponry communications everything we left for iraqi army they took 23 hunch these in mosul when they captured it last year and now they're using them. martha: so crazy. the president said a couple weeks ago we'll send 1000 new missiles because we heard these promises of arming the iraqis over and over. >> right. martha: we heard also about arming moderate syrians at one point. we watched the president get up at podium we commit to this group. we'll send them good stuff to they can fight the good fight out there and over and over again the same thing happens. >> even the prime minister of iraq says it was our fault. we didn't rearm them quickly enough to fight for of ramadi. they gave up 2300 hum seasoned $27 billion of equipment we gave them as surplus. we're just arming enemy at this point. the iraqi army the she law led army without the help of iran, which itself is scary does not have the will to fight isis. they're fighting ideology. they want to be martyrs. they want to go to heaven. they embrace that and admit it. iraqi soldiers not only do not have the proper leadership, they're not very well-trained. they're pretty much empty army for a paycheck. once the threat of death comes -- martha: not fighting for a country or a leader. you've known this a long time. that raises the question, what are we doing? we've got 3,000 special forces still there training. do you think they should be brought home if we're not going to commit to this in bigger way? >> we need to commit to this in a bigger way. we need to make sure they're trained and leaders are trained. martha: is that possible, rob? >> hard to say. as quickly as we pulled out probably not. martha: we've ruined foundation we laid you and some others lost blood and treasure on that soil is gone. >> anbar province ramadi, mosul, pretty much all the sunni dominant areas we lost because they will let isis in because they're not there after the sunni per se. it's a pretty big mess. martha: last time we felt like losing iraq we had a surge. >> yes. martha: president bush was 100% behind that surge and plan. >> yes he was. martha: even if we had a surge, now they're talking about delaying the effort to retake mosul, right? if we were to, need the president to be 100% behind it to work, don't you? >> we need the president and need the american people to behind it. the surge of this type would be a little bit different. i think it would be pretty easy for us, marine units to come in off the west coast of syria, we can defeat isis that way. we can defeat them. it wouldn't be like the first invasion of iraq because we have some iraqis there. this is something the brass, the pentagon they need to get their heads together. a lot of great minds over there. they can come up with a great plan. we need the support of the president and american people. martha: we hear of a coalition that doesn't appear to exist correct? >> how many nations say they exist but they're not doing anything. it is difficult spot. martha: i'm out of time. the tajik commander says he will take weapons that he got. he was trained by u.s. special forces but turned over, now with isis. >> yes he is. he has been to the united states three times. that is more of opportunistic type thing. he came here to get training and wants to be back in tajikistan. he was doing contracting work. now that isis is getting a foothold, tajikistan on north part of afghanistan. not necessarily friendly to coalition fighters. a lot of foreign fighters we fought against many times in afghanistan from tajikistan. this is dangerous because now that he came over, might be medium level thing what about the next commander? serious foreign fighters we would call them in afghanistan affiliated with al qaeda. now they're joining isis. now they have the minds to fight. they have been fighting their whole lives. martha: and money and support of that group. >> certainly. martha: rob, thank you. always good to see you. thank you for your service. we'll see you next time. thank you, rob. >> appreciate it. martha: bill? bill: so a drive-thru a wildlife park in south africa taking a frightening turn. a lion kills an american woman and injures another man, driving through a park in johannesburg. they were on the self--drive tour. apparently with their windows down. >> the lady was busy taking pictures of it. the lion then, sort of lunged at the car. and it bit the lady through the window. our staff immediately rushed over to chase the lion away and the gentleman that was driving he sustained some injuries to his arms, trying to get the lion out as well. bill: the woman died from her injuries. the lion is taken to a second property while the park investigates. the man is okay. what a frightening frightening ordeal. martha: we see that people getting out in drive-through safaris taking pictures and getting attack. you simply can not. bill: she was still in the car, with the window down the lion lunged at her. it was over. martha: terrible. all right. so undercover testing exposes gaping failures at the tsa. this is a real eye-opener everybody. the fake explosives that were snuck past airport security checkpoints time and time again. homeland security now says, they promise that they will reform the system. we have heard this before. reaction from house oversight committee chairman jason chaffetz coming up next. martha: president obama giving himself a bit of a high-five martha. he says he has re-established respect for the united states around the world since taking office. >> people don't remember when i came into office the united states in world opinion ranked below china and just barely above russia. you drop 40 grand on a new set of wheels, then... wham! a minivan t-bones you. guess what: your insurance company will only give you 37-thousand to replace it. 