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makes it easy for anne to manage her finances when she's on the go. even when she's not going anywhere. citibank for ipad. easier banking. standard at citibank. skawsdz. >> at last. crippled carnival cruise ship finally reaches port. as you can see in the live look the ship is finally arrived in mobile, alabama. short time ago people actually began walking down the ramp leaving the ship baggage in hands. earlier we saw passengers complaining about. hallway covered in filth. raw sewage in plain sight. good evening i'm dan ashley. fire inside the engine room on sunday crippled the cruise ship on the third day of a 4 day trip. and now after 5 days of enduring the mess praejs now docking and disembarking. marsy is live in mobile, alabama right now with the very latest on this. >>reporter: good evening. ship pulled into the dock here about an hour and 45 minutes ago. the passengers now leaving. cheering as the nightmare on board finally comes to an end. >> last males were the long egg as passengers on the carnival triumph sweated out the final minutes aboard the luxury liner that became a prison ship. it left more than 8 days with more than 4000 people aboard but an engine room fire sunday left the mammouth vessel a helpless giant. marooned in the gulf of mexico with no power. sewage seeping down walls and scarce rations. >> condition on board the ship very challenging. >>reporter: for passengers a tonight mayor. >> our toilet sort of exploded all over the place and we have been on the balcony ever since. >>reporter: carpeting in the hallway soaked in urine. heat and stench force passengers top side where they put autopsy kind of shanty town living in the open and sleeping on deck. >> we had sewage coming in the bathroom. smell was horrific. there's no ac. >>reporter: one sick passenger medevaced to safety this woman finally got to speak with her young daughter aboard. >> eating cold frozen food. cucumber sandwich, tomato sandwich. 12-year-old? >>reporter: once at port the passengers were about ordeal still isn't over. >> the debarking process could take 4 to 5 hours. >>reporter: passengers reimbursed free cross and 500 dollars. >> i know it was very difficult and i want to apologize again for subjecting our guests to that. >>reporter: and carnival cruise line is providing buses. we have seen half a dozen leave so far but many passengers say they are so desperate to get home quickly and gate hot shower they are finding their own way home. we are live in mobile, alabama, abc news. now back to you. >> thank you. no doubt they can not get home soon enough. let's move on. plot thicken in an explosive situation in a south bay neighborhood. >> man storing bomb and dangerous chemical accused of making death threat against a local state senator. the target is state senator lee because of the tough stand on gun control. suspect in the case everett bosch. 7 news reporter on story that seems to get bigger and more frightening by the minute. >> santa clara what began with simple search warrant on tuesday has become what investigators say is a long slow going high stress walk through a cluttered potential mine fichltd every room we go into is a task. >>reporter: it has been going on since tuesday when chp officers arrested 45-year-old everett bash on suspicion of writing a threatening evening to state senator lee last mont month. today the senator went public and talked about it. >> the author of that particular e-mail specifically stated that if i did not sooetion effort to deal with gun violence that he would assassinate me in or around the capitol. >>reporter: chp served search warrant on tuesday. this video only hints at the mess inside which included guns and explosive material >> there is material that is classified as an explosive so yes there are materials prohibited restricted and criminals to possess. not typical household product you find in your home. >>reporter: no enthusiastic morning investigators pulled out bottles of acid. handed off what they describe as an explosive device than a bomb squad. >> if this person were not a suspect the material you found would it be suspicious. >> yes. >>reporter: after all this beginning to appear that even the supposed victim was in the a state senator we would still be in the midst of most unusual story. >> not this threat or any other threat could deter me from addressing the critical issues surrounding gun violence. this case is a rather troubling one and only further demonstrates the need to address particular problem. >>reporter: background senator lee pushing 2 bills in the state senate. first would make it more difficult to load magazine into semi-automatic weapon. second would require gun owners to keep the weapons under lock and key. >> as for bash he may arraigned as early as tomorrow and investigators say they will be back at this house combing through it again. if santa clara wayne abc 7 news. >> man accused of trying to blow up a bank of america branch in oakland back in court today. 28-year-old matthew of san jose arrested friday in fbi stechblingt he reportedly told undercover agent that he would dance with joy to see the bank of america come down. prosecutors said man goal was to spark a right wing backlash of some kind and ultimately a civil war. ka the attorney came into federal court in oakland and asked to delay criminal proceedings while he researches whether mental competencey needs to be reevaluated. concerning to court records the undercover agent supplied the bucket of fake the explosives triggering did he advice made from cell phones that he purchased and the government agent also supplied the black suv. that carried the bomb to the bank. today the judge agreed to put off preliminary hearing while the attorney does his research on his client mental state. next appearance set for march 8. >> investigators have ladies but no suspect tonight in the murder of 19-year-old lane college student. foster was shot and killed just before 9 last night san leandro. 7 news reporter has the latest on what we have on the case so far. >> this is a heart break. >>reporter: close break of foster, says foster was a young man with a smile and future. >> let me know people throughout that didn't want to see a man doing great. don't want to see a man with something going for themself being successful. they see somebody trying to be somebody and break it down. >>reporter: 19-year-old foster shot and killed wednesday night in the field behind san leandro hillside 62. alameda county sheriff say it appears foster was involved in some kind of game with several ors when gunfire erupted. >> found on the school grounds. but again we don't want to assume for 100 percent that that is exactly where the crime occurred because he may have run to the spot. >> the college football team this past season. graduate of oakland high school where he also played football. at lane the konl told us he would have been on the field did for spring conditioning with the teammate. >> felt everybody here. avenues registered linebacker last year. trying to do the right thing. transferred coming to make the transition from high school to college. >> class were his cancelled at hillside school today to give investigators time to gather any evidence that might be in the field during daylight hour hours. >> we don't expect something like that to the happen at school. not at the night team. safe for the kid. >> pretty much a good kid. good friend. good other brother. perfect role model. nothing wrong with them at all. >> foster loss hits the football team especially hard. early this week they lost another player in a car accident in southern california. >> young people trying to do the right think and make a sacrifice go to school every day. no longer with you, it's tough. >> now that investigators have collected whatever evidence might be here at the school hillside elementary will reopen for classes on friday morning. in san leandro, abc 7 news. >> the charred body found in the burned out caben in the san bernardino mountains positively identified as fugitive ex cop christopher dorner. district attorney is the suspect in 4 murder and was cornered in a mountain cabin after more than a week on the run. stand off lasted several hours ended when the cabin went up in flames two days ago. authorities today aparagraph new rules for big ships in san francisco bay. tankers can no longer sail under the bay bridge in heavy fog. today ruling comes 5 week after oil tanker hit a bridge tower causing 3 million dollars in damage. fog was a factor. new recalls apply to ships heading out of the bay. incoming ships could have negative effects on port commerce. so they left that alone. >> they have potential to save lives stop crime and bring home missing people. but also one of the most controversial tools in law enforcement today. jonathan bloom takes you to alameda county where small unmanned aircraft are a topic of very intense debate. >> life size model of a predator drone sits menacing among the protestors at the alameda county board of supervisors. these won't be flying over the east bay any time soon but these might. small unmanned helicopters equipped with camera. >> plan on using this for search and rescue. >> sheriff wants to spend up to 50,000 dollars on the did he vase he says could help locate missing people and survey the scenes of fires. those aren't the use with civil rights groups concerned. >> they will argue it's being used for basically good policing. we are afraid it is going to be used to surveil protestors, dissident, people that are against police brutality. >>reporter: sheriff says that is simply never happen. >> don't use these types of of devices for surveillance. gathering intel on civilian activity. >> american civil liberties union wants that in writing. >> the problem with the sheriff's policy it's crafted to look narrow but actually contains loop holes that render the privacy protection meaningless. >>reporter: backlash comes as supervisors decide to see how much authority they have to fly unmanned aircraft, it could be watched the world over. >> we all know that eyes are all eye on alameda continue and we want to get it right. >> the county would be the first in california to use the the devices. some are concerned over what happens when they get more sophisticated. >> they can see through wall. equipped with facial recognition technology and license plate readers and rada radar. >> supervisor grilled the sheriff. >> have you done privacy assessment. >> yes those are the conversations we have had with aclu and community groups. >>reporter: but those groups aren't satisfied. >> we would also be who are fitd if they had tan our recommendation. >>reporter: if supervisors can broker a compromise the small aircraft could fly in a year. in oakland, abc 7 news. one bill rising. coming up. san francisco sheriff plays unusual role in a worldwide campaign against domestic violence. >> new bionic eye restoring sight to the blind. bay area researcher who helped develop it and spencer has the weather. >> in the accu-weather forecast center than joy the spring like warmth because wetter weather coming our wait a minute accu-weather forecast in just a moment. >> thanks spencer. also feathers flying. just how much does it cost to clean up from the world largest pillow fight on this valentine's day. >> back live again. these are pictures as they happen to passengers on the carnival cruiseship in mobile, alabama just got back to court. ship is called triumph. not exactly a triumphant return but certainly passenger for 1,000 in off. incredibly relieved to be back on dry land. there is no mass-produced human. so we created the extraordinarily comfortable sleep number experience. a collection of innovations designed around a bed with dualair technology that allows you to adjust to the support your body needs. each of your bodies. our sleep professionals 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[ male announcer ] get u-verse tv for just $19 a month for 1 year when you bundle tv and internet. rethink possible. real big deals of the week. or how to keep from driving all over for the best deals. you don't need to run around. safeway gives you real big club card deals each week. right now, tide is $5.49 for 50 ounces. that's under 20 cents a load! skip the warehouse. charmin is $8.99 for 16 double rolls. and chobani greek yogurt is just a buck. real big deals this week and every week. only at safeway. ingredients for life. as part of a heart healthy diet. that's true. ...but you still have to go to the gym. ♪ the one and only, cheerios ♪ the one and only, cheerios >> police on the scene of apparent murder-suicide in east san jose on bermuda a way close to the intersection of highway 101 and 280. here's the scene from sky 7 hd overhead. man shot a woman romantically involved with then shot and killed himself. it happened just after 4:00 o'clock this afternoon. house mate heard the shots found the bodies and then called police. the street will be cordoneed off for a few more hours. well this valentine's day there is an international day of action to demand an end to violence against women and girls. as caroline tyler explains millions show theirh d this is my body what? the the. >>reporter: this song this dance the gel is to have one billion people all over the world performing today in a campaign against violence towards women. >> so there's this power moving throughout the world right now that is going to create a shift of conscience nishtionz among those who brought the global effort into unique setting. san francisco is thought to have the only jail system anywhere taking part. >> it means i'm part of the world. and it makes me feel good about myself. >>reporter: the song break the chain was created by play wright eve answer especially for this day and resonates for those who find themselves behind bars. both women and men whether kind of feelings did it give you. >> i'm about to cry right now. it's beautiful. grit to be a part of this. ♪ . >>reporter: idea of bringing the movement into the jail came from sheriff mirkarimi who pleaded guilty in a domestic violence case last year. both he and his wife miss lopez danced with the inmates today. >> owe said it's important to take responsibility. would he sa that it's important to understand what the power of redemption mean but i also said and vowed that we are here to better ourselves. >>reporter: the sheriff says he thinks it was important to bring what he described as creativity and courage of the program into the jails today and says he is considering making dance a permanent part there. i'm carolyn tyler abc 7 news. >> valentine's day tradition in the city. it is the great san francisco pillow fight now in the eighth year. as you can see it is very important popular. starts at the stroke of 6:00 o'clock at justin her machine plaza along the embarcadero and you can only hit people with a pillow. the cleanup last year cost somewhere in the neighborhood of 5000 dollars. one interesting thing. not as many feathers flying as in year past which makes the picture not quite as dramatic but the clean up a little easier because apparently they put out on facebook to encourage people to come with synthetic pillow instead feather stuffed. they have a great time. spencer is here with the forecast. that's a lot of fun and weather was perfect. >>reporter: it was great. nice clear mild no fog no chin. >> if i had a pillow i would smack you. >>reporter: i would receive the smack graciously. live view from the high definition east bay hills camera at mount bowler peak out over the bay on the clear evening. it's a pleasant evening around the bay area. live doppler 7 hd receipt now. we have an absence of clouds. clear sky. pattern couple days. how about the high pressure today. we had some warmth in the bay area. high up to mid 70's at ukiah mostly clear lake and clover dale. low 70's in many location and we had one record hay for the date. oakland airport 71 degrees. new record high for oakland airport for this date. so you can see we are having some very unwinter like weather. rate now temperatures mainly in the 50' 50's. 61 degree reading at 43 mochbility upper 40's at napa fairfield and livermore. here the forecast feature sunny mild conditions the next two days cooling against on sunday. rain arrives on tuesday so this mailed pattern business to wind down right now. satellite image shows high pressure the dominant feature in our weather that will hold this dry pattern in place throughhe weekend in fact mild weather for us for a couple days. animation at 11:00 o'clock tonight and center of high pressure east northeast continues to slide inland we get a flow of offshore flow of mild air that will keep our temperatures up way above average the next couple days. however low tonight will drop in the chilly range in the interior valley of the north bay with low of 38. santa rosa 37 napa 38 at fairfield 38 east bay inland at livermore. other locations we see low in the 40's vts. look at tomorrow high. another mild day even milder than today was generally. in the south baylow 70's. 72 at san jose and santa clara. on the peninsula also see low 70's. 71 redwood city. 72 at mountain view. mid upper 60's on the coast. at pacifica and a half man bay. in and around san francisco high in the mid upper 60's. 68 degrees downtown. 66 sunset district. north bay hi upper 60's and low 70's. 71 at santa clara and calistoga 70 at nap a.on the east bay we see high of 71 at oakland. union city and castro vaechlt inland east bay high in the low 70's. 72 at antioch. fairfield. walnut creek and pleasanton and near monterey bay look for low to mid 70's near the bay and inland mid 70's gilroy holster and salinas. here's accu-weather 7 day forecast. 2 more very mild days coming our way. pleasant day on sunday as well. just a little bit cooler but mainly sunny skies clouds thicken just a tad on monday which is president's day continues getting cooler then by midweek tuesday wednesday we see some rain or showers moving into the area. high pressure those days only in the 50's. >> down right chilly. >> thank you very much expense snaer still to come on 7 news at 9 in the cockpit of jet fighter. what might just be the next best thing to being a top gun really incredible pictures. chosen county. what remember informer astronaut and current silicon valley experts are doing to protect the planet from asteroids. >> sta through presidents' day, get 36 months interest-free financing and save up to $500 on beautyrest and posturepedic. get a sealy queen set for just $399. even get 3 years interest-free financing on tempur-pedic. plus, free delivery, set-up, and removal of your old set. keep more presidents in your wallet. this special financing offer ends presidents' day at sleep train. superior service, best selection, lowest price, guaranteed. ♪ sleep train ♪ your ticket to a better night's sleep ♪ >> stunning video show as pilot taking off from an aircraft carrier and then flying in the sky. within seconds the pilot reaches an altitude that really renders the ground practically invisible. even the pilot loo looks to be in awe but magnificent view he is experiencing. he takes the f/a-18 fighter jet for series of expense and turns for a flit and it carries missiles and weapons. video up loaded to you tube apparently by the pilot. >> pretty spectacular stuff. >> these days we are acustom to the development of every more sophisticated prosthetic limb but how about prosthetic eye. that's along the lines of what the fd proved today. it's local search we property new 2009 when clinical trial under way at that time. heather with did's important developments. >> dean lloyd was one of 30 patient's implanted with did he advice for clinical trichlts he worked with researchers at uc sf who had to determine if the implant system would help him see again without side effect that do more harm than good. >> the experience now in a number of patient's has democrat stated it's safe. and it's well tolerated and really has been effective in restoring vision to people whoa have profound vision loss from retina problems. >>reporter: it's made with a company called second sight here. the animation shows how it works. tiny camera mounted on pair of glasses wirelessly sends video information to the a microprocessor that converts it into electronic signal third then transmitted to a receiver on the eye. the pulse travel along the optic nerve to the brain which perceives pattern of light and dark. patient's do have to good through a learning process to interpret what they are seeing. right now the images are limited to large targets with high contrast lick a door. >> it improves ability to walk around because they can see edges of curb. out lane of person speak to go them. they can see sometimes they can see stripes on a crosswalk when crossing the street. >>reporter: in addition to uc sf work on clinical trials lawrence livermore lab is where implant material were developed and scientist there are still working to improve on it. aiming for facial recognition and possibly colors. >> second sight also hopes some day help people with age related macular degeneration that affects many more people. this is abc 7 news. well we have a lieutenant more to bring you tonight on 7 news at 9:00. athlete made history now faces murder charges police say about oscars history and death of his girlfriend. >> survivors escaped through crack in the plane. up next why a plane operator says the pilot is to blame for the deadly crash. >> plus berkeley math whiz crunches the number on the cost to document students and puts his future at risk in the process. >> california mayor who had a bi [ man ] they're big. strength we can count on. same with aladdin. the biggest in bail. no one has lower prices, is faster or more professional. aladdin bail bonds. bigger because we're better. real big deals of the week. or how to keep from driving all over for the best deals. you don't need to run around. safeway gives you real big club card deals each week. right now, tide is $5.49 for 50 ounces. that's under 20 cents a load! skip the warehouse. charmin is $8.99 for 16 double rolls. and chobani greek yogurt is just a buck. real big deals this week and every week. only at safeway. ingredients for life. >> stunning news today that one of the most inspiring athlete in the world has been charged with murder. other car history the first double leg amputee to compete on track in the olympic is charged with shooting his girlfriend known as the face of avon in south africa. very successful model. details are still coming out about this. abc reporter her has the news from the home in south africa tonight. >> there's the start. land breaking whoyshtion would have imagine the man who did this would end up like this. accused of murder. of his girlfriend reef a.well known model in africa seen in cell phone commercial and fixture on the red carpet. 