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"how can my car depreciate before it's first oil change?" you ask. maybe the better question is why do you have that insurance company? with liberty mutual new car replacement, we'll replace the full value of your car. see car insurance in a whole new light. liberty mutual insurance. martha: two world war i heroes are getting a medal of honor nearly 100 years after rescuing follo soldiers on the battlefields of france. president barack obama will bestow the honor on sergeant william shaman and private henry johnson. in 1918 he dodged gunfire to pull wounded men to safety during three days of battle. johnson helped his harlem hell fighters regiment fight off a surprise attack by german raiders with only a knife. he was able to hold off the enemy and prevent the capture of a wounded soldier. what a wonderful award. bill: 15 before the hour. shocking report exposing big problems at the tsa. undercover agents, posing as passengers smuggling mock explosives past airport security time and time again. they got through 96% of the time. now the head of the tsa melvin carraway has been quote, reassigned. chairman of the homeland or house oversight committee, jason chaffetz is with me now. good morning to you. thanks for coming back here. how do you explain this number? why is this happening? >> you don't. this is an agency by the tens of thousands added personnel but i don't think they are doing what they should be doing. they should be doing behavioral profiling. screening for going through a metal detect it. they should be implementing the dogs. the military trying to fine improvised explosive devices in afghanistan and iraq, found through an organization, the joint improvised explosive device defeat organization, the general came out single best way to find explosive devices a dog. instead what we're doing at the airports is a lot of security theater. what we need are things that can actually find explosives and dogs are the best way to -- bill: these red teams. they're investigators. they work for homeland security. let's hope they're not better than terrorists. this is what jeh johnson said, head of homeland security on friday of last week about airport screening. >> in fiscal year 2014 alone we screened some 16.4 million passengers through preclearance and denied boarding to some 10,000 individuals, including a number who were in the terrorist screening database. bill: right now in light of this report sir, that just looks like numbers that he was spouting off. he says several changes have been made already. is that the case? >> well, i don't see it. we've been barking this literally for years and i don't see it getting better. those metrics are getting worse. and i worry about it. because 99% of the americans will do it the right way the legal lawful way but we're trying to find those people who have nefarious intent and weed them out. when we test it 96%, i mean, my goodness couldn't get any worse than that. bill: you could go to 100, i don't think you want to go there. let's hope it doesn't go there. now there is a two-day hearing you will chair starting later today and continues tomorrow. this has to do what is called a foia request, freedom of information act. the heart of this request goes to the transparency of government with the american people with reporters and journalist who is are pursuing certain stories. what are you finding under this administration when it comes to those foia requests? >> well the censorship we're getting from the obama administration is at record high. in fact under the obama administration the number of denials, the number of backlog if you will, is more than doubled. there were some 550,000 times that the administration used an exemption to say we can't give thaw information. we have people coming today from the "new york times," from "newsweek," from judicial watch from a lot of these good groups, the aclu, in a very bipartisan way broad array of concerned citizens and national media who said, the freedom of information act which is the way the public can access government records it is not working. it is not working for niche. and yet this is president obama who said he was going to be the most transparent administration in the history of administrations and he issued an order from the department of justice on his first day in office. it has gotten worse not better. bill: i'm read about delays that take months. some of these day lays last for years. >> yeah. bill: what is going on there? why would that be? >> i think it is obstruction. i think it is censorship. even the associated press says the censorship under obama administration is at record highs. not a quote but paraphrase of what is going on. sharyl attkisson from cbs news will come in and talk about this. terry anderson former hostage in beirut trying to get information. he will come in and talk. hopefully it will loosen it up. we will have to have reform. there has to be consequences to an administration that holds back information from the public. we has a nation, we're open an transparent. that is who we are as a country. that is not what is happening in this administration and it has got to change. bill: day two tomorrow you will bring heads of government responsible for getting these requests managed. we'll see what they have to say then. house oversight chairman there jason chaffetz, republican from utah. thanks for coming back. we'll see what answers you get today. martha? martha: answering for a deadly crash. safety regulators and amtrak facing questions in a congressional hearing today on what happened in the images that you see here outside of philadelphia. some of the questions being asked we will tell you. bill: heart break martha, in the city of romans. paris is removing symbols of love from an iconic bridge. the parisians may not be happy about this. we'll tell you why they're coming down. ♪ ♪ bill: heartbreaking site in the city of love. removing the iconic padlocks from the city's so-called lovers bridge. thousands visiting paris attach locks to the bridge as symbols of their love. now they're being taken down over fear the sheer weight was putting the 19th structure at risk. what happens to the locks now? city says it will recycle them. martha: recycle them? bill: what happens to the love now? martha: is it better than if the love all went crashing into the water below? that would be a very bad sign. bill: only if we were recording it. martha: exactly. if a tree falls in the woods. fox news alert here as amtrak's ceo is on the hot seat. congressional investigators grilling the ceo on the crash in philadelphia last month that killed eight people and injured 200. the big question, why wasn't a speed control system in place to slow down that train which was on a very notorious curve and there kind of safeguard was in place on other parts of the track? it was going 100 plus miles-an-hour before it derailed. peter doocy live in washington. peter, how far have the investigators come in figuring out what was going on in the crash? >> reporter: we're hoping they will tell us this morning martha. we're hearing from the muzz puzzle pieces they're working with that and drew boss steen that he was with a shift so long because of equipment malfunctions it was grueling that the accident happened. that was particular he was posting online train forums to keep crews well-rested, and to keep them well-rested. boss tee an talked about the. postian said that was common sense and shouldn't require a an act of congress to put in place. here we are at a hearing before congress to see who overlooked pretty significant safety improvements that could have been made. martha: clear it was awareness that it was needed in that area. who well be testifying? >> reporter: union advocates for more people on front of the train. they will make their case. the ceo of amtrak will be there. the so the acting administrator of the national railroad administration. keep in mind while they're explaining the crash and what could have been done and what will be done there are at least four people in the hospital being treated for injuries when 188 went off the rails. martha. awful loss of life. peter thank you very much. bill: we're minutes away from two senate committees about to hold hearings on the max -- massive irs data breach affecting hundreds of thousand of americans. more details happening there. more importantly what is being done about it. we'll take you there live. martha: ex-cia director david petraeus speaking out in a rare interview about iraq and isis. what the chief architect of the surge says iraqis need to do to win this pat he will. -- battle. feel secure in your dentures... feel free to be yourself all day. just switch from denture paste to sea-bond denture adhesive seals. holds stronger than the leading paste all day... without the ooze. feel secure. be yourself. with stronger, clean sea-bond. >> the united states is the most respected country on earth and you can thank him. brand new hour of america's newsroom. >> the president is giving himself a pat on the back braise braising himself and with boasting. >> when i came into the office the united states was ranked below china and barely above russia and today once again the united states is the most respected country again on earth and part of that is because, i think of the work we did to reengage the world and say we want to work with you. >> john bolton is a former ambassador. we didn't ask what poll he was referring to that says we are number one but they are checking and will get back to us. what do you make of that statement, ambassador? >> there is something wrong in every sentence you uttered. we could start at the end or beginning. i think the poll is in his mind of what obama thinks of himself on any given day. there are two different levels here. one is opinion of world leaders and the other is a public opinion poll. i think the public opinion polls are worthless. if you are taking a poll of citizens and countries without freedom of the press and anti-american statements are rampant you will get anti american sentiments. but the real issue is what leaders think, friends and foe and by that measure there is no doubt the opinion of the united states around the world is plummeting to new depths. >> he went on to say we have gained mutual respect around the world and that was the bases of ending two wars and focusing on the very real threat of terrorism and trying to work with partners in iraq and afghanistan and we have seen how that appears. let's play charles' clip here: >> you wonder what world and planet he is living on. it isn't just as you said our enemies who have no respect for us the chinese, russians, iranians you can go all the way down. it is our allies. the king of barain was supposed to come and stiffed to the president and the foreign ministry issued a statement saying that on that day, where was the king? at a horse show in england. if that is a sign of respect we have problems. >> i heard rudy gill talking about this. >> i think when the united states defends interests around the world, you will get public criticism by friendly leaders and i think that was true at the end of the bush administration. but when the united states does what we have done these past six years and turn inward and doesn't protect interest or allies what you get is people crumbling the opposite. they always complain about the united states when why being assert assertive. i think the real measure is whether order and stability what minimal order and stability there is that we provide has been diminishing because that is what people look for and we are sliding into the chaos in the middle east russia china, eastern europe