2 of them were a couple that demanded attention. he lives in the luxury estate behind 10 pet hay wall and electric fence. hear in south africa this is rampant and rumor going around here that he may have shot his girlfriend mistaking her for intruder. but police have other suspicions. crime is rampant. police said there were accidents in the past at the home and received reports of neighbor hearing shouting before the shooting. >> previously been accidents at the home. alleges of domestic violence. >>reporter: determination was legendary. legs amputated just 11 most old but with a pair of prosthetic leg he was as fast as lightning. >> i'll work extremely hard to be where i am. >>reporter: nicknamed blade runner he rose to champion and first double amputee to come boat in the olympic. but today as word of the shooting spread this nike ad was the wordy am the bullet in the chamber was taken down from his site. >> someone who sell brited as humanitarian to be in this position. it's just shocking. >>reporter: just yesterday tweeted what do you have up your sleeve for your love tomorrow? day that with end in tragedy. leaving a world of admirer asking how an athlete who embodied a expert of over coming any obstacle now facing a murder charge. this is abc news, south africa. >> in you crane a plane broke in half after it crash landed. survivors they escaped by climbing through crack in the burning wreck annual to get away. it was carrying soccer fans. pilot blames heavy fog. he says the landing strip not even visible but the company that operates the plane blames the pilot for even trying to listened and says a criminal case now being pursued against the payment and the crew. the plane clipped airport weather station skidded off the runway and overturned before bursting that flames killing 5 people. 52 passengers and crew were open board. one passenger says the plane opened up as it if were a tin can. >> we came across worst statistics to pass along. over the last 25 days not one not one u.s. service member killed in afghanistan. most of the casualty now afghan. longest stretch without a u.s. fatality since 2008. >> warning for americans tonight considering traveling to the peru. u.s. embassy says it has information a gang may planning to kidnap american tourists visiting there. warning runs through at least the end of the month. state department personnel rae striingt from going there. >> ex mayor of san diego admits she lost more than 1 billion dollars gambling over the last decade and they stole from charity to help pay it off. maureen also won about 1 billion dollars apparently over the same period or of time but ended up 13 million in the red. federal court today prosecutors say she stole two million from the charitable foundation set up by late husband founder of the jack in the box chain. foundation has since gone bankrupt. >> uc berkeley student is featured in a nationally released video aimed at building support for path to citizenship for young immigrants. they are referred to as the dreamers. 7 news education reporter explains who is behind the campaign. >> finishing up a degree in math and statistics at uc berkeley. >>reporter: it wasn't hard to find him on the 9th floor of the hall. we wanted to know why he decided to speak out. >> i thought maybe it's the right moment for me to actually contribute something to the movement. >>reporter: it's called the dream is now. focuses on urging congress to pass the dream act. which were provide permanent residencey to young people lake parents who are brought to the country as a child by an immigrant parent. he was born in south korea. video released nationwide was directed by davis of inconvenient truth and witnessing for superman. tarns argues that instead of the government spending monto deport people someone lick him with college agree with pour more money into the economy. of. >> they earn that much money. that means they are going to spend that money. >>reporter: parents claim if the chem act doesn't pass even with a math degree he won't be able to find a good paying job. >> find a job under the table. i have done supermarket laundry things like that. >> rick of sovreignty matters says the dream act would encourage more people to cross the pwrder. >> everybody that had a this the of wanting to come to the u.s. is hearing the president and both side of congress say there's going to be an amnesty. we want to have the people come here and work little. they have heard it heard it heard it. >>reporter: chancellor robert said university like uc berkeley will continue to help students like terence. >> these are extraordinarily talented people and in the current era with all of the challenges we have in california we can not afford to waste that kind of talent. >> if you want to see the entire video see our web site and click on see it on tv. in the newsroom, abc 7 news. >> coming up next. not quite armageddon. of. >> like something out of hollywood but real. just ahead enormous asteroid ready to fly by earth tomorrow. what scientists say about it you can't move the tv there. yuh-huh. we have a wireless receiver. listen. back in my day, there was no u-verse wireless receiver that let you move the tv away from the tv outlet. we can move it to the kitchen, the patio, the closet and almost anywhere. why would you want a tv in the closet? [ both laugh ] ♪ [ fancy voice ] brilliant idea, darling. ♪ [ female announcer ] the wireless receiver. get u-verse tv for just $19 a month for 1 year when you bundle tv and internet. rethink possible. sf when it comes to drug fish apparently a lot lick people new shoyd shows fish swimming in water with a drug become hyper, anti-social and aggressive. even get the muvrmies. research underscores the importance of preventing medicine from getting in water way typically by getting flushed into water systems when we throw them out. well now to russia and developing news where apparent meet why are shower has sparked series of explosions in the raem of the country 1,000 miles from moscow. witness say houses shook window blown out and cell phone suddenly stopped working. one person says the he can motion was is will you do that it so you knowed lake earthquake aund and thunder at the same time and huge trail of smoke seen across the sky. others report seeing burning objects fall to earth. some buildings being evacuated as a result. despite that there are reports of some injuries but nothing too extensive at this moment but we are staying on top of it. >> open the sun of things falling from space everyone on the planet tonight is on the brink of close encounter. big asteroid hurdles through says about to miss us by a cosmic inch really. closer than some of our weather satellite. so close that scientist are springing in action. here's neal. >> now while watching this a chunk of space rock big enough to level a city is huvrlingt huvrlingtsing towards our planet 8 times faster than speeding bullet. good news is scientist say it will miss. scary news is the 130,000 melt rick ton asteroid is the size of half a football field and it will be much closer than the moon. in fact it will split the natal between the earth and 600 satellite around us. the ones the cell phones rely on his possibly supermarket one on the way by. if you think this is all still a long long way from all of us way down here walking the street, you may want to think again. last close call turned out to be a direct hit. it was 19 08. luckily it hit the meddle of nowhere. siberia decimating 1,000 miles of trees but no people. >> if a very large asteroid hit it would probably create the same kind of disaster that wiped out the dinosaurs. >>reporter: amazingly nobody knew da 14 was headed our way until a spanish dentist and amateur astronomer randomly discovered it a year ago. nasa doesn't have the resources to look for asteroids. which is why a trio of american astronauts and rocket scientist raise money to launch their own asteroid early warning system called sentinel dedicated telescope scanning the stars for threats. >> this asteroid is a wake up call we should be looking out there. these things do hit the earth. >>reporter: we can keep the plan it safe say scientist, if we just know what is out there headed our way. this is abc news, seattle. that will get our attentio attention. he was in a bigger rush than she was. come up next on 7 news at 9. court ship by a former president. stay with us. i'll through presidents' day, get 36 months interest-free financing and save up to $500 on beautyrest and posturepedic. get a sealy queen set for just $399. even get 3 years interest-free financing on tempur-pedic. plus, free delivery, set-up, and removal of your old set. keep more presidents in your wallet. this special financing offer ends presidents' day at sleep train. superior service, best selection, lowest price, guaranteed. ♪ sleep train ♪ your ticket to a better night's sleep ♪ 0. >> in honor of valentine's day the presidential library released full set of letters exchanged by a then 26-year-old lyndon johnson and 20-year-old lady bird taylor when they were cowering. that was in 1934. lbj quite taken with her that he proposed marriage on the very first date. and that first date took place jaws day after they first met. lady bird was unsure. she wanted them to get to know each other better. at one point writing all i can say in salute honesty is love you. however lasting i love you so i can't answer you yet. took 10 week but lady bird finally accepted proposal. she and lbj married for 39 years. >> well, then, there is this valentine's day message. ikea in australia offering free crib to babies born on november 14t 14th, 2013. that is 9 months from today. folks are commenting that since carrying a baby takes 2 66 days on average conception today would result in a baby being born on november 7th not the 14th but why get stuck on the details. >> good back to update the forecast. expense iser highs. >> here's clear skies around the bay area at this hour and tomorrow beginning the 4 day weekend sort of we call it 4 day weekend because monday is a hotel day. if you think of going tout lake tahoe these are the conditions you can expect. sunny sky through sunday. partly cloudy on monday which is president's day. mild conditions and no snow. speaking of no show. where do we stand with respect to our percentage of normal snow pack state wide. 75 percent of normal but that is way ahead of where we were at this time last year. only 33 percent of normal snow pack so we are doing okay. get you more snow though. here in the bay area season sky high pressure once again in the low to mid 70's for most locations and here's the accu-weather 7 day forecas forecast. we have 2 more days of unseasonably mild weather coming our way. that will be through saturday. start to consolidate down on sunday. it will be a pleasant day as well. then much cooler on tuesday and wed with a chance of rain on tuesday. good chance of rain tuesday and showers could occur on wednesday as well. >> thanks very much. >> larry is off and we have all the sports tonight with collin. >> this is my time of year. of college happen. can't get enough. local college hoop fan a massacre and happy if you are a bear. less than 10 males a [ woman ] my boyfriend and i were going on 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[ male announcer ] with no blackout dates, you can use your citi thankyou points to travel whenever you want. visit citi.com/thankyoucards to apply. >> quick reminder. academy awards 10 days away so now is the time to down load official oscar app. has details of the nominee and my pick feature can help you keep track of the favorite. available for i-phone. i-pad. android and kindle fire. oscars will be on sunday february 24th and the only place you can watch is abc 7. hope you can join us that evening. >> come up tonight on 7 news at 11:00. fake navy seal who turned outrageous claims that big profit. 7 news tracks him down in an exclusive i team investigation. >> 1 billion rising. tonight huge event tow win violence against women. we have more on that. gin us for those stories and more for you come up on 7 nuts at 11 over on channel 7. collin is here and round ball tonight at st. mary's. fun to wendy burch the program. >> pa ville i don't know rocks. the renewed west coast power began saying another classic at pavilion. time home game against the fifth rank zag and senior didn't disappoint. nba mav right there. speaking of this. lottery material. 7 fa fatter with range. 12 in the first half. zag by 9. tl top of the key. then playing the pick and roll. 25 people in the hoop. another 3. not a replay. double team off this pick and roll. creates separation. 5 first. 19 poin point. up at the break. 20 to 4 run. off balance 3. 52-37 bull dog. st. mary's hang in there. 56-49 gonzaga. 8 minutes to play. >> sacramento mayor johnson court side. found something in the weekend upset. 7 rank arizona the swearing ucla all sorts of trouble. dunking and then the dunking again. the junior. solidifying the put back. pack 12. allen nobody around. get this. 41-17 at the first half. pouring it on in the second 20 minutes. david the put back and foul. 18 point 13 board. terminator with the thunder. robert bears hammer bruins 76-63. is coach and cardinal hosting usc. 11 of 13 over all. fontain to duane crushes it. splashing athlete 17 of sanford 23 in the first half. 5 second left. fears half j.c. 40 feet. trom an led by 12 at the break. second half. chasing randall. on a right right now. 4 men to play there. lebron james. 6 straight 30 point gyms. kevin durrant he takes a nasty fall first quarter. never left the game. in being if a, he would finish with 40. but in a rematch of last year finals king james and the heat a little better. lebron and machine for record 7 straight game. 30 or more with 60 percent somewhating that 30 fa fatter cost him. settle on 50% of the gym. 13 poychbilitys heat by 10. 110-100. not ased about as it sounds. a's closer has undergone surgery for torn ligament in his right knee. mri discovered yesterday. miss 4 to 6 week that means all of spring training is g.o.p. for him. good news for for manger melvin they think he could be back on april first home opener against this and remember this he took over the closer role mid season. the entrance to game dubbed the rage. 24 saves and era of just over 2 and a half. looks like the giants full squad already working in and out scottsdale. that's because the majority of the players are already there. 37 pitchers in camp for bruce. position players arrive tomorrow and take the field

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Transcripts For CNNW Wolf 20140507

hello, i'm wolf blitzer reporting from washington. in nigeria, they just want their daughters back. the parents are speaking out about the horrifying ordeal. in an swlexclusive interview, a father described looking for his two daughters and realizing they were gone. >> when i went into the school compou compound, nobody will ever stand it. you will see their dresses cut out all over. and everything was burned into ashes. so the watchman told us they have gone with our daughters. >> we're not revealing his identity because of concerns for his safety. says the community is living in fear since the abductions. >> life is very dangerous in chibok right now. since the 14th of april, to date, we don't sleep at home. in the evening, from 6:00, it will be the same people coming into the town but around 5, 6 people will disappear to the bush because there is no security. there is no security. we looked in the bush with all our little ones. >> the terrorist behind the kidnappings unleashed a new and deadly attack in northern nigeria. witnesses say boko haram militants attacked the town killing at least 150 people. they say the attackers tossed bomb, tossed grenades into a crowded marketplace and fired into buildings where people tried to take cover. comes as the u.s. military begins work on a plan to try to help search for the kidnapped girls. our pentagon correspondent barbara starr has details on that. also, our correspondent is joining us with a personal perspective on the kidnapping. let's start with you. what is the pentagon planning? >> what pentagon is looking at is assembling a team of about ten people, military personnel, expected to fly to nigeria in the next couple of day, part of a broader administration effort, including law enforcement and possibly intelligence personnel. the key, the key here is, they are going to offer assistance and help to the nigerians. but pentagon officials flat-out say, don't look for a u.s. military rescue operation. this simply would be too difficult to do at this point. why would it be difficult? well, look, first you've got to have nigeria's agreement to take the help. those girls may be across international borders. you would have to have every country's permission. but the bottom line is you have to have perfect, iron-clad intelligence. where are they, who is holding them, if they are dispersed now in multiple locations. how do you strike those locations simultaneously so you give the terrorists no warning that someone is coming after them? the problems just mount up, wolf. >> enormous problems. there are calls though, barbara, as you know, for a direct u.s. military operation in nigeria. listen to what republican senator susan collins of maine told our own dana bash. >> more can be done by this administration. i would like to see special forces deploy to help rescue these young girls. >> so what do the folks over there at the pentagon say about using special forces to go in there? how feasible is that? >> well, let's say you could solve all the problems and you even had perfect ironclad intelligence which is extremely unlikely at this point, then you are really talking about assembling a major operation. it would have to be a helicopter assault that is the only way you're going to get into these remote areas quickly in, quickly out. but think of this problem. you go into a village. you go into a town. how do you know in advance who is boko haram and who may be simply innocent villagers who are not going to take very kindly to u.s. military helicopters descending upon them. and what if some of these girls, as we just said a moment ago, are dispersed? what if they are in major city, in different building, different locations. so many days have gone by now, the opportunities may, may be slipping away. wolf. >> all right, hold on for moment, barbara. za zain, i want to bring you in. you actually grew up in nigeria. give us a sense, first, what the nigerian government is up against in this battle against boko haram. >> yes, so one of the ways you destroy a group like boko haram is of course through cutting off funding. part of the problem with boko haram in nigeria is the way they raise their money. aside from drugs and illegal activities, they raise their money through kidnap and holding people ransom. huge