and the south china sea do what they want and everybody around the world can see it. that is why i think the next 19 months are so dangerous. >> scary thought. we will see you soon ambassador bolton. the senate is back in session working on a bill that might restore parts of the patriot act given the nsa limited surveyillance powers. the usa freedom act is the measure that passed in the house and it is scheduled in the senate this morning. and in the house the foreign affairs committee is holding a hearing on the four americans being retained in iran. a pastor accused of undermining national security, a former marine accused of spying, a cia contractor taken in 2007 and the journalist from the washington post. we are expecting to hear emotional testimony from the family. and the head of the irs is in the hot seat in not one but two hearings on why and how hackers were able to steal the tax information of a hundred thousand people. jerry is live from fox business and with me now. they had more than a hundred thousand? >> 104,000 taxpayers caught up in this getting their personal information stolen from the website of the irs. if people were seeing their previous filings criminals were able to get inside and steal their information. this is the worst than the average garden variety hike because in this case they were looking at your filings with the irs they have the names of your children and children's social security. >> this could dog people for years? >> the irs is giving you credit crediting monitor but that will not catch the fraud. people will file for unemployment and medicare and other benefits under their name. >> what is the senator from utah going to do? >> he said taxpayers deserve to know what happened and this hearing is the first step of many and pledged to follow this until they find out what happened here. >> russell george we have heard from him many times, what is he saying? >> he is testifying today. he is highly critical of the irs and looked into criminal activity in the wake of lois lerner loosing her e-mails and has been on record dodging the irs and the chairman of the irs is testifying as well. >> and this is all about trust. you heard about the irs using software through microsoft that is 13 years old. >> microsoft no longer supports it so no security patches or updates and they told the agency this a year ago. this is putting us at risk because it isn't updated for security. >> you found it could be vulnerable? >> this is another problem and a chink in the agency. >> we will watch that hearing and see what they say. 104,000 americans. the 2016 campaign is heating up and candidates are flooding into florida along with candidates including former arkansas governor mike huckabee. he is talking at walt disney world. six current and former governors are there as well. the arctitech in the iraq surge is giving an interview on what needs to be done. >> you cannot deal with a the problem with a force of arms. you have to have the political component. >> watt does that look like? >> we will talk to jack keane in a moment about that. and the storm may be over for now but folks in texas are still dealing with and will be dealing with the aftermath of the record rain fall. >> and the tsa underfire missing 96 percent of the fake weapons people try to sneak into the airports. this was an inside job on behalf of the homeland and they failed miserablely. >> we screen for guns and bombs and they use box cutters. they put a knife in their shoe and we take away the shoes. we put in full body scanners and they will do something else. this is a stupid game. laugh loud, live loud, super poligrip. ♪ ♪ when you're living with diabetes steady is exciting. only glucerna has carbsteady clinically proven to help minimize blood sugar spikes. so you stay steady ahead. ♪ ♪ every backyard comes together around a grill and kingsford charcoal. gather 'round. we all enter this world with a shout and we see no reason to stop. so cvs health is creating industry-leading programs and tools that help people stay on medicines as their doctors prescribed. it could help save tens of thousands of lives every year. and that would be something worth shouting about. cvs health, because health is everything. the real question that needs to be asked is "what is it that we can do that is impactful?" what the cloud enables is computing to empower cancer researchers. it used to take two weeks to sequence and analyze a genome; with the microsoft cloud we can analyze 100 per day. whatever i can do to help compute a cure for cancer, that's what i'd like to do. what do you think of when you think of the united states postal service? exactly. that's what pushes us to deliver smarter simpler faster sleeker earlier fresher harder farther quicker and yeah even on sundays. what's next? we'll show you. >> texas still reeling from the storms that hit. you can see in wimberley with the damage here and rising rivers in houston are creeping up on more. the red cross is saying it is the worst flooding they have seen in that part. >> the flooding is spreading across the state. when you look at a map of texas it is stunning how many places were impacted. dallas for example, has gone six weeks with hail, tornados -- >> pretty remarkable stuff. in the northeast in new jersey they said in newark fish were swimming in the street after a river overloaded. and authorities are warning people not to eat the fish. parts of new jersey being hit by flash flooding with more rain in the forecast and maybe a little tomorrow. >> fishing in the streets of newark. good advice not to eat it. >> we need the rain in the northeast. but texas is a different story. a shocking report on serious airport failures causing the active tsa chief to be moved to another position we don't know where yet, but this is after the department of homeland security discovered undercover investigators carried fake bombs and breezed through the country's biggest airports. the screeners did not detect 96% of the fake bombs these folks were able to sneak through. there is an f. indiana senator is on the in tell committee joining me now. good too you with us. >> what are we doing here? spending billions and you can walk through with a bomb? >> everybody buying airline tickets are spending more for the tsa to keep us safe and prevent terror attacks. this is shocking. if there is a silver lining it is this is show shocking it will require immediate action. this has to be a top to bottom effort of looking at the trainers how we hire and train them how they perform their jobs and looking at the equipment that is supposed to detect this. bring in the ceo of the equipment and say what is happening here. we know the threat is terrorist would like to take the plane down. >> the message is loud and clear they can get through. we didn't have a tsa. we had private security and you could walk through and a lot of people look at this and say i don't know if we are safer for all of the billions we have spent on this. i interview john pistol the former head of the tsa in september because we were alerting people to the fact there were issues back then and this is what he said about the attack efforts starting from oversea overseas. >> every plot since 9/11 came from overseas so there is no terrorist trying to get on the plane in the united states and that is because they see the united states as being one of the most secure aviation systems in the world. >> he is saying all of this security is a deterant scaring people away. and he is saying the attacks as efforts came from the underwear bomber and richard reed who were flying outside of the country. but those people were taken down by alert citizens on the plane in both cases. no protection other than that. >> we want people to be alert because that can be a help. we absolutely have to work with foreign allies in airports around the world to try to detect this from happening overseas. you have to do more here in order to ensure passengers we are taking every step to keep them safe. when we are debating the necessary tool that helped with threats some in the senate want to eliminate this and we will debate and vote on this today and tomorrow. so here we are once again looking at major security threats and we need to be vigilant and support the measures. >> this security expert feels we are going about this the wrong way. >> i think the tsa is a waste of money. we spend billions a year on one particular threat. both richard reed and the underwear bomber it was alert passengers that saw something going on and stopped it. >> so in 14 years the tsa has never stopped a plot. so is it time to rethink and start from square one this isn't working, clearly, senator? >> i think we need to keep this because we know it is deterring people. we don't know how many who thought they would take down a plane through a measure carrying something on a plane we don't know how many said that is too hard to do and i will not take the risk. we have to stay one step ahead of the terrorist but behind. we don't want to wait for something to be successful before we say we should have detected this. whether it is passengers staying vigilant tightening the csa whether it is all hands on deck we have to realize terrorism is a threat to american safety. everybody has to be involved in this. that is why the debate on another tool helping us define threats needs to be not exaggerated and misrepresented or overrepresented. so as a public we need to basically all be aware we are living if a different world and we need to come together to prevent the attacks. >> we know you are active on that issue and thank you for being here. we may need to rethink this tsa thing from the bottom up and i hope somebody takes that on. >> i could not agree with you more. this is all hands on deck. we will review the whole program. >> good to have you. >> a hollywood celebrity draws fire for supporting the second amendment. why vince von supports guns in schools and that is not all. >> and seeking approval for the keystone pipeline and lining the clinton's pockets while doing it. >> we followed the money and looked at the major foreign donors and said do thes people have business before the state department and how does it end up for them. i think there are coincidences but these patterns are showing trades. e ready to start with production. ok, are you doing test markets like last time? uh, no we're going to roll out globally. ok. we'll start working on some financing options right away. thanks, joe. oh, yeah. it's a game-changer for the rock-climbing industry. this is one strong rope! huh joe? oh, yeah it's incredible! how you doing team? jeff you good? 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[ male announcer ] how do you make cancer a thing of the past? well...you use the past. huntsman cancer institute has combined 300 years of family histories with health records to discover inherited genes for melanoma, breast colon and ovarian cancers. so we can predict and treat cancer. and sometimes even prevent it from happening in the first place. to learn more or support the cause go to huntsmancancer.org. thanks for calling angie's list. how may i help you? i heard i could call angie's list if i needed work done around my house at a fair price. you heard right, just tell us what you need done and we'll find a top rated provider to take care of it. so i could get a faulty light switch fixed? yup! or have a guy refinish my floors? absolutely! or send someone out to groom my pookie? pookie's what you call your? my dog. yes, we can do that. real help from real people. come see what the new angie's list can do for you. >> move over kim kardashian. caitlyn