source of income for them. they might hold someone ransen for a few hundred thousand to several million dollars. now you have the conversation whereby the cause of that boko haram can be better funded, better armed than the nigerian soldiers themselves. that's one issue. another issue is this is a third world country. they don't have the same surveillance capabilities as the americans. plus, their hideout in the zambista forest, the size of that forest is three type time size of new jersey. it's not as if you can just walk through the forest and look for these girls. they certainly do not help. wolf. >> tell us about your personal experiences in nigeria, zain. i know so many nigerians. i know many who live here in the united states are so angry, they're so upset about what's going on there. but what about your family members, situations like these kidnapping, how are they dealing with all this? >> right. so i'm actually from the southern part of nigeria, it's on the opposite end of the country from where boko haram has their strong hold in the north. kidnappings in my section of the country is extremely rife. it's for a different reason, it's for terrorism. i have a personal experience with it. my uncle three years ago was coming home late at night and he was kidnapped. he was driven five hours into the middle of the night. the car they used broke down. the kidnappers panicked and they let him go. but in nigeria, for westerners, nigerians who are westerner, who sort of live in the western world and come back to nigeria every christmas, there's a general fear about kidnapping just because it's so rife. a lot of nigerians come back to nigeria every christmas. and that is a huge sort of source of revenue for the kidnappers because they know there's a lot of nigerians coming back and that's when kidnappings start to increase. >> zain asher in new york, barbara starr at the pentagon. zain, give our best wishes to your family over there. a very personal story for you. becoming personal for so many of our viewers here in the united states and around the world. guy, thanks very much. these nigerian kidnappings are highlighting the problems for girls around the world trying to overcome barriers to education. you can help make a difference. go to cnn.com/impact. you will be able to impact your world. cominge ing up, ukrainian t claim victory in one overrun city but their declaration may be a bit premature. also, hillary clinton and the monica lewinsky effect. we'll discuss what it could mean for a posable presidentable run. shame and survival. that's the title of monica lewinsky essay in the new issue of "vanity fair." in it, she talks about her, quote, consensual affair with president bill clinton. some are questioning her timing of her entry into the spotlight. thinking the clintons are behind it. monica lewinsky says that's not true. our political commentator ana navarro. what do you think about the assertion by lynne cheney the clintons are behind this, some sort of conspiratorial theory to get it out the way before hillary runs, if she runs? >> sounds like a vast left wing conspiracy, something like that. i think it sounds crazy. i think anybody who's known anybody or been through the pain of a spouse that had an faffair would know this is not something you drug up willingly. i don't think it's being drug up by the clintons. i think this is 40-year-old woman. 40's a big number for women. it makes a lot of us take stock of our lives. who has decided to take back her narrative. we've heard more about monica how win ski this year between the question that got asked of senator rand paul, between her 40th birthday, and now with this, and the possible election of a nomination of hillary clinton than we have in the last ten years. so i think she wants to tell her story and her side of the story. >> is it smart for someone like senator rand paul who is a potentially presidential candidate, republican, talking about bill clinton, as a sexual predator, or other words he used? >> in fairness to rand paul, he was answering a question posed to his wife. he was asked to respond to what his wife had said. it was not something he brought out pro actively. i think it's toxic politically. i think it's run its natural life. it is, what, 15, 16 years ago. we haven't seen it harm the clinton s politically in all of that time. hillary clinton was re-elected since then. bill clinton is the most popular democrat out there today, the most popular democrat surrogate certainly. i think that horse has been beat to death. certainly, hillary clinton if she runs needs to be scrutinized. she needs to be scrutinized for her record, and she's got one. she does not need to be put over the coals for something her husband did decades ago. >> a lot of us remember barbara walters interview with monica lewinsky years ago after the scandal broke. here's what she said today on "the view." listen to this. >> the republican party loves her story because she can attack hillary. hillarybehaved with dignity, she has not talked about it. if they want to dredge this up to hurt hillary -- not do this now because she's trying to help or hurt hillary. >> what do you think about what barbara walters is saying? >> i think there's little evidence regarding barbara walters statement that it's been a republican motivated thing as there is behind lynne cheney's statement that it was a hillary thing. i think this was a monica thing. she has been quiet for all of this time, monica lewinsky, i think she's chosen this time, in part, because she's anticipating a hillary nomination, a hillary candidacy, and she wants to get this out of the way for herself. and, you know what, wolf, if it helps her move forward, if it helps her as a person, if this gives her some sort of closure and she can let go of this emotional baggage, girl, get it done. everybody else has to move forward. bill clinton has. the country has. let's get it past. >> when you read that excerpt of "vanity fair" that was released yesterday -- an additional chunk is going to be released tomorrow, what was your -- did you feel sorry for monica lewinsky? what was your immediate gut reaction? >> my immediate gut reaction was we probably haven't thought enough of the effect of her. we've thought of the political effect on bill clinton and on hillary and on his legacy and the country and what it means for history. but, you know, how many of us really have stopped to think what did this mean in the life of this 24-year-old girl who is now 40 and how has this affected her life long term. i think it's something she needs to come to terms with. she needs not to let it define her. bill clinton didn't let this affair define his presidency. hillary clinton didn't let that affair define her as a woman, as a wife, as a senator. monica, don't let it define you. >> i was very moved when she writes very emotionally she was so publicly, internationally humiliated that for weeks on end she really maybe once or twice thought about suicide. but her mother was so worried that she might try to commit suicide, she watched her at night every single night. that's a moving segment right there. it speaks a lot about what this woman has gone through. >> i thought it was very introspective and very honest and frankly very revealing. i think she, you know, put her soul and feelings out. >> anna navarro, offering good advice to monica lewinsky. >> move forward. >> all right. that's it. our thanks, ana, thanks very much. up next, ukraine, and an offer from russia's president, vladimir putin. but will he follow through on promises peaces? we're going live to ukraine and to russia. (music) defiance is in our bones. defiance never grows old. citracal maximum. calcium citrate plus d. highly soluble, easily absorbed. this is the first power plant in the country to combine solar and natural gas at the same location. during the day, we generate as much electricity as we can using solar. at night and when it's cloudy, we use more natural gas. this ensures we can produce clean electricity whenever our customers need it. ♪ could mean less waiting for things like security backups and file downloads you'd take that test, right? well, what are you waiting for? you could literally be done with the test by now. now you could have done it twice. this is awkward. check your speed. see how fast your internet can be. switch now and add voice and tv for $34.90. comcast business built for business. white house correspondent michelle kosinski now. new information on that driver who caused a nearly more than one hour lockdown at the white house yesterday. michelle, tell us what you're viewing. remind our viewers what happened and what's the new information. >> this was such a weird situation. people who have worked here for decades say they've never seen anything quite like it. this car in the middle of the k day was able to follow a motorcade into the white house secure area. to make matters worse and more alarming at the time, it was the obama daughters' motorcade. lock down the area for more than an hour. but it turned out to be this 55-year-old man who worked for the irs. so everybody questioned, was he trying to cut through to the treasury building which is on the other side of the white house or what was he thinking? well, now a source inside the secret service explains this. says he was at an appointment in the afternoon and he usually isn't downtown. he's try to get on a major roadway after his appointment. he's confused by the d.c. traffic around here, to which many of us have to admit can relate, he missed his turn. he panics in traffic around one of those traffic circles and cuts a hard turn right behind the traffic in front of him. he has no idea, according to the secret service, this was an official motorcade, let alone the obama girls. so he's traveling directly behind these cars. the barriers that block off the street in front of the white house are down. and he's able to roll right in behind the motorcade. so the question is, well, why didn't those barriers go right back up? i mean what would happen in the case this was a real, say, terrorist? the secret service says it was really a timing issue. first all, the agents on duty has to react and decide whether to try to put those barriers right back up. but it does take a second or two. secret service says it did react immediately once the car was inside. they stopped it, they arrested the man. he's now charged with a misdemeanor. they do think this was an honest mistake, wolf. >> does underline the potential problem. two cars, two vehicle, going into a secure area, a third car just starts following them. i v could covered the white hou long time. i don't remember an incident like this. it would be pretty terrify. they had to spend an hour just going through that car to make sure there was no bomb inside. >> this could be fused man outside, you have to feel for him, just making this mistake. you think about it, really, any of us might have done that. you're following traffic. you don't even realize maybe that the barriers are there in the first place and they happen to be down right at that moment. but we did ask that question. what if this were some kind of malicious intent and they follow the motorcade? you have to expect if a car, an unidentified car and the secret service did see, it was very obvious in this case this car was not part of the motorcade, all they can really do is react immediately. if that car did have a malicious intent and tried to speed through, you know they would have taken more severe measures. but it is now, you know, something that's being looked at, that there is a timing issue there, clearly. this makes it very clear to the public that those barriers can really only react so quickly and there's a human having to react behind that sort of technical side of things. >> at least it was not a big issue this time. let's hope they fix it to make sure if there is a malicious intent it doesn't succeed. michelle, thanks very much for that update. i myself was curious overnight what exactly was this guy doing following that motorcade into the white house. other news we're following. let's go to ukraine it the russian president vladimir putin says he's ready to help defuse the situation. he's urging them to postpone a referendum on withdrawing. he also says he's pulling troops back from the ukrainian border but the white house says they've seen no evidence of withdrawal. the fighting continues between government trues and pro-russian forces. our own carwa damon, matthew chance, on the scene. troops are going or already have started moving away from the border? they've had 40,000 to 50,000 accord to u.s. officials. what is the latest information you're getting there? what's he doing? >> yeah, it's interesting, isn't it, because the west is -- the united states and others are treating this with a large degree skepticism. in a meeting with the swiss president earlier today, after that meeting, vladimir putin came out and said he understands there's lots of concerns about the tens of thousands of troops that have been stationed along the ukrainian border on the russian side. because of those rn soconcerns, he's ordered them back to their regular training grounds in order to deescalate the situation. vladimir putin isn't particularly known for his flip-flopping, but he has undertaken what seep seems to significant u-turn. saying for instance he now supports essentially a presidential election to take place in ukraine on the 25th of may as a step in the right direction. he spoke saying it was absurd for presidential elections to take place given security election there. he also called on the separatist pro-russian groups in eastern southern ukraine to postpone their plans for a series of referendums on independence over the course of the weekend. that's significant departure as well. it seems this is the first possible sign we've seen things may be deescalating. >>anctions are beginning to bite and bite personally for putin and his top aides and maybe that's one of the reasons we see this blink coming from vladimir putin right now, beginning to sound very, very different. we shall see in the coming hours what unfolds. arwa damon is in eastern ukraine for us, as she has been over these past several weeks. what are you seeing, arwa, on the ground? overnight, ukrainian troops had tried to move in and they crashed are pro-russian militants on outskirts according to a spokeswoman, killing five of them. they did manage to regain control of city hall after pro-russian protesters evacuated. when we arrived this morning, it was the ukrainian flag that was flying. with no reason given to anyone whatsoever, the russian troops occupying the building evacuated it and within seconds that ukrainian flag was down it the russian flag and the regional one right back up. the crowd there moving to the police station where they were trying to free detainees it the police firing shots over their heads to try to disperse them. we've been seeing this growing anger at a checkpoint that is along one of the routes from mariopol to the russian border. there people gathered yelling at the military, at one point even forming something of a human chain to try to prevent military armor from moving forward. it's still a very tense and volatile situation. >> the assistance secretary of state testified if elections were hold today, they would go off without a hitch. based on what you're seeing, arwa, you think that's accurate? >> to be held today, that would be very difficult to fathom, wolf, because the ukrainian government has little to no authority in large parts of eastern ukraine. nor do they control key buildings like the main administration centers. like their main security services buildings. and also, the access, the list of voter, the locations of polling sites, all of those vital documents, they're in the hands of the pro russian camp. difficult to see if an election were to be held today, a presidential election, that is, it would be even feasible in this part of the country. >> arwa damon be in eastern ukraine, thank you. matthew chance in moscow for us, thanks to you as well. a meeting of the minds in australia over the next big phase in the search for flight 370. you'll find out what officials are considering as they map out the unprecedented new mission. [ male announcer ] this is jim. a man who doesn't stand still. but jim has afib, atrial fibrillation, an irregular heartbeat not caused by a heart valve problem. that puts jim at a greater risk of stroke. for years, jim's medicine tied him to a monthly trip to the clinic to get his blood tested. but now, with once-a-day xarelto jim's on the move. jim's doctor recommended xarelto. like warfarin, xarelto is proven effective to reduce afib-related stroke risk. but xarelto is the first and only once-a-day prescription blood thinner for patients with afib not caused by a heart valve problem that doesn't require routine blood monitoring. so jim's not tied to that monitoring routine. [ gps ] proceed to the designated route. not today. [ male announcer ] for patients currently well managed on warfarin there is limited information on how xarelto and warfarin compare in reducing the risk of stroke. xarelto is just one pill a day taken with the evening meal. plus, with no known dietary restrictions, jim can eat the healthy foods he likes. do not stop taking xarelto, rivaroxaban, without talking to the doctor who prescribes it as this may increase the risk of having a stroke. get help right away if you develop any symptoms like bleeding, unusual bruising, or tingling. you may have a higher risk of bleeding if you take xarelto with aspirin products, nsaids, or blood thinners. talk to your doctor before taking xarelto if you have abnormal bleeding. xarelto can cause bleeding, which can be serious and rarely may lead to death. you are likely to bruise more easily on xarelto and it may take longer for bleeding to stop. tell your doctors you are taking xarelto before any planned medical or dental procedures. before starting xarelto, tell your doctor about any conditions such as kidney, liver, or bleeding problems. xarelto is not for patients with artificial heart valves. jim changed his routine. ask your doctor about xarelto. once-a-day xarelto means no regular blood monitoring -- no known dietary restrictions. for more information and savings options, call 1-888-xarelto or visit goxarelto.com. welcome back. i'm wolf blitzer reporting from washington. a high-level meeting is being held in australia today, focused solely on where the search for flight 370 is headed next. officials from malaysia, china and australia, they're all reviewing all the data collected so far to try to figure out what is going to be needed in this new phase of this search. let's bring in our panel of experts. peter goelz is a former managing ntsb director. and tom fuentes, former assistant director of the fbi. they've got a lot of underwater activity they've planned for the next six months to a year. >> you're right, wolf. they've searched just the smallest possible area around the ping. they're going to be looking at an area the size of the state of connecticut. it's going to take them a long time. >> this is a slow meticulous process. the bluefin alone cost about $40,000 a day to operate that. it's going to be expensive as well. let's look at the new poll. we've asked americaned their opinions of what's going on with the search, the plane's mysteriousious disappearance. should the search continue for flight 370? yes, 69%. no, 30%. think forget about it, you're not going to find it. >> two thirds say keep it up. >> you surprised by those numbers? >> no, that's about what i would expect. i think probably because of the frustration level of not finding anything up until now, i think if you were to ask people 45 days ago about the search, that we will likely find something, you'd have a bigger majority want to support it. >> do you think flight 370 is located in the indian ocean where the search is taking place? 51% say yes, 46% say no. why the skepticism? >> because we haven't found anything. it's not clear whether those pings really came from the -- >> really, they had those handshakes of the satellite. >> the handshakes are a hard thing to get your head around, to put it mildly. that's a pretty complex equation. >> you're not surprised by the skepticism that they're looking in the right place? >> no, i think we've got to prove the investigators are in the right place. it's going to be a long time. >> the disappearance of flight 370, tom, due to accident or mechanical failure? accident or neck can kale failure? likely 52%. not likely0046%. did that surprise you? >> no, because that's a guess either way. you could say 50/50. we still don't know the cause. that doesn't surprise me. >> the next question, does the disappearance of flight 370 due to terrorist or hostile government? 57% say likely. 41% say not likely. significant majority think it was due to terrorists or hostile government. >> well, i think there's been enough evidence that says something was going on in the cockpit. the plane was not changing direction on its own. that leads you to believe something nefarious. >> whether it was nefarious, whether it was suicidal. a lot of people believed someone as opposed to catastrophic mechanical failure. >> exactly. in the modern era, since 9/11, something bad happens to an airplane, people think terrorists had something to do with it. >> will the general public ever find out what happened to flight 370? yes, 52%, no, 46%. i'll ask you. if you were being polled and they said to you, tom fuentes, do you believe that this -- we will learn what happened to flight 370? you will say? >> i think if you ask me today, i'll say yes. when you ask me five years from now, i might not say yes. i think i'd say yes, it's going to take time. the answer is, they cannot give up the search. >> what if it takes five years? >> it will be greatly reduced. there will be some people that will still be searching. >> flew to some land, flew to some island, and people are going to believe that, until they find some hard evidence and wreckage. >> we've also got the limitations the bluefin. those first two-hour pings were heard was deeper than they expected. the bluefin-21 couldn't be that deep. maybe when they bring in the right equipment and go deeper they might have better luck. he survived what many may not have survived. flying across the ocean in a jet wheel, hardly any actioxygen. in pursuit of all things awesome, amazing, and that's epic, bro, we've forgotten just how good good is. good is setting a personal best before going for a world record. good is swinging to get on base before swinging for a home run. [ crowd cheering ] good is choosing not to overshoot the moon, but to land right on it and do some experiments. ♪ so start your day off good with a coffee that's good cup after cup. maxwell house. ♪ good to the last drop maxwell house. trwith secure wifie for your business. it also comes with public wifi for your customers. not so with internet from the phone company. i would email the phone company to inquire as to why they have shortchanged these customers. but that would require wifi. switch to comcast business internet and get two wifi networks included. comcast business built for business. that teenager who managed against all odds to survive a trip to hawaii apparently inside a wheel well of a boeing 767 soon face charges in california. meanwhile, new surveillance video is being released of the stow away jumping out of the plane after it landed. brian todd has been covering the story for us in "the situation room." start with the new video. show us, walk us through what it shows. >> i'll play some of the video. it's spot shadowed. you can see in the spot shadow there. right there, a figure seemingly drop from the rear area of the plane. he's out of picture for a little bit it then you'll see images of him walking erratically toward the front. this is who authorities believe is that 15-year-old stowaway who rode fom san jose to hawaii in maui. there's -- there you see him, walking back and forward erratically. authorities now believe he did stow away in the wheel well of that plane from california to maui on april 20th. the san jose police told us over the phone they want to interview the teenager. they are going to determine whether criminal charges are going to be filed against him. if criminal charges are filed, it will probably be criminal trespass, but that has not been determined. again, we've said this in our reporting, he did hop the fence at san jose international airport on april 20th. shortly after 1:00 a.m. a lot of security questions being raised about how he was able to do that. so that is another question. >> he's only 15 years old too. >> that's right. >> so it does raise a lot of security questions. how a 15-year-old could do this. >> what's striking, he hops the fence apparently about 1:00 a.m. accord to sources and stays on the ground in san jose for about six hours before he even gets on that plane. how is he able to stay on the tarmac inside the perimeter of the fence in san jose for six hours? granted, he does hop the fence in pitch black and maybe he goes to a corner and stands there are sits there for a while. still, where's the surveillance video? where's the layers of security? sometimes a fence is not going to be quite enough to stop a terrorist. so these are the hard questions being asked right now. >> all right, brian, thanks very much. we'll hopefully learn from all this and move forward. appreciate it. >> a win in a primary election in north carolina could have payoff for the gop. our political panel getting ready. a closer look. who won and who lost. that's next. cut! [bell rings] this...is jane. her long day on set starts with shoulder pain... ...and a choice take 6 tylenol in a day which is 2 aleve for... ...all day relief. hmm. [bell ring] "roll sound!" "action!" you really love, what would you do?" ♪ [ woman ] i'd be a writer. [ man ] i'd be a baker. [ woman ] i wanna be a pie maker. [ man ] i wanna be a pilot. [ woman ] i'd be an architect. what if i told you someone could pay you and what if that person were you? ♪ when you think about it, isn't that what retirement should be, paying ourselves to do what we love? ♪ turning to politics right now, a key senate election in north carolina. in a race pitting the old republican guard, the establishment as it's called, against the tea party, the statehouse speaker tom tillis won a three-way gop senate primary yesterday. tillis takes on democratic incumbent kay hagan in november. she's considered vulnerable. let's talk about the importance of the tillis win. joining us, our chief political analyst gloria borger and dana bash, our chief congressional correspondent. gloria, how big of a win is this for the establishment republican as opposed to the tea party -- >> the establishment fights back. you've had the chamber of commerce and other establishment republican groups putting millions of dollars into this race because they're sick and tired of nominating candidates that are going to lose in general elections. this was a very important win for them. rand paul, as you know, was on the other side of this. he endorsed the guy who lost. and it took him about what, a nano second, to turn around and say, okay, now i'm -- >> because he went in there, rand paul, to endorse the tea party candidate. >> tea party was split though. >> if there would have been a runoff, would have been good news for kay hagan, the dimmic incumbent. >> she would have loved that because the republican fight would have gone into the summer, ticking away from her. i think when you talk about kay hagan, you talk about tom tillis, people who might not cover politics the way we do might go, huh, who are these people, we don't know them. this is why it matters. because north carolina of any state is going to be the microcosm for what happens in 2016 because of demographic changes and just because of what happened with the obama presidency. he surprisingly won there in his first go-around, in 2008, barely. and then he lost in his re-election campaign. >> and it's also going to have, you know -- it's so important because it's going to be who wins control of the senate. >> exactly. >> you know, they need six seat, the republicans, to take over. if kay hagan is considered one of the most vulnerable democrats, tom tillis is, you know, a very credible challenger, and that's exactly >> she effectively won on the coat tails of president obama when he had the surprising end, she was on the ballot, too. she won by 53% of the vote. >> and a win in north carolina in 2008. he didn't carry north carolina in 2012. listen to last night. >> we need to be clear. it's not the end of the primaries. it has been a mission all along. that is to beat kay hagen and make reed irrelevant. >> how vulnerable is kay hagen? the democrats have her on top of the list of people they are very concerned about. because of the fact that president obama isn't as popular as he was a few years ago. some of the issues that are front and center are not necessarily on her side. >> let's just say if she could pick a year in which to run, this probably would not have been the year she picked. >> the president of the united states has just landed in little rock, arkansas, and the two of them are going to be together. he just got off the plane and you see who is there receiving him? >> let's see if there is a hug. been trying to stay away in their home states from the president. but not prior. >> exactly. it looks like the senator. it should be the case times 20 in arkansas where president obama never came close to his republican -- >> so it's a sufchallenge ahead of him? especially this young congressman. >> but better chances. i think he would have generated more controversy if he had held back and the president wanted to go and is giving funding for tornado relief and all the rest if he would have stayed back and watched him through that. >> helping people is not a partisan issue. but one thing that again, i just want to point out these statistics. president obama lost 60% -- 60% is what mitt romney got in arkansas. he didn't even come close. if you look at the polls from prior, although he is definitely an endangered democrat, he is actually doing quite well. >> just ahead, kevin durrant's tearful speak. he says the real mvp is his mom. you're going to hear it. you need to hear this. stay with us. it starts with little things. tiny changes in the brain. little things, anyone can do. it steals your memories. your independence. insures support. a breakthrough. and sooner than you'd like... ...sooner than you think. ...you die from alzheimer's disease. ...we cure alzheimer's disease. every little click, call, or donation adds up to something big. alzheimer's association. the brains behind saving yours. hey, razor. check this out. listen up, thunder dragons, it's time to get a hotel. we can save big on killer hotels with priceline express deals. somewhere with a fitness center? hey you know what man, these guys aint no dragons. they're cool. these deals are legit. yeah, we're cool. she's cool. we're cool. i'm cool. hey, isn't that razor's old lady? not anymore. priceline savings without the bidding. what is this place? where are we? this is where we bring together reliably fast internet and the best in entertainment. we call it the x1 entertainment operating system. it looks like the future! we must have encountered a temporal vortex. further analytics are necessary. beam us up. ♪ that's my phone. hey. [ female announcer ] the x1 entertainment operating system. only from xfinity. tv and internet together like never before. >> janet yellen won't raise interest rates any time soon. >> kevin durrant has won the nba's most valuable player award. we talk about the incredible season on the court. he thanked his team. he thanked the city for their support but he saved the best for last offering these words for his mother. >> and last, my mom. i don't think you know what you did. you had my brother when you were 18 years old. three years later i came out. the odds were stacked against us. single parent with two boys by the time you were 21 years old. we wasn't supposed to be here. you made us believe. you kept us off the street. you put clothes on our backs, food on the table. when you didn't eat, you made sure we ate. you went to sleep hungry. you sacrificed for us. you the real mvp. [ applause ] >> how powerful is that especially on the eve of mother's day. she is, is, is the real mvp and he's an mvp as well. on this programming note we will hear from kevin durrant's mother when she joins us live here on cnn during the 3:00 p.m. eastern hour. that's an hour from now. you will want to catch that interview. that's it for me. >> boka haram has carried out another attack. at least 150 people were killed by militants who stormed the area. and now nigerian police put up a reward.

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Transcripts For FOXNEWSW Americas Newsroom 20140507

so every and i look forward to complying with whatever responsibility west have. martha: catherine herridge says the administration is refusing to release the full contents, the back and forth of some very potentially interesting emails that discuss combating fox news's coverage of this scandal. bill: chris stirewalt, fox news digital politics editor leading our coverage. you get the sense these controversies are coming to a head starting today, chris. >> well what we're seeing now is, the consequence of a strategy that was slow walked, stonewall,down play, ignore for a couple of scandals, the irs, benghazi, that cropped up more than a year ago and linger, linger, linger. the administration probably felt good about it in real time as it was engaging in these tactics but now what you see there is long hangover into election year. because of their decision not to be forthcoming at the time it is harder to make these things bo away, and harder for democrats to ignore and that's why they will be participating in the benghazi panel. that is why they have to tread very carefully, very carefully, around the issue of irs targeting. bill: white house with regard to the emails, the white house says releasing them would have chilling eon frank deliberation. what is that defense all about? >> i bet it would have chilling effect i'm sure, this is just my surmise, i'm sure the administration doesn't have any problem dumping on fox news. the president has done it himself. that's not a problem for them. i would suspect, and again my surmise, the thing they don't want to come out in these emails if they are are as they appear to be identifying of reporters who are pro-administration. the identifying of news outlets that are supplicant to the demands of the administration. that will shut down their pipeline for getting their narrative out. if they identify people who do their bidding, those people can't do their bidding anymore. bill: you heard john kerry say he will talk, he has got nothing to hide. >> he doesn't have anything to hide. he doesn't do the griming in the back room where you figure out this reporter will take layoff on this this guy will get up out of bed in the middle of the night and put our talking points out in a story. it is not those people, john kerry flies in jets and deals with lofty issues of state. this is talking about the boiler room operation of harassing unfriendly reporters and coaxing and rewarding those who are favorably inclined. bill: more to come. thank you, chris stirewalt, teeing it up for us today in washington. >> you bet. bill: here's martha. martha: meanwhile congress is also debate lois lerner's fate today. a vote is expected to come later today whether to holder in contempt of congress. she ran the division of the irs that targeted conservative groups for extra oversight. that has been admitted when they applied for their tax-exempt status. many were waited for years, they were asked questions, what do you pray for, what books do you read? you remember all that. she pled the fifth over and over but that was after gave a very clear and bold statement which she protested that she was innocent. now the chairman of the house oversight and government reform committee darrell issa said he never wanted things to get to this stage. >> she asserts in front of us, under oath, she broke no regulations, she broke no rules and clearly the facts show that she did certain actions. that's what we want. we would much rather, like any judge, in any courtroom, we'd much rather have the witness answer the questions then hold them in contempt. martha: we're going to speak to utah congressman jason chaffetz who is also on the committee and we'll see how things are looking ahead of that vote. bill: we're waiting to hear from both sides. you will hear from both side this morning. house speaker john boehner in 55 minutes from now holds a news conference. we assume he will have a lot to say on this whether it is benghazi, irs, the select committee, the elections we'll talk about in a moment that occurred last night. also democrats will speak this morning. we'll bring that live to you when that happens as well. what do you think at home? what will come of the irs matter, specifically, what do you think will be the results? send us a tweet @marthamaccallum and @billhemmer. we'll get to that. talk to us on twitter next two hours. martha: big stories coming to a head these coming days. also a big victory for mainstream republicans in a battleground state last night. north carolina house speaker tom tillis beat a handful of tea party candidates to secure the nomination. this gives him the chance to take on a newly-vulnerable democratic senator kay hagan. she is taking a hit after the beginning of health care started to kick in as they head toward november senate election in nc. >> if we want to change the mess of obamacare, we have to change our senator. [cheering] if we want to change government's overreach, we have to change our senator. and if we want to end our nation's financial crisis, we have got to change our senator. martha: his campaign laid out quite clearly last night. chief political correspondent carl cameron joins me live from washington. so, carl, how do you sum up what happened last night? >> reporter: that was the race to watch and it was as mainstream for a victory. this was a huge battle. super pac money, out-of-state interests, tea party money, tea party groups from all over the country came here. house speaker tom tillis in north carolina needed 40% to avoid a run off. that was 46 es. that doubled the tea party backed candidate. he argued he would be best candidate to defeat kay hagan in the fall. hagan is one of most vulnerable democrats in variety of reasons. mitt romney won north carolina in 2012. the president and his agenda is really unpopular. hagan tried to distance herself from obamacare but like other senate democrats she voted for it. here is tom tillis last night. >> we need to be not clear. it is not end of the primary, this is beginning of our pray marry mission all along, that is to beat kay hagan and make harry reid irrelevant in american -- [cheers and applause] >> reporter: this is cast as establishment versus tea party but really oversimplification. the truth is tillis drew social conservatives, tea partiers and establishment mainstream republicans. at one point eight candidates actually running against him. he got 46% in very, very crowded race, martha. martha: what other states had elections. what happened there, carl? >> reporter: not a lot of big surprises, martha. john boehner bested his tea party off significance. got9% of the vote that is blowout by most standards. that is lower than last few primaries. it is very conservative district. john kasich, ohio, didn't have opponent but he will face key lock ga county -- cuyahoga county representative. a awful lot of incumbents across the country are safe this year. we'll see a lot of big primaries that may give us a idea what is going on between the tea party and establishment itself. martha: great to watch. carl, thank you. bill: meanwhile "american idol," the alum, clay aiken is in a race that is too close to call this morning. the singer turned politician facing a textile entrepeneur in democratic congressional primary by the name of keith chris co. with no winner yet the two could find themselves in runoff. they take on republican congresswoman renee ellmers. martha: senate committee pushing for tougher sanctions on russia ahead of ukraine's presidential elections. protests and deadly violence have not stopped in the east. they meet with leaders to make sure the may 26th elections go smoothly. senator lindsey graham says president obama has to do more to stop russia from tightening its grip on that country. >> i would urge the president to get on national television and lay out the plan if the elections do not go forward in fair and free fashion in ukraine i will impose section tomorrow sanctions which means it will hurt our economy but the price we would pay i think would be worth it to bring about some stability and make russia pay a price. martha: the state department says it will widen the scope of the sanctions if russia does not change course to diffuse to crisis. bill: let's hope the fbi can help now. the u.s. sending help in anight. the brutal islamist group, boko haram, kidnapping 100 girls. on top of 200 taken a month ago. the u.s. is trying to help. amy kellogg is in london. time is of the essence. amy, what help is the u.s. sending there? >> reporter: bill, president obama says he will send military personnel and intelligence into nigeria but it is not clear exactly what that team which is being called a command cell will be able to on the ground as protests mount and people around the world, not just in nigeria stand