jenner making her debut on the cover of vanity fair. he won a gold medal in the 1976 summer olympics. he was the guy and on the box of wheaties. he was everywhere. the kardashian clan showing love and she smashed records for her new account. she tweeted another jenner world record and at 65 who would have thought. humbled and honored it reach one million fans in one hour. thank you for your support. it was held by president obama before that. he tweeted back it takes courage to share your story. and one thing you hear about from everyone who likes and knows jenner is he is a likable person and a good girl. >> and another jenner record. >> they are amazing at getting themselves on the cover of magazines. interesting story on everybody's mind. a lot of people talking about it. >> cash for the keystone pipeline. a new investigate revealing canadian banks with an interest in the pipeline helped put millions in the pockets of the clintons as she served as secretary of state. the author of following the cash is with me now live from tallahassee. welcome back. let me set the stage a little. hilary clinton is secretary of state. bill clinton is out giving speeches. to whom is he giving speeches and what was their position on the keystone pipeline? >> when hilary clinton becomes secretary of state already on her desk, is thumbs up or down to the keystone pipeline. and bill is asked for the first time ever to give ten speeches for a bank called tbt investment bank ten speeches for about $10 million. they paid him for the last speech and three months later hilary clinton greenlights the keystone pipeline and the investment group, one of the largest shareholders with $1.6 in equity and $933 million in loans tied up so it raises questions about the green greenlighting. >> the environmentalist couldn't see why she would not express an opinion. in 2010 she said we are going to depend on dirty oil from the gulf or from canada. have you found a quid pro quo? is there a connection and link here? >> i think there is a link. e-mail that says we will give you this money and you will do this in exchange no there is not that. but hilary clinton is not taking an issue on the history of the keystone pipeline. part of this is commercial because she is paid $1.6 to give speeches for the invesstment group and the commercial bank of canada who is tied up with this as well. so if she makes the statement it will hurt her and the banks may not feel the need to put money in her pocket. >> in 2013 the clinton foundation spent about $85 million, covering airplanes hotels and employee labor cost, and i believe the foundation had 402 employees in 2013 which comes out to roughly $210,000 per employee working for the foundation. you looked into this and what did you find regarding the expenses? >> it is troubling. there is not a lot of transparency. they have a large travel budget amount amounting to $50 million with a lot of that being bill clinton. there are stories of people going to the clinton foundation events that got a seat for themselves and the foundation paid for a seat for their dog. "the new york times" reported on that. this is the problem. it is an organization committed to fighting poverty but they are living high on the hog; these employees and expenses are high. >> you can't leave the dog at home. peter thank you for your time. we will continue to look into these expenses. thank you for coming back today. >> thanks, bill. >> back on capital hill we are moments away on an amended house bill that will restore surveillance powers. and former cia director speaking out against isis and how we go about beating them and whether or not he thinks the iraqi forces are up to the task to manage the job or not. >> we know they can fight. we know they will fight. but they will only fight if they have good leadership and indeed support and knowledge that somebody has their back when they get into a tough battle. y insurance company understands the life behind it. ♪ those who have served our nation have earned the very best service in return. ♪ usaa. we know what it means to serve. get an auto insurance quote and see why 92% of our members plan to stay for life. the sentate is trying to advance the usa freedom act aimed at restoring parts of the expired patriot act. mitch mcconnell, calling an early vote senator rand paul is a fierce opponent of nsa survilance and unable to stall longer. mike emanual is live on capital hill. any drama expected in there? >> the sounds like a number of senators want to take the next step changing the way the phone data is collected switching over to the telecom companies retaining the data and restore two revisions from the patriot act. a first vote on sunday evening was 77-17 so we had plenty of drama over the past ten days the gathering of intelligence in this country and we don't anticipate drama with this vote. >> what about these amendments that senator mcconnell favors? >> that is right. the majority leader and richard burr the senate intelligence chairman favor three amendments saying if we shift it from having the government collect the information to having the telecom companies retain it it should be tested and given enough time to make sure it works before it is implemented. there is one. and another having the director of national intelligence certify the system works. and three making sure if the telecom company changes their method they notify the government. send the bill to the president to sign it they are saying. there are concerns if the amendments pass it goes back to the house and there could be friction there. so the white house and house are saying pass the house bill let's move on. >> mike, thanks a lot. we will be watching. in iraq we have the right strategy right now. a combination of coalition airstrikes training, equipping, assisting, and effective local partners. that is the winning strategy. >> that is the deputy of national security advisor on beating isis. jack keane is here and general welcome back to you and good morning to you. that is what he said. good morning. he said they have the right strategy. do do they? >> given the events in ramadi and the other setbacks it makes you question if this is working. it needs to be reviewed and we need more resources to help our iraqi partners to be sure and we have no strategy to defeat isis in syria which is the president's stated goal. >> and the general is saying the only way you beat the group is with a two-prong approach. this is part of what he said in that interview. >> you cannot deal with an industrial strength extremist problem just with the force of arm. you have to have the political component. as important as the force of arms and recognizing they must be killed or captured but to enable that requires political initiatives. >> my guess is you don't disagree with that. but he was talking that way a year ago. >> that is the strategy in play in 2007-2008. a political and military strategy to defeat al-qaeda and the shiite militia. he is advocating for people more on the ground special trainers, and all of the things we have been talking about. and he is talking about to help it be successful and the administration helped the engineer and new government in iraq and they deserve credit they have not done enough to move it into the right direction so the sunnis are included and the tribes receive the kind of warning they need. and they are being undermined by political opponents. we need to be involved more politically to help the government. >> and also because it was said the iraqis have the will to fight and i don't know if you agree with that and he believes that ramadi will fall and isis will lose there as well perhaps in a week or a bit longer. do you share that same view? >> eventually ramadi will be retaken with enough shiite militia to do that. can we hold on to it? that will take sunni tribes to do that. that is the big question mark. in terms of the iraqi army they distinguished themselves in defeating the al-qaeda and shiite based groups. but maliki purged the leaders and they stopped training for three years. when isis shows up as we all saw, in mosul and such, this army fled. that is a mere shadow of watt the army was that the general was close to that i saw first hand myself. can we put it back together? we can because we need good leaders and training. we don't have enough of either. >> come back to the message from the administration. ash carter said the strategy makes sense and the execution of the strategy is challenging but the key is we can defeat isis but we cannot keep them defeated only the people who live in the region can do that. that along with what josh earnest said we are not fighting the war for the iraqis anymore. it is up to them. that might be the case. perhaps there is a shift there. they are making it more clear at the moment on behalf of the commander and chief but is that a winning strategy in your view? >> well i don't like the statements. there is a lot of way to talk about how you support your allies. and i don't think this is the way to deal with it. >> what would you do? >> well first of all we all know the stability in the middle east depends on the countries being involved in the middle east but they need assistance from the united states. i think the administration after the debacle at ramadi has been dis distancing themselves from iraq and the iraq government. we should do the opposite in terms of helping and assisting them and making sure we do have resolve and are committed. we are going to be there and see this thing through till the end. we have seen this pattern played out before with the administration as we distance ourselves from things that become challenging. >> general thank you for your perspective. there is a lot more and that was fascinating. we will talk again. jack keane in washington, thank you. vince von is hitting politics with both barrels strongly defending gun rights in a very big new interview that is getting hollywood fired up. our political panel weighs in. >> we are waiting for the cattle call of the 2016 election. former texas governor rick perry along the potential candidates speaking at a high profile event in florida. what will he reveal? we will tell you next. when broker chris hill stays at laquinta and fires up free wi-fi, with a network that's now up to 5 times faster than before you know what he can do? let's see if he's ready. he can swim with the sharks! book your next stay at lq.com! >> a shooting involved with the fbi and boston police part of a joint terror'ism. they approached man to ask questions and he pulled out a knife described as a military style. she he was shot and taken to the hospital and died. the man is in his mid-20s. when we get more information we will pass it along to you. comedian and actor vince von is becoming a cult hero after defending the second amendment saying he supports americans having guns in public including schools and we have the right to resist the power of corrupt and abusive government. it is not about duck hunting. it is about the individual. it is well known the greatest defense against an intruder is the sound of a gun hammer being pulled back he said. joined by david web here radio talk show host and leslie marshall a fox news contribute as well. welcome to both of you. >> good morning martha. >> this is getting a lot of attention because i think you don't hear this talk much from folks in hollywood. david, what do you think? >> it is not new hearing vince von saying this. he has been upfront about believes but it is nice to have someone going out there in britain and stand up for the second amendment argument and the constitutional argument and the safety argument. and he talks about the middle of the night is silent and there is an intruder in your house and they hear the hammer the gun being calulked, they are scared. and gun violence has been going down. it is largely because we have a well trained law-abiding population for the most part that respects our second amendment rights and acts appropriately. >> but talking like this leslie in the circles he goes in in hollywood is not poplar. you are supposed to accept that being against guns and being against private ownership of guns and guns in schools to protect people is not a line that will go over well at a cocktail party in hollywood. >> we have had the people who are pro-gun in hollywood like charleston heston. here in los angeles not far from hollywood most people are liberal democrats and in favor of gun control, they are not in favor of taking away people's rights or the second amendment or their guns. but there is a huge difference between somebody being a gun owner and somebody carrying a gun in public. i have the right to not own a gun, and i have a right to feel safer knowing in southern california i can go to disney land without my kids being exposed to that. and that is the choice i have as well. i have to tell you it is wild. i am seeing a lot of hero stuff from the nra on the right with vince von today opposite when liem neison spoke out. >> he said take mass shootings. they only happen in places where they don't allow guns. in all of these schools guns are not allowed so they go out and shoot the f-ing schools because they know guns are not there. that is not a point that goes over well. >> it is time to stop getting into wrong and false arguments with those who want to restrict your rights. a criminal will go after the soft target or the softer target and look where they can be most effective where it is a mass shooting or a robber. we are talking about the mass shootings in this case. a gun doesn't determine an outcome. but a good guy with a gun or a law enforcement officer or someone with a gun changes the dynamic with a shooter. and leslie is saying you are safe in california but you don't feel less safe because someone has a gun in open carry or concealed carry permit. you don't feel safe or unsafe either way. that is subjective. the reality is different. >> quick comment, lesley. >> columbine did have armed guards. so not everyone is not armed. and how can the united states have a higher murder rate than canada uk france, germany and i could list others. >> good talking to you. "happening now" is next. >> the supreme court could blow this month and we will play out the scenario for that. and talk to an animal expert about a deadly attack in africa by a lion and there is new research on dramatic brain injury that could help our soldiers. tracking the ocean's deep sea predators. you can spot a shark on your smart phone. >> that might be helpful to me. >> could it? will it? here at the td ameritrade trader group, they work all the time. sup jj? working hard? working 24/7 on mobile trader, rated #1 trading app in the app store. it lets you trade stocks options, futures... even advanced orders. and it offers more charts than a lot of the other competitors do in desktop. you work so late. i guess you don't see your family very much? i see them all the time. did you finish your derivative pricing model, honey? for all the confidence you need. td ameritrade. you got this. >>wy take you live to the floor of the senate where they are closer to the vote of the usa freedom act and once they get that vote they are hoping to vote on the amendments that will strengthen the bill in his views. but some members think passing the amendments would be equivalent to a poisoned pill. >> the wave of the future is here for folks. gps technology makes it easier to track the movements of a shark on your smart phone. we are taking about the great white sharks here. we are live with the story in northern california. >> good morning, this is pacific grove and this stretch of the california coast is home to several hundred white sharks that have been tagged with gps trackers and are creating buzz online because of the shark apps ran by scientist available to anyone. like any ocean lover mimi is enthrall enthralled my sharks. >> we cannot them but we are fascinating with them. >> reporter: she can get to know real sharks through shark net. an effort by stanford to engage the public. >> our goal is to build a wire dashboard to send the message sharks are part of the eco system and a healthy eco system has large sharks and by knowing what they are doing we hope to encourage education about the sharks. >> big mature female shark. >> reporter: this is a six foot great white tagged in 2011 and tracked from florida to new york. they are not a warning system for ocean swimmers but a way to share data about shark behavior. >> these animals spend months at a time out in the open ocean environment and we have no way to track them. so this is a good way to learn more. >> reporter: scientist encourage people to understand and ultimately protect the marine environment. >> i feel better. thank you for reporting that. a stunning report on the tsa and huge security breaches. if you can't put a feeling into words, why try? at 62,000 brush movements per minute philips sonicare leaves your mouth with a level of clean like you've never felt before. innovation and you. philips sonicare. today. lookout for those sharks, have a great day. >> we begin on tuesday with a shake-up at the t s a after a scathing report on security america's airports. >> airport screeners to failed nearly all the security tests. those agents were able to sneak guns and fake bombs through checkpoints. almost every time they tried to do it. ed homan security secretary asking to reassign

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