up to condemn the kidnapping and criticize their bought for not doing enough. it becomes increasingly clear the rescue operation will be complex and very high-risk. the girls are believed to be not held in just one location. they're thought to be taken by poke cohair ramiltant into the boko haram. they claim to be the spokespeople for pure islam, bill. just to give you a sense how very brazen this group is, knowing now that they are in the spotlight, and likely the object of large operation imminently, they carried out another attack in the village on the border of cameroon, killing hundreds of people, hacking many of them to death, bill. it happened monday. we're just getting information about it now. martha: bill: amy, watching that story out of london. martha, what is next? martha: we have a pretty packed show and we're glad you're joining us today. he hitched a ride in the wheel of a jet. there is brand new video that shows how he did this in subzero temperatures or at least how thing folded. many questioning whether that was even possible. the surveillance video that will prove this actually happened. it is unbelievable. bill: sure is. also lois lerner on the hot seat today. benghazi intensifies. how jason chaffetz fees about that new collect committee trying to figure out how the white house responded that night and the days after. >> we didn't run to the sound of guns. they were issuing press releases. we had americans dying. don't worry! the united states postal service will get it there on time with priority mail flat rate shipping. our priority has always been saving the day. because our priority... amazing! ...is you! the amazing spider-man 2 delivered by the united states postal service. you always get the lowest price book any flight or hotel and if you find it for less we'll match it and give you fifty dollars back that's the expedia guarantee their type 2 diabetes... ...with non-insulin victoza. for a while, i took a pill to lower my blood sugar, but it didn't get me to my goal. so i asked my doctor about victoza. he said victoza works differently than pills, and it comes in a pen. and the needle is thin. victoza is an injectable prescription medicine that may improve blood sugar in adults with type 2 diabetes when used with diet and exercise. it is not recommended as the first medication to treat diabetes and should not be used in people with type 1 diabetes or diabetic ketoacidosis. victoza has not been studied with mealtime insulin. victoza is not insulin. do not take victoza if you have a personal or family history of medullary thyroid cancer, multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 2, or if you are allergic to victoza or any of its ingredients. symptoms of a serious allergic reaction may include swelling of face, lips, tongue or throat, fainting or dizziness, very rapid heartbeat, problems breathing or swallowing, severe rash or itching. tell your doctor if you get a lump or swelling in your neck. serious side effects may happen in people who take victoza including inflammation of the pancreas (pancreatitis) which may be fatal. stop taking victoza and call your doctor right away if you have signs of pancreatitis, such as severe pain that will not go away in your abdomen or from your abdomen to your back, with or without vomiting. tell your doctor about all the medicines you take and if you have any medical conditions. taking victoza with a sulfonylurea or insulin may cause low blood sugar. the most common side effects are nausea, diarrhea, and headache. some side effects can lead to dehydration, which may cause kidney problems. if your pill isn't giving you the control you need... ask your doctor about non-insulin victoza. it's covered by most health plans. martha: so the white house was put on lockdown after a car snuck into the motorcade that was carrying daughters of president obama. it happened late yesterday afternoon. secret service stopped the sedan after it followed the motorcade through a security check point just a short distance away from the white house. agents arrested a 55-year-old driver. matthew goldstein is charged with unlawful entry. we're told he had a pass for the treasury department which is next door to the white house. police say there was nothing suspicious in the car. perhaps he made a left turn at the wrong time. >> i have not done anything wrong. i have not broken any laws. i have not violated any irs rules or regulations, and i have not provided false information to this or any other congressional committee. bill: so that was about a year ago. lois lerner protesting her innocence about the targeting of conservative groups by the irs and that statement, according to republicans has her in hot water. she went on to plead the fifth at two different hearings, refusing to answer questions about her role. today congress is set to vote on whether to hold her in contempt. will that happen? jason chaffetz, congressman out of utah on the house judiciary committee with me now. good morning to you. will it happen today? >> yeah, late this afternoon. lois lerner, for somebody who says she wanted to remain silent certainly did an awful lot of talking. we know she went and spoke to the other branch government, again, as many of pointed out on our side of the aisle, she waived her fifth amendment rights. when she made the statements that you just played on the air, we have a right to question her about those statements. bill: if you hold her in contempt, referred to the department of justice, right? eric holder could do nothing? >> we have a variety of other tools and i'm not at liberty to talk about those but believe me, we have thought that through. we're not just pogue to let go of this you can't just have this executive branch say that they will continue to do nothing. if we hold her in contempt of congress, there's a very serious charge. these things are not optional in this country. bill: if you have other tools, are you still in contact with her attorneys? is there some sort of negotiations still underway? >> i wouldn't necessarily refer to it as a negotiation. i know the staff has their telephones open there. they can call and communicate, send us letters, in any way, shape or form but this has been going on mowerthon 10 months now. i will also note later on, early evening tonight we'll debate a resolution offered by jim jordan out of ohio, it is a good resolution, i cosponsored it, the that the attorney general should appoint a special prosecutor or special investigator i should say to look at this. appoint somebody truly independent to come in to get to the bottom of this that would be ideal. we'll debate that tonight. and then, have a vote on that probably tomorrow. bill: sorry for the interruption. you wanted a select committee on benghazi and now you've gotten it. now you want a select committee on irs as well, is that right. >> i'm not saying necessarily a select committee. maybe a special prosecutor that the attorney general would identify. we have need to make sure that person is independent and unfettered act test to help get to the truth. all we're trying to do is get to the truth. i don't know exactly where it goes. that is our process. that is the constitution in motion. that is the checks and balances that the legislative branch is supposed to be providing but it totally breaks down if you have the attorney general and white house say no, no, no. don't look at us. nothing wrong here. clearly there's something fundamentally wrong. benghazi, fast and furious, irs. we have a long list. bill: you ticked off a number there. democrats are saying it is all political. you're doing this, one phrase yesterday, to get ratings. >> no. that is not what the president says. bill: democratic congressman from massachusetts saying something similar. want to listen to it and get you to respond to this comment. >> it looks so political. you, you leave this beltway here and, people who are watching this, i mean, it looks like, you snow, it's, a political process, pure and simple. aimed at trying to appeal to the red meat, choice of red meat, political base. but, but the facts don't seem to matter. bill: you would say what on that, sir? >> the facts do matter. i'm sure politically they don't like it, because it tends to be embarrassing for them. remember when the irs thing first happened, it was the president of the united states that went to the microphone and said he would get to the bottom of this it was attorney general who went before the american people and said they would dive deep and investigate this. and that they had an open investigation. it wasn't just some crazy, house republicans saying that. it was the administration as well but we haven't gotten to the truth. we haven't gotten to the bottom of it and if lois lerner will come before congress and say she did nothing wrong and not break any rules, then we have a right to question her about that. she didn't plead the fifth. she made statements and that we'll question her about that. bill: we ask viewers at home, the office, wherever they're working today, what they think will come of this irs investigation? and 20 seconds or less, what do you think will come of it? >> well, i think we clearly demonstrated we have roughly 300 or so organizations out there that were prohibited from moving forward and exercising the their first amendment rights. that is not right. the irs has a heavy hand on both sides of the aisle. we should be pursuing that, making sure it is not a political organization. bill: jason, thank you. we'll see if the contempt vote happens as you said, later today it is expected. thank you, sir for coming back to. martha, what's next? martha: straight ahead on "america's newsroom" this morning, paying for a life in the fast lane. a possible new tax that could have you thinking twice before hitting the road. we'll explain. bill: also he opened fire at a fedex facility before turning the gun on himself. now we hear those chilling 911 calls. >> 911, what is the emergency? i've been shot. >> 1675 airport road? >> kennesaw, georgia. >> who did it, sir? >> i don't know. bill: president obama visiting some of these communities in arkansas today devastated by the deadly tornadoes about a week ago. those storms slamming towns north of little rock, killing 15 people there and destroying hundreds of homes. the administration already designated four different counties as major disaster areas. severe weather killed at least 35 people. martha: parts of the united states are now in desperate need of new roads and bridges but the nation's infrastructure fund, like some parts of the country, are running on empty these days. money for those projects comes from the federal gas tax that you pay every time you fill up. but president obama is now proposing another source of revenue, interstate tolls, which is something you don't have to do apparently. doug mckelway is live in washington. so, doug, there is tremendous urgency for congress to get something done on this, right? >> there really is, martha, the highway trust fund which pace for up keep of the interstate my e highway civil is expected to run out of money in august, go bankrupt. better car mileage means we're paying for less gas and therefore paying less gas tax now at 18.4 cents a gallon of federal taxes. >> it hasn't been increased in 20 years and according to the american society of civil engineers, all of infrastructure in this country gets a grade of d plus. so we're in trouble in terms of our investment in infrastructure. >> reporter: so how to pay for that highway trust fund? the obama administration now favors lifting prohibition on tolls on interstate highways. many living in the northeast saying wait a minute, we already have interstate highway tolls. those were grandfathered in in 1956 from existing toll roads. tolls on interstate is found receptive audience on capitol hill, even among some small government libertarian types. >> interstate highway system is owned by state governments. i think we ought to free state government ability up to be able to respond to infrastructure needs. in any way they can. >> reporter: many in congress think interstate tolls would hit the poor, hardest and raise little money in rural states. martha? martha: what is issue of this, federal gasoline tax, when was that last raised? >> reporter: last raised during the clinton administration. as we all know gasoline prices risen considerably at that time but federal gas tax has not kept pace. they say raising federal gas takes is cheaper way to pay for maintenance of crumbling interstate highways and bridges. >> we don't understand why we ought not take the lesser of evils, the most inexpensive of options available to us. >> reporter: opponents of tolls say the administrative costs are far higher for tolls than with a gasoline tax. martha? martha: interesting debate. hard to believe there is not enough in there to pay for it based on all taxes now being paid. of the. >> reporter: so true. you bet. martha: thanks a lot. what do you think? do you think there should be tolls on interstates we do have in new jersey? send us a tweet @marthamaccallum and @billhemmer. where is all the money going? another tax, right? bill: somewhere out there. so the white house says it has got nothing to hide. why won't it hand over the full contents of one specific email chain? debates that. what is in that, huh? plus there's this. >> conde lied a thousand times. martha: so students out of tens of thousands of causing condoleeza rice to back out of graduation speech. now college republicans are fighting back. we'll talk to a student who argues that a lack of free speech is hurting the national debate. >> we wish the school could have defended her more over the past few weeks rather than just send out emails, especially following the protests. they did not disavow the actions of the protesters for damaging university property and there is no place for that in a college environment at all. ady, ya know what salesman alan ames becomes? i think the numbers speak for themselves. i'm sold! a "selling machine!" ready for you alert, only at lq.com. so i'm going pro. 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[ male announcer ] that's how we run, and nothing runs like a deere. visit your dealer or johndeere.com/1family. bill: fox news alert, 9:30 in washington as the epa goes under the microscope. a house oversight committee holding a hearing want to know whether the epa is stopping its own internal investigation from investigating the epa. all this coming as president expected to unveil new climate energy initiatives this week. darrell issa as the hearing guests underway. more on this a little later. stuart varney will drop on by. martha: interesting story here today, the white house is refusing to disclose the full contents of an email back and forth about seven emails back and forth on the subject of benghazi. saying to do so will have chilling effect on their quote ability to have frank shrub shuns on subjects in the white house. basically an executive privilege argument. told you about email in question yesterday. those on the chain trying to come up with a strategy to deal with a specific fox news report. now our report, this is on the 27th of of 2012, contradicted the white house narrative about what had happened in the 24 hours after the assault on the consulate. alan colmes, is host of alan colmes show and fox news contributor. rich lowery, editor of "national review" and fox news contributor. just to lay there out a little bit more, reporting from our washington bureau came out on the 27th of september which was really the first time that it was said no, actually the white house did not, did not admit that it was terrorism in the first 24 hours after the attack. so then there's a back and forth. ben rhodes is involved. john brennan, the counterterrorism advise so the president is involved and pictures we pull up. denis mcdonough was involved in the email chain back and forth. was a strategy. how do we combat this story coming out of fox? what do we do? they're refusing to turn over content of emails as context of benghazi. alan. >> i don't know why they're not turning it over. it is not whether it was a video, not a video which we can debate. the intelligence sources said they believed it to be video first. strategy how to deal with what fox said and not release memo. this is where the worse not even a crime. i don't know what they're hiding. they should put them out. why not? martha: must have some reason, rich. >> tell you why they're is not releasing them. there is something embarrassing there. same reason they didn't release the ben rhodes email forever until under threat after lawsuit. if it was benign they would have released it long ago and released email chain. really striking if you look at judicial watch email, there is huge mass of redaction. pages and pages of redaction with email chain. there has to be something there. they don't want it public and -- >> nothing in those emails -- martha: redactions on those as well. when you redact something requested by a freedom of information request, you have to cite the reason. the reason was not cited on these emails. >> when they redacted looks worse than whatever might be in there. looks like they're hiding something. martha: how do you know? >> they should not do it. put it out there. get it out there. they should have gotten out there. always get ahead of whatever the issue is. martha: you know what? the only thing i can imagine, you're saying get it out there, they don't want to. that makes me think -- >> ben rhodes memo released thanks to judicial watch and foia, if you look at it, what are we saying sunday morning shows, concurrent with what the cia was saying at the time. susan rice kept saying best of our knowledge right now, the quote was word was evolving. it is revolving. so put it out there. martha: based on this massive redaction of seven emails, rich lowery, that this may have been the development of the total strategy. it may be, okay, guys, this is not, this does not look good for us. and here is what we need to do. and if that's what's in there, that's huge, rich. >> we don't know what is in there. but we can almost be certain what is not in there, oh, there is this report. let's check it out. got to be careful. maybe you're wrong about the video. shouldn't have put video story out in the first place because we're so committed to the fact, that would have been released already and released long, long ago. there are two strategies when it comes to scandals. one is suggested by alan get out ahead of it one is the what they're doing here, slow walk anything. cover up any embarrassing information. when it comes out do what they're doing now, this is old news and those republicans are nasty because they're still obsessed with this. they kept this email under wraps for years and now jay carney is putting out ridiculous story it is under wraps nothing to do with benghazi because -- >> republicans are obsessed with it and i think obsessed with wrong thing. what is at issue security at these embassies and why security is lapse. what we need to do in the future who perpetrated horrific events that is what the focus should be. martha: that is the focus, alan. the truth is if the security requests had been answered potential this would have never happened and never would have to be explained away in a different way, is, is there. so, i mean, think that to say that it is just political and it is not about what it should be about but really about security at embassy, never happens again and appears all these efforts are effort to cover up the fact it is not happening. >> there is security breaches during the bush administration, 13 different times at embassies. it is not fault of the president or secretary of state that it happens but should release all the information we know. this is all about media strategy. martha: why don't they want to. >> clearly because they have a guilty conscience. why don't they release it if it is obvious they should and haven't under force of a lawsuit. >> they should have used the first strategy. this is about strategy and media strategy. not about who did this, how do we address security in the future. >> i'm glad we agree they're using cover-up strategy. >> how many times have i sat here today they should have released all the email. >> we agree. martha: eventually the ben rhodes email came out. these as catherine reported have been redacted without being cited for a reason why. that pushes it to next level of information request that may be answered in the near future. so we'll see. thank you very much. good to talk to you both. >> thank you, martha. >> looking for a place to retire, aren't you, alan, rich? go to south dakota, folks. a new study says it is the best state to retire beating out colorado, utah, north dakota, and wyoming although all five ranked very high in the study. researchers at bankrate.com looked at weather, cost of living, overall well-being of people that live there. it rose above the rest because of low tax and low crime rate and what is considered, a solid wellness score. wellness. and living. i don't know where new york ranked on that yet. i don't know where ohio ranked on that or new jersey. south dakota could be the place. martha: new york, new jersey, great places to retire. you take the bus to the museums. good place to be when you're older. bill: road trip to south dakota, "america's newsroom"? martha: love to do that. good skiing. we've been talking about this story all week. there is outrage over condoleeza rice being pushed out as the speaker for commencement at rutgers. we'll talk to a member of the republican student organization and see why the students say they're very disap.ed at this point with their school. bill: if you thought that story was going away, think again, right? it is still out there. chaos when a gunman opens fire. hear the chilling 911 call, one of the victims pleading indoors for help. >> he has a shotgun. i've been shot. i've been shot. >> stay on the line with me. stay on the line, okay. >> tell my wife i love her. cúp,b [ female announcer ] this allergy season, will you be a sound sleeper, or a mouth breather? a mouth breather! [ whimpers ] how do you sleep like that? well, put on a breathe right strip and shut your mouth. allergy medicines open your nose over time, but add a breathe right strip and pow! it instantly opens your nose up to 38% more. so you can breathe and do the one thing you want to do -- sleep. add breathe right to your allergy medicine. shut your mouth and sleep right. breathe right. martha: chilling 911 tapes reveal chaos when a gunman opens fire inside of a fedex facility outside of atlanta. listen to this. >> 911, what is the emergency? >> 1675 airport road, i've been shot. >> 1675 air report road? >> ken saw, georgia. >> who did it, sir. >> unknown gunman. i've been shot. i've been shot. >> stay on the line with me. stay on the line, okay? >> tell my wife i love her. >> what is your name? >> -- i'm losing energy really fast. martha: how frighten something that. the caller, a newlywed and army veteran. reportedly now in serious condition. he was one of three people shot in the rampage last week. three other people were hurt in the commotion that followed. the 19-year-old gunman, an employee there, ended that whole episode by taking his own life. >> understand there's a need for tolerance and diversity of thought on our college campus because that has not been demonstrated by the protesters. bill: there is so much reaction what is happening out of rutgers. that is a student talking with greta after the former secretary of state condoleeza rice withdrew from a speaking engagement at graduation. student protesters staging a sit-in last week, rallying against rice over her ties to the bush administration and war in iraq. rut guess says there has been overwhelming response by students and staffers disappointed by her decision, brought on by what one school official called a small minority of intolerant students and faculty members. alex smith, the president of the college national republican committee. alex, good morning to you out of washington, d.c. >> good morning, bill. bill: what do you think rutgers is missing now that condoleeza rice will not speak there or bring whatever message that she had planned for that school? >> well they're simply missing out on hearing from one of the most accomplished women in american history. i mean the university is supposed to be a place of competing viewpoints and dialogue and that is not what they're getting in allowing this tyranny of the minority of faculty members to take over and essentially deny the students that privilege. bill: why do you think rutgers reacted the way it did? based on everything i read, you have 45,000 students, undergrad at that school. you had about 50 that were upset. >> you know, i think honestly it is one of these things where the university has become just such a place for liberalism and for intolerance of other viewpoints that rutgers simply decided not to make any waves with this select group of facultity members and students and defending dr. rice and her visit there. back in march. bill: what do you think of that decision, alex? how does that sit with you? >> i think it's a terrible decision. dr. rice is one of my heroes, one of the people that inspired me to get involved in politics personally and i think that there are a lot of students sitting at commencement interested in public service and interested going into the foreign service, who will be denied the opportunity to hear from truly one of the most amazing figures in our lifetime. bill: also, some of the groups that rutgers now, it is not a place where some free ideas and diversity of opinions are encouraged. i mean do you think that is the case? >> for sure. the left claims to be the side of tolerance and of diversity but this demonstrates that they don't want the dialogue and they're not interested in it. i mean for example, rutgers paid over $32,000 to hear from snooki but they, they will deny their students the opportunity to hear from dr. condoleeza rice, who is one of the most instrumental and historical figures in our lifetime. it is truly just a travesty. i'm really disappointed in the university's decision to deny the students the chance to hear from such a great leader. bill: you wonder, the president apparently of the school will meet with the students who want condoleeza rice to come back and apparently that is not going to happen. that decision has been made. they will go forward with the former governor there. do you think this is something that rutgers looks back and says, you know what? we kind of screwed that up? we regret that now, because the way it went. >> i absolutely do. i think there was a time in history where liberalism on campus could succeed and could basically take over, because we didn't have access to social media. we didn't have access to new forms of media that allow us to get out our message, that allow us to get out these moments of intolerance on campus. so i think that the public relations backlash that will hit the university over denying the students the opportunity to hear dr. rice speak and decision not to vigorously defend their invitation to her will really hurt them in the long run because now we have access to new forms of media that allow us to have our voice be heard. bill: that is a fascinating answer you just gave there. you're saying that technology today, gives you a whole new avenue which to speak? >> absolutely. for example, if the recent professor tire raids we heard of on -- tirades, the republican create ad hashtag, my liberal campus to share their forms of bias. our contention bias takes many force. the snide comment so passing and so quick you can't really respond to it. all together it builds a culture where conservative students don't feel welcome on campus. we invited students to share the stories using hashtag. the stories that we heard, they were breathtaking in some cases. just incredibly sad this is the state of our universities and some of our taxpayer-funded universities at that. bill: alex, thanks for coming in out of washington, d.c. >> thanks, bill. bill: one of leading student members was on with greta last night. what he talked about the physical damage done to damage on campus. we'll track that down. alex smith, thank you out of washington. >> thank you. bill: 11 minutes before the hour. martha: the former governor, tom kaine, apparently is going to speak. i think that presents its own controversy as well, whether or not he should put a vote of confidence in for rutgers university after what has happened in the course of all of this much. texas tech has another invitation to condoleeza rice to come speak at their graduation. no word whether or not she will do that. but not a great day for rutgers university. bill: dr. rice will speak again of the question is where. martha: still to come in "america's newsroom." we told you about a teenager that defied death as a stowaway in the jet engine of that plane. now the complete lapse of security that is caught on surveillance video. wait until you see think, rob ford has been out of the spotlight because he's in rehab and now why he says he is finding the experience amazing. ♪ i do a lot oresearch on angie's list before i do any projects on my home. i love my contractor, and i am so thankful to angie's list for bringing us together. find out why more than two million members count on angie's list. angie's list -- reviews you can trust. there was a boy who traveled to a faraway place where villages floated on water and castles were houses dragons lurked giants stood tall and the good queen showed the boy it could all be real avo: whatever you can imagine, all in one place expedia, find yours trwith secure wifie for your business. it also comes with public wifi for your customers. not so with internet from the phone company. i would email the phone company to inquire as to why they have shortchanged these customers. but that would require wifi. switch to comcast business internet and get two wifi networks included. comcast business built for business. dog: get four years interest-free financing dog: get four years on the entire tempur-pedic cloud collection. get a queen size sealy gel memory foam mattress for just $497. don't miss the memorial day sale. martha: undeniable proof now that a california teenager did in fact hitch a ride to hawaii in the wheel well of a plane. transportation officials released security footage of the 15-year-old, look at this. you can see him jump off the plane and walk around on the runway. how did he survive this at those temperatures and be able to get out and walk off? william la jeunesse is live for us in los angeles on this extraordinary story, william. >> reporter: if you doubted, that anyone could survive five hours, 30,000 feet, subzero temperatures, here is the video to back it up. a 15-year-old somalian immigrant from san jose, captured by airport surveillance cameras in hawaii, jumping down from the wheel well of the boeing triple seven and stumbling around for several minutes before he approaches an airline emmoye e. he ran away from home after argument with his dad allegedly said his mother died in somalia. he learned she was alive. and climbed the fence in san jose, airport and jumped on the first plane he could to go see her. it was blind luck he got on hawaii air flight 45. some would argue that it's a miracle that he survived. martha? martha: incredible story. where is he now, what happened and what happens next? >> reporter: he is back in california. he is in the hands of child protective services. his mother is in refugee camp in ethiopia. there are efforts to reunite the two. the dad said his son with no formal education in somalia is happen having trouble at high school. san jose airport is trying to figure out their airport was so easily breached and how he hung out for six hours before takeoff before get without getting caught. they may cite him for criminal trespass which is misdemeanor and a fine. but he may not have a home but we do know he does have lawyer. martha? martha: quite a story. william, thank you. bill: so sad when you talk about wanting to go home and see his mom and resorts to this wow, out of desperation. >> i feel for that boy, i really do. hope it works out for him. bill: william, thanks for that update on that. we're about to hear from house speaker john boehner. the list is long for him. irs debate, contempt for lois lerner and special committee on benghazi and primary results that included speaker boehner. we'll take you there live when it begins only moments away. woman: everyone in the nicu -- all the nurses wanted to watch him when he was there 118 days. everything that you thought was important to you changes in light of having a child that needs you every moment. i wouldn't trade him for the world. who matters most to you says the most about you. at massmutual we're owned by our policyowners, and they matter most to us. if you're caring for a child with special needs, our innovative special care program offers strategies that can help. it's called truecar. and truecar users... save time and money. so when you're... ready to buy a car, make sure you... never overpay. visit truecar.com today. martha: important moment coming up as we get closer to the dueling news conferenc conferenn capitol hill. leaders from both parties expected to speak out as two major controversies are now coming to a head. brand new hour of "america's newsroom." i am martha mccallum. bill: i am bill hemmer. we will hear from john boehner and nancy pelosi. and the formation of a select committee on benghazi. making manual leading the coverage on that this hour. hello, good morning. reporter: we expect will open with jobs and the economy recognizing that is still the number one priority. and then we expect some questions on the benghazi select committee. the speaker was initially reluctant to go forward but authorize going forward just last friday. on the democratic side we expect nancy pelosi and others to talk about what the plan to do in terms of the benghazi select committee. there was talks perhaps they would not play ball. we know they have asked for equal representation on the panel. it is currently set up for seven republicans, five democrats, they would like an equal balance there. suspect boehner will get questions on the irs investigation. bill: what is ahead today for that? >> we suspect lois lerner at the center will get found in contempt of congress. the recall she defended her actions, refused to answer questions. she has not been asked to come to capitol hill today after making several appearances here and claim in the fifth. they will press the attorney general to name a special counsel to investigate the irs targeting conservative groups. it is clear many house lawmakers have their little faith in a justice department investigation. bill: we talked about 45 minutes, he did not reveal much if holder drops the issue and if doj does not pursue lerner. but they have a lot of tools they will not reveal right now. do you have a sense of what the tools are in the toolbox? >> i have heard a lot of cryptic talk this is not the end of the game trying to get to the bottom of the irs investigation. the american people still want answers what went on, how high up the government it went. the bottom line, they do have other tools they can utilize, there being careful with their language revealing what those precise tools might be. bill: and if h if you still in h with the attorney's behalf of lerner. reporter: there has been a lot of a lot of back and forth between the house oversight committee and the attorneys for lois lerner. lot of words back and forth. negotiations even late in the game get her to come to capitol hill and talk to lawmakers. they say why won't she come up and talk to the people representing the u.s. congress. there's a lot of friction about that because the legislative branch may feel she should come up here and talk about what went on at the irs part of the executive branch there. bill: when speaker boehner talks, we will go to him live. martha: more on the vote on lois lerner. that debate got heated at times, watch some of this. >> nobody can find a scarier organization, at least one without guns, then the irs. >> may be can do another investigation and waste taxpayer money. martha: a lot of back and forth over whether or not they should be moving forward with these contempt hearings on lois lerner. remember when she sat down to plead the fifth and say she would not be answering any other questions she did a rather lengthy explanation why she was innocent in all this and that has prompted the contempt hearings. representing dozens of stations targeted by the irs. what do you make of these proceedings, this issue of a contempt hearing, do you think it will happen, play it out. >> first of all it is the logical next step in this process of the investigation, a vote on contempt. the house has passed a contempt order, the attorney general will not follow up on that contempt. the irony, of course martha, is lois lerner gave testimony to the department of justice, albeit not under oath. she is not giving the same to tt monkey house oversight committee so what you have is just a logical next step of bringing contempt action. i don't expect doj to move forward with it, you will have a call for a special prosecutor which has to go through doj. something that is clear, people have to understand have civil litigation against the irs on this very same matter. if she takes the fifth amendment, it is deemed an omission of the fact that is in dispute. and the purpose of a criminal case not have it held against you under the fifth amendment, although i think she waved it, but if she were to revert the fifth, she in terms admitted it. >> you feel there is a stone wall, so what is the point? >> you have to go through this process. the house is doing this correctly. you need to have a process put forward because there will be litigation over if she actually reserved her fifth amendment right. she proclaimed her innocence, said i did not violate any rules and regulations and then all of a sudden a situation where she says i am pleading my fifth amendment right. a lot of people believe that is a waiver. she could be compelled to testify. i think it moves forward the possibility her lawyers not wanting her to get into a contempt situation move to tell at least the committee behind closed doors what she would say if she were to testify and if there is a immunity deal. martha: if she was more forthcoming with people. >> she sat down during an interview to discuss the case and the issues. she is apparently not under oath when she did it bu for the lawys agreed to that. as is more pressure on her to engage in a conversation that may ultimately get her immunity. the american people are still asking these questions. martha: absolutely be at something she must be mulling over on a daily basis with how to proceed to all of this. we will see you next time. the picture we have up on the screen is a daily briefing, we don't often go to these. this morning because of the nature of what is on the table between the irs and the benghazi hearing and select committee, we feel like this is going to be newsworthy and something you will want to hear. we do expect details about who would be on this select committee to do the investigations and benghazi, the makeup of it is a major component, whether it woul to bn republicans and five democrats or if it would be evenly split. but it is completely on customary to do an even split. a similar situations for democrats that has weighed more heavily to the democratic side. so that would be rather unusual. bill: in the end you have four dead americans. if you protest this, what does that say about where you are? i rather animated meeting happening behind closed doors among democrats about if they participate or not. we should see nancy pelosi in about 20 minutes or so. knowing that speaker boehner and no space committee on a friday afternoon before we can last week, i don't know publicly if he had even been asked about it. as mike emanuel said, he is pushing jobs, obamacare is still in maine talking point, so we would expect the first subject matter out of his mouth. martha: it is worth pointing out he didn't want to do this necessarily. here he is, let's listen. boehner: this week it will pass to more bills that will help expand economic opportunity and security for america's middle class. one to make research and development tax permanent and a second to develop access to charter schools. last week we learned economic growth in the first quarter was an anemic one-tenth of 1%. but sitting over in the united states senate are nearly 40 job tools that will deliver the title of economic growth the american people are demanding. i think president obama should call the senate leader and demand these bills be brought to the floor of the united states senate. >> good morning. this has really been a week of irony at the white house. president obama was quoted as lamenting the amount of focus on jobs and then democrats spent their days promoting policies that will do little but eliminate jobs. i think the bottom line is democrats are all talk and no action on jobs. today we in the house have sent 200 bills to the senate. those were 200 bills that remain blocked by senate democrats. dozens of these bills would encourage jobs and economic growth. the fact is many of them are overwhelmingly bipartisan, some are even sponsored by democrats. so it is unfathomable to think why wouldn't the senate want to take these up, instead what we are seeing is more political theater over the senate while leaving working middl middle-cls americans behind. as was just said, we will take up a big jobs bill this week. it is the permanent extension of r&d tax credits. this has been a provision that expired over and over again over the last 30 years, this is one of the most generative things we can do for my policy standpoint that has been confirmed by independent economic analysis to grow jobs and to have america work again with more people. martha: eric cantor. they're making some opening statements. along the lines of jobs and some of the other business of the day. when they get to the q&a section you will hear some questions about the irs and about the makeup of the benghazi select committee. we will keep an eye on it and ring you back as this gets a little more interesting shall we say down the road. bill: very vital issues. we will get back to that in a moment. toronto's mayor admitting, here is rob ford now. >> yes, i did smoke crack cocaine, but am i an addict? no. have i tried it? probably in one of my drunken stupors. bill: he has a new message from rehab. martha: rescuing a girl clinging to an overpass. we will show you that. bill: and white house issues a dire warning on climate change and a call to action now. designed to change the message? >> it was on the old testaments. if you see the skies will not cooperate. this is quite superstitious. woman: this is not exactly what i expected. man: definitely more murdery than the reviews said. captain obvious: this is a creepy room. man: oh hey, captain obvious. captain obvious: you should have used hotels.com. their genuine guest reviews are written by guests who have genuinely stayed there. instead of people who lie on the internet. son: look, a finger. captain: that's unsettling. man: you think? captain: all the time. except when i sleep. which i would not do here. hotels.com would have mentioned the finger. bill: a primary victory for some who may be a bellwether state. north carolina house speaker beating out several tea party candidates to secure the nomination for senate. that will pit him against democratic senator in november. that will be closely watched race. it could help the u.s. senate come november. here he was last night. >> thank barack obama for trusting barack the mack big government. but like you, i put my trust in freedom. responsibility in our citizens instead of the political machine. bill: he easily picked up 40% of the votes, what's needed to avoid a runoff election. watch the tar heel state in november. martha: president obama sounding the alarm on climate change calling for sweeping new regulations to prevent serious harm, he says, to our country. critics say the actions proposed by the administration would put a chill on the economy. and throw more americans out of work. >> what they tell you is that you should be scared about what's happened today. if we could have a pact with other countries in which everybody would reduce their emissions, i would sign on. in the absence of it, all we are doing is economic suicide. in the name of do-gooders him that will not do and i had to somand iota issome of good. martha: environment and public works. thank you for being here. he says if you cannot get the world to cooperate in this, you have china admitting an enormous amount of pollution into the air. does it count if we are doing this on our own? >> he is right. it is costing significantly in terms of higher energy cost as well as cost of people looking for jobs. in this is your position, don't be afraid to bring it to the united states. on the floor right now, let's have a vote on what you're proposing because even when the senate has 60 democrats, president obama didn't bring this to a vote in the senate, he couldn't get it done because there was bipartisan opposition to a president obama is proposing. martha: he says this is being up a bit to the now. in terms of priorities and what is going on in washington and across the country, how do you feel about that in terms of the political focus being put on it right now? >> the focus should be getting people to work, getting people back to work, jobs and the economy is such a big part of what is on people's minds in addition to paying more and getting less. what the president is proposing will make it harder for people to get back to work. don't hurt the economy relative to what is happening around the world. that is why we have come out the western conference has come out with reports specifically talking about washington getting it wrong on environmental issues and the states getting it right. and wyoming one of the most beautiful places in the world, we focused a lot on protecting our environment, at the same time using the resources we have been given to help our communities and help our state. martha: you say this would like bipartisan support, so why is the president pushing it if you can't really make it happen? and that i look at the keystone pipeline issue that has a fair amount of bipartisan support in the president seems to be not interested in that. >> i agree with you, martha. the president seems to be held hostage by the extreme left, the key donors have promised to help him maintain control of the senate. the individual for san francisco who promised $100 million to the democrats to help elect or reelect democratic senators who believe in thes in the things te president is talking about, but i believe things that would hurt the economy, making it harder for people to get back to work and would raise energy cost on american families. none of that is good for our country or our economy. martha: thank you, always good talking to you. >> thank you for having me. bill: willis into the speaker boehner stuff. stay tuned on that. and the u.s. government sending a highly trained team to rescue hundreds of young girls held captive for trying to get an education. they are being held captive by a brutal islamic group. how the u.s. might be able to help them. martha: explosive out of this world video coming your way from nasa. an incredible display. on the surface of the sun. we will show you what it looks like. really pretty cool. ♪ ♪ dog: oh, boy! mattress discounters oh, boy! mattress discounters memorial day sale. what's this? a queen size sealy gel memory foam mattress for just $497? mattress discounters has the largest selection of memory foam mattresses under one "roof." comforpedic, icomfort, optimum, and, wow, four years interest-free financing on the entire tempur-pedic cloud collection? don't miss the memorial day sale. ♪ mattress discounters martha: we are back, moments ago we showed you the g.o.p. news john boehner was speaking at. here's where he addressed the issue of the select committee at benghazi. >> it's clear we need to proceed. many of you know i thought and continued to believe there are four committee committees invesg benghazi and have done a good job. but in line was crossed last week. one of them became clear that the white house played a more significant role in the developments of how they were going to describe this, certainly more than anything that had been disclosed so far, and then secondly when it became clear documents that were turned over to a private organization that frankly have been blocked in terms of giving them to us, it was time for us to bring this together in the one place and focus our efforts. this is all about getting to the truth. it will not be a sideshow, there will not be a circus, this is a serious investigation. listen, our system of government depends on transparency and accountability. we owe it to the future of our country and to the next administration to do our job, to make it clear place of activities that may have gone on here are not acceptable in our system of government. martha: all right. there had been another question and went off in another direction and then moments later the irs issue came up because they are talking about whether or not lois lerner will be held in contempt. there will be a vote coming up on that over the next possibly as early as this afternoon and john boehner addressed the irs issue as well. boehner: i think it is about reading these activities into one place. being paid for out of existing irs counts. >> you said they would appoint a special counsel. can you tell the american people if they will produce results? boehner: who's been fired over the targeting of conservative groups by the irs? no one that i'm aware of. who's going to jail? for violating the law? when is the administration going to tell the american people the truth? they have not told truth about benghazi, they have not told truth about the irs, they have not told the truth about fast and furious. only one would have to guess if they are not willing to tell the american people the truth, it must not be very pretty. martha: interesting. he said he must not be very pretty when it comes to benghazi, when it comes to the irs, even mentioned fast and furious. he believes the white house is hiding something and now there are two very strong front split up to find the answers to those questions. the select committee in benghazi and contempt hearings for lois lerner. bill: once a headset for quite some time with did not want to go to select committee route unless he could determine there was a connection inside the white house. it was the ben rhodes e-mail that surfaced that triggered his decision to go forward with that. off we go now. nancy pelosi was just asked about whether or not democrats are enjoying the select committee. we will see where that goes on the hill. meantime, 28 minutes after the hour. u.s. forces joining the hunt for a ruthless leader of an islamic terror group of ducting hundreds of schoolgirls in nigeria. the leader vowing to sell them into slavery. meanwhile mothers of the children protesting in nigeria's capital hoping it will force the government to do more. they are heartbroken, as you can imagine. repaired u.s. navy captain and fox news military analyst with us this morning. captain, good morning to you. >> good morning, bill. bill: they don't want any western education. i think what viewers need to understand is how brutal this group has been in killing innocent people in nigeria for a long time. >> they are led by a psychopath. on monday they entered another village along the camera on village and hacks to death and shot another 100 people. these people on a scale of 1 to 10 for brutality are a 10. bill: so what can we do? there is a group to nigeria now. i know you wanted to help them for quite some time, we offered that help but the government in nigeria did not take it, now they are. >> we are providing an interagency group made up of law enforcement intelligence, people who are familiar with hostage negotiation. they will be operating out of a coordinatiocoronation sell out r embassy in the capital city of nigeria. we will not put troops on the ground, per se. loading marines are army combat troops, that is not what is being discussed here. what we will do is provide the people who can then access intelligence and information that the united states had and capabilities and bring them to bear to help the nigerian government solve their problem. bill: you know that operate in the north and east nigeria. should it snuff them out? >> it is going to take a full effort by the nigerian government. up until this point they have not demonstrated that. they have been holding them off, trying to contain them, but now it is clearly out of hand. the man running this thing has taken this to a whole new level. they were brutal poor. now they are just maniacal. this is not going to heal itself, nothing could be done other than nigerians solving this for themselves, united states cannot solve the problem. bill: you cannot use a drone with the captives. they are big exporter of oil, the world economic forum there. it is important. the muslim extremist know that. from washington, appreciate it. martha: monica lewinsky was quiet for years, so why now? the article that just came out. avo: with expedia you always get the lowest price book any flight or hotel and if you find it for less we'll match it and give you fifty dollars back that's the expedia guarantee she loves to shop online with her debit card. and so does bill, an identity thief who stole mary's identity, took over her bank accounts, and stole her hard-earned money. unfortunately, millions of americans just like you learn all it may take is a little misplaced information to wreak havoc on your life. this is identity theft. and no one helps stop it better than lifelock. lifelock offers the most comprehensive identity theft protection available. if mary had lifelock's bank account alerts, she may have been notified before it was too late. lifelock's credit notification service is on the job 24/7. as soon as they detect a threat to your identity within their network, they will alert you, protecting you before the damage is done. lifelock has the most comprehensive identity theft protection available, guarding your social security number, your money, your credit, even the equity in your home. my years as a prosecutor taught me that we all need to protect ourselves from crime. in today's world, that includes identity theft. it's a serious problem. we all have to protect ourselves. 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>> we had as many as 250,000. we're seeing this play out. we're less entrepreneurial today according to a study from brookings than ever before. more small companies are being destroyed than created right now. bill: the decisions because they till do not know still? >> not just because they're halting. they know it costs them more to have more employees. they stop hiring. they stop growing. they stop planning for future. they can't do it. because it costs them more money. bill: charles, do you agree? >> i do i agree. here is the sad irony, piggyback off something gerry said with businesses starting, with interest rates this low, with computers so cheap you would think people would start businesses left and right. you know when the last 30 years businesses spiked? under ronald reagan. i have to to tell you something. this is sew amazing, this number, the nfib number is lowest number i've seen. cbo said half a million people. i've seen projections of 3 million people john dropping out of the market because of obamacare. this is earnings season. companies from united health said we had a hard time because of obamacare. intuitive surgical. tenet healthcare, hospital visits, emergency room visits exploding to the upside. that wasn't supposed to happen. bill: you think obamacare keep as lid on all of this, all the economic growth? >> obamacare reshuffled deck of people already had insurance. we need to know, supposed to help 40 million people without health care insurance. that number is low by all estimates. bill: 30 million and went to 45 million. >> numbers change all the time. but the other problem is, that it is putting a knife in the back of employers health care, right? because now these employers say, hey, put them on the exchange. who does that hurt? that hurts taxpayers. bill: to that point, gerri, you can't believe the national foundation of independent business, nfib as charles referred to, large companies will be saving money once they put their employees on the plan. do they? >> companies save money but who picks up the tab? the taxpayer picks up the tab. we already have 17 trilliondollars worth of debt in this country. why do we want more? the problem with health care, the problem with obamacare isn't as republicans say not enough people are signing up. it is that too many people will sign up and we'll have another entitlement program that we can't afford. >> here's the thing. if you're in a business and you want to attract great talent, you probably will offer some form of health care. the larger companies have that advantage. smaller businesses which is the crux of this problem can not compete in that arena. how can you bring on best talent, how can you compete? this is a perfect backdrop for people to start businesses right now. bill: that's a bite point and you're saying small businesses are being held back. >> this is one of the roadblocks. one of the gigantic roadblocks and high taxes and and regulations that one of the things that dissuade people. bill: do you agree with the premise that large companies will be more profitable because they will be able to trim some of theirs costs because of government health care. >> i do. >> i do believe a lost larger companies will go ahead and bite the bullet and find a way to make it up. >> we've already seen companies start to say they will throw people -- >> some will. there is no doubt about it. >> as more people do it and pressure for eps and earnings around performance continues more will be pressured to do it. >> to gerri's point, i'm watching in earnings period, pride themselves on conscious capitalism, they're getting crushed. whole foods is getting crushed. bill: crushed on what. >> getting hammered. they believe in higher minimum wage, all the social things, socially conscious and social things ahead of profits. the container store, panera bread. whole foods today getting annihilated. it will be interesting to see how corporate america holds up with more competition. bill: see you guys on the other network. gerri willis, charles payne, thank you. >> were you involved -- >> can you get off my driveway please? can you get off my driveway? can you get off my property please? get off my property. >> i'm leaving. >> take it off my property. >> i'm leaving. thank you. thank you very much. >> get off my property. >> thank you very much. get off my property. martha: one of the greatest hits from rob ford. who can those prosecutor or not toe mayor, repeatedly dodging questions from reporters about whether he had smoked crack. so now, somewhat loveable mayor, we must admit is speaking out from rehab, confidentially telling supporters that he will be back in the city mayoral election and plans to win it and before making decision to get help for addiction after another video surfaced of him in a drunken rant n interview with toronto sun about rehab. i feel great. rehab is amazing. reminds me of football camp. i do feel bad about what happened but he says it might have been the best thing that happened because i'm working on getting better. good for rob ford. football camp. bill: we sat back here and chuckled over his antics the last year but let's hope he gets better. >> i hope he gets better but i never heard them say rehab reminds them of feed ball camp. even the old charm with rob ford. bill: monica lewinsky breaking years of silence in a new article. we'll talk to a man who was president clinton's advisor for the scandal. what it could mean for the hillary clinton's potential run in 2016. >> "vanity fair" published anything about monica lewinsky that hillary clinton didn't want in "vanity fair"? >> i want you to listen to me. i'm going to say this again. i did not have sexual relations with that woman, miss lewinsky. martha: remember that? who can forget it, right? after for than 15 years of silence, monica lewinsky is speaking about her affair with former president bill clinton, publishing an article in "vanity fair" as the nation awaits to hear if hillary clinton will run for president in sift is. in latest issue, with beautiful picture of monica lewinsky, with hillary's reaction to the affair. my first thought getting up to speed, if that is the worst thing she said i would be so lucky. yes, i get it. hillary clinton wanted it on the record she was lashing out at her husband's mistress. she may have faulted her husband for being inappropriate but i find her impulse to blame the woman, not only me, but herself, trouble troubling. the timing of this article is raising eyebrows and impact of it on hillary clinton's possible presidential campaign of course. this sound bite from last night from lynne cheney. >> i really wonder if this isn't an effort on the clintons part to get that story out of the way? would "vanity fair" publish anything about monica lewinsky that hillary clinton didn't want in "vanity fair?" martha: joining me, doug schoen, he was in the white house during this entire episode and saga with monica lewinsky, advising president clinton. he knows more about this than any of us do, that's for sure. >> thank you, martha. martha: good to have you here. i want to make clear in that passage she is referring to the tapes that were revealed of hillary clinton and she called monica lewinsky a narcissistic loon and that is when monica lewinsky reacted to that, if that is the worst name she called me i understand. she is talking about her husband's mistress but she also talked about the fact in that hillary expressed that she felt she hadn't been there for her husband emotionally and blaming herself. a lot of psychology that we could get into this all of this. >> right. martha: let's address lynne cheney's comment. she thinks this is clinton plant, this story. >> i think that's silly. i think, the clintons and the american people, martha would like this to go away. i don't think this will have any discernible impact on 2016. monica lewinsky did what she did for her own reasons. i don't think the clintons have anything to do with it. martha: the suggestions that the clintons are so powerful and done lots of glowing in depth pieces on clintons on in "vanity fair," do you think "vanity fair" bow to the wishes of them and have the monica piece run if they didn't think it would be a good piece that sells magazines? >> i think it's a good piece that sells magazines. whether it has political significance and whether clintons have anything to do wit it is entirely different issue. martha: cuts monica lewinsky issue hurt hillary in 2016. >> i don't think so. i don't think anyone really cares. they didn't care in the run-up to the midterm elections in 1998. we won a smashing victory. i don't think they're going to care now. let's put the past behind us is what most people think. martha: what do you think, looking back on what monica lewinsky says about all of this? that she was a victim and that they ruined her brand. she says, it was a consensual relationship. she said i said that from the beginning. she knew what she was in for. she wanted to have an affair with the president of the united states and went after him and she did that. that they were consenting adults. she says in the aftermath she was abused in that way? >> look i was there. you're right. and we were very careful and i think for very good, both substantive and arguably procedural reasons not to do anything or to say anything to besmirch miss lewinsky's character and i wouldn't do that now. the sad by-product of one of these instances it is very difficult for a woman in her position to move on and move on successfully. she has tried a number of things. she has a degree from the london school of economics but she herself acknowledges in the article, martha, to her, quote, history makes it hard for employers to sign off and hire her. martha: what about the bashing that is being done by some of democrats, saying, look this is a party that launches the war on women, that says that republicans don't treat women well and, you look at the history of bill clinton and in my mind he may be the one who suffers the most from this, i hadn't heard the names kathleen willey or juanita broderick and paula jones in long time. you're hearing them quite a bit. and brings up some not very pleasant memories. >> that's true. i don't think you will hear too much of it during the 2016 if hillary runs for a couple reasons. one, it is distant past. , and it is hillary running and not bill. this is fundamentally in the past. it is extraneous to issues now. i think republicans have real issues which go well beyond the matters you mentioned. martha: all right. thanks for the trip down memory lane. >> thank you. martha: back to the white house in 1990s with doug schoen. bill: i guess. where were you? thank you, doug. you heard of the housing crisis. we'll show awe housing solution. some amazing new homes made from something you would not expect, america. stay tuned. if i told you that a free ten-second test could mean less waiting for things like security backups and file downloads you'd take that test, right? well, what are you waiting for? you could literally be done with the test by now. now you could have done it twice. this is awkward. check your speed. see how fast your internet can be. switch now and add voice and tv for $34.90. comcast business built for business. >> big day on capitol hill. hairings on obamacare and irs and epa. we're awaiting contempt vote of former irs official lois lerner. so we'll keep you posted on that. the man some named as potential special counsel for the benghazi select committee will join us whether he wants the job of the annual so-called "pig book" is unveiled in six minutes. with details on pork barrel projects congressional leaders are squeezing out of the federal government and taxpayers. that is all coming up on "happening now." bill: thank you, jenna. some creative thinking outside the box to cop up with ingenius solution, solving several problems at one time. a company that recycles shipping container boxes to build a new home. steve harrigan checked it out live in miami. how are these containers different from, maybe a mobile home, steve? >> bill the owner gets angry if you compare these containers to mobile homes he says because they're made of corrugated steel and they're much stronger f you use concrete pilings to anchor down the four sides he claims they do much better in hurricane areas. >> the hurricanes come through and they level the mobile home parks this will be standing basically undamaged. >> sawyer says these container homes also appeal to green buyers because basically, he is taking rusting containers out of ports, junk and turning them into homes for people, bill. bill: how are sales. >> right now he has two different models for sale. one 20 feet by eight feet for $37,000. the other bigger, 40 feet by eight feet for a $57,000. they both come out with fold out sofa a queen bed size. sales are pretty good. could turn into a lucrative business model. buying containers off of a port, a rusty container you can pick one up under $2,000. bill: that whole hurricane idea makes sense too. thank you, steve. steve harrigan in miami. martha. martha: we're getting closer we believe to an impending contempt vote in the house against former ears official lois lerner. we have the latest developments on that story from capitol hill. , how much money do you think you'll need when you retire? then we gave each person a ribbon to show how many years that amount might last. i was trying to, like, pull it a little further. [ woman ] got me to 70 years old. i'm going have to rethink this thing. it's hard to imagin how much we'll need for a retirement that could last 3years or mor so maybe we need to approach things dferently, if we want to be ready for a longer retirement. ♪ if we want to be ready for a longer retirement. honestly, the off-season isn't i've got a lot to do. that's why i got my surface. it's great for watching game film and drawing up plays. it's got onenote, so i can stay on top of my to-do list, which has been absolutely absurd since the big game. with skype, it's just really easy to stay in touch with the kids i work with. alright, russell you are good to go! alright, fellas. alright, russ. back to work! there was a boy who traveled to a faraway place where villages floated on water and castles were houses dragons lurked giants stood tall and the good queen showed the boy it could all be real avo: whatever you can imagine, all in one place expedia, find yours >> really nation moment we want to share. kevin durrant was named the valuable player of the year. his speech brought the crowd to their feet and many to tears. >> you kept us off the street, kept clothes on our back and food on the table. when you didn't eat, you made sure we eat. you sacrificed for us. you the real mvp. >> wow. >> wow. that was a beautiful tribute to his mother and his ability and his moment to thank her. it is his first time mvp award. lebron james was second and he was very happy for ckevin. >> thank for sharing that. we have to run. >> fox news alert from capital hill on the benghazi scandal with new details about the select committee tasked with investigating the deadly terr terrorist attack. i am jon scott. >> and i am jenna lee. in less than three years, the house committee will create the resolution to get the details on what happened before and after the attack of the murder

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Transcripts For CNNW CNN Newsroom 20140514

mourners and desperate loved ones gather there at this coal mine in turkey, about a seven hour drive southwest -- northwest of istanbul. the death toll at this hour, 245. 129 miners may still be alive and all eyes are on what rescuers bring up over ground. there have been moments of jubilation as well. [ applause ] at least 88 miners have made it out. some walking out of this mine on their own. it's really a miracle. a transformer blew and ig nighted a fire tuesday that has been slowing down the rescue today. let's take you to this mine site to cnn's ivan watson. there are more lifeless bodies being pulled out of this mine than survivorsment when is the last time there were cheers at that mine? >> reporter: you know, i have been here probably 12 hours and haven't heard any real cheers at all. the mood is quite grim down near the mouth of the coal mine. he said it was his duty to stand there and receive other friends that would be coming out. he told me he has no hope of seeing any of them come out alive that it's far too late for that. and i have watched a procession of lifeless bodies carried out on stretchers the scene there, he is quite grim. some of the rescue workers i have talked to managed to shut the doors. and get on tanks of oxygen and gas masks in time, there could be people alive. more than 24 hours after the fire broke out. it is a tragic and sad scene. as you drive around this province, flags are at half mass. the road in main street is line ed with police and protectors. the real sense of a major disaster. >> they are pumping oxygen into this mine site, are they not? >> we are told by authorities that they are pumping some air in and we see smoke puffing out from what seems to be an entrance to the mine. i talked to a couple of rescue volunteers who had been working overnight down there. they had retrieved the bodies of six miners they said. they said that the heat was pretty terrible. the air was also, you know, quite poisonous. dense smoke. and the distances that they are having to travel, they are saying that it takes 45 minutes. where these hundreds of coal miners are working. this fire erupted at a time when reportedly the coal mine was going through a shift. and that is perhaps why this has been so, so, so deadly. to top it all off, you have a locally elected lawmaker who had just put into motion asking for an investigation into the security standards at this mine and other coal mines around this very town and can you believe it? the parliament voted that motion for an investigation down. so this is becoming a big topic of debate and controversy even as the bodies still keep coming out. >> awful. we will stay in close contact with you, hoping for cheers in the coming hours instead of more bodies coming out of that mine. let's talk about, too, today, this potentially deadly mers virus. it has now spread to an 18th country. the netherlands is reporting a case of the virus that emerged from the middle east. two health care workers in orlando, both have tested negative even though both had flu-like symptoms. the number of people exposed to that man and the case in indiana are being kept in isolation and the cdc are trying to find the people who flew on the plane with the man currently in florida. and so, obviously, as we continue reporting this, we are hearing about signs in u.s. airports just giving people a head's up if they are going to the middle east. how concern should we be now? >> i would be worried about him. i would be worried about me and my children because we're in such close contact. i would be concerned if any health care workers had taken care of him and not using precautions but i don't think this is something that many, many people need to be concerned about. if you are not a held care worker, if you don't have close contact with a mers patient, which most of us haven't, this really isn't a grave concern. they are contacting people who flew on these planes with this mers patients because they want to be sure. these people spent many hours with this patient. >> i have heard you say, if you're a family member of this individual you should be frightened possibly. but if officials are trying to track down the folks on the planes who might have come in contact, maybe just shared the air, could it be as simple as that and somebody could be with the particular type of virus. >> in indiana, you have flights from london to chicago. that's hundreds of people on a plane together for hours with this mers patient and nobody on that plane got sick. now at the cdc here behind me there are people making phone calls as we speak for the florida patient who was on a series of flights. is it possible? sure it's possible. but the likelihood seems low. this is a new virus with a very high mortality rate, 30%. they want to take every precaution they can. >> as they should be. thank you so much. and just ahead here on cnn, a man searching for his biological father makes a disturbing discovery because he says his dad may be one of the most elusive serial killers in history, the infamous zoed y zodiac killer. >> and the mount everest of ocean discoveries, christopher columbus's ship is being attacked by looters. >> and a bounce house goes airborne, the kids inside falling out. look at that! we'll be right back. cut! [bell rings] this...is jane. her long day on set starts with shoulder pain... ...and a choice take 6 tylenol in a day which is 2 aleve for... ...all day relief. hmm. [bell ring] "roll sound!" 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[ chainsaw buzzing ] humans. sometimes, life trips us up. sometimes, we trip ourselves up. and although the mistakes may seem to just keep coming at you, so do the solutions. like multi-policy discounts from liberty mutual insurance. save up to 10% just for combining your auto and home insurance. call liberty mutual insurance at... to speak with an insurance expert and ask about all the personalized savings available for when you get married, move into a new house, or add a car to your policy. personalized coverage and savings -- all the things humans need to make our world a little less imperfect. call... and ask about all the ways you could save. liberty mutual insurance -- responsibility. what's your policy? welcome back. a man's soul searching journey ends up with something that would shake anyone's identity because his dad could be a serial killer. that is what this man who wrote the book said. the man who abandoned him when he was four weeks old is the zodiac killer. >> seens from zodiac here, part of the string of films and books and articles on the string of killings. it is still an open case decades later. see this man, a louisiana business executive says his biological father bears a mighty strong resemblance to the sketches of the killer. look at that. plus, stewart could not ignore a letter puzzle from the killer that contained the words ev best and jr., which could be the name of stewart's dad. there is certainly doubt, my next guest knows her father was one. melissa moore's dad was keith jesperson, the happy face killer who admitted killing eight women in the 90s. she wrote a book, "shattered silence -- the untold story of a serial killer's daughter". >> thank you for having me. >> before we get to more specifics, i want to focus on you. tell me first about the moment when you realized after your dad was caught and you realized oh my god, my father is a serial killer. >> right, it was my fresh man year in high school. i was only 15 years old. it was shocking. my mom had called me in from the upstairs area of my house and called us in for a meeting. the next day i had to go to school like everything was normal. everybody else knew. they had watched the news, too. >> they knew it was your father? >> yeah. >> you say it was shocking but i read in parts of your book how your father had dark tendcies. tell me what he would hang from the clothes line? >> right, he would hang our -- well, my pets, for instance. in one case it was some kittens that i had found in the cellar that i was pretending. i was just a little girl. my dad had hung them on the clothes line and was torturing them. that was one really dark and horrible day for me. >> that is something you remember for the rest of your life. here you are as a grown woman and you're a mother. looking back, before we get to current day, your father, you know, sent letters with his own signature, sort of like this zodiac killer did. >> correct. it was a smiley face that he would put on the stalls of bathrooms, at truck stops. >> that is like a sign of serial killers. let me play you sound. he talked to cnn by phone earlier today. take a listen. >> i never set out to that my dad was a serial killer. mine was a journey to find myself by finding the other half of me in my father. >> the biggest difference between his story and yours besides the fact that we don't know he was abandoned when he was four weeks old. how has that -- do you think it's better to be older or younger or does it matter? >> well, as i have come forward with my story, i have had the privilege of meeting other family members that are children and adults and spouses of serial killers. it's a small club, not a fun club. for gary to possibly be a part of this not fun club to be in you can see it in kids when their parents get divorced. you can put knit the context of murder, of serial murder x then you just amp it up. and even international cases to be the same place. >> sure. >> so -- >> we will follow this story to see if, you know, if gary's father is in fact the zodiac killer as well. >> thank you. coming up, is this zungen ship the long lost remains of a ship sailed by christopher columbus himself? our next guest says yes. he is the one who found it. also ahead, parents look on in absolute horror asbounce house is. we will tell you what happened to the children inside. yes, there were kids inside. next. peoi go to angie's listt for all kinds of reasons. to gauge whether or not the projects will be done in a timely fashion and within budget. angie's list members can tell you which provider is the best in town. you'll find reviews on everything from home repair to healthcare. now that we're expecting, i like the fact i can go onto angie's list and look for pediatricians. the service providers that i've found on angie's list actually have blown me away. find out why more than two million members count on angie's list. angie's list -- reviews you can trust. add brand new belongings from nationwide insurance... ...and we'll replace destroyed or stolen items with brand-new versions. we put members first. join the nation. ♪ nationwide is on your side ♪ >> a bounce house gets blown away. and thank goodness you're okay. >> look at this terrifying photo. that blue dot soaring high. right off the front yard. three children playing inside were sent flying two stories into the sky, soaring over a stretch of trees and this apartment complex. >> the first little boy came out, landed in the middle of the road. the other little boy came down and hit his head and then he landed on the ground. >> a 10-year-old girl escaping with only scrapes. the two boys still hospitalized. >> this is not the first time the birthday party favorites have been sent airborne. >> the parents were out there, too. everything was done properly. >> don, thank you. just ahead. . >> he is a man who is upset and he is reaching. he is reaching. he's trying to find something that he can grab on to to help him save his team and it's not going to happen. >> and the biebs is back. justin bieber and another brush with the law. this time accusations of attempted robbery. details next. i'm randy and i quit smoking with chantix. as a police officer, i've helped many people in the last 23 years. but i needed help in quitting smoking. along with support, chantix (varenicline) is proven to help people quit smoking. chantix reduced the urge for me to smoke. it actually caught me by surprise. some people had changes in behavior, thinking or mood, hostility, agitation, depressed mood and suicidal thoughts or actions while taking or after stopping chantix. if you notice any of these, stop chantix and call your doctor right away. tell your doctor about any history of mental health problems, which could get worse while taking chantix. don't take chantix if you've had a serious allergic or skin reaction to it. if you develop these, stop chantix and see your doctor right away as some could be life threatening. tell your doctor if you have a history of heart or blood vessel problems, or if you develop new or worse symptoms. get medical help right away if you have symptoms of a heart attack or stroke. use caution when driving or operating machinery. common side effects include nausea, trouble sleeping and unusual dreams. i did not know what it was like to be a non-smoker. but i do now. ask your doctor if chantix is right for you. how did i know? 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[ male announcer ] in a clinical study, over 80% of treated men had their t levels restored to normal. talk to your doctor about all your symptoms. get the blood tests. change your number. turn it up. androgel 1.62%. >> bottom of the hour, you with watching krmp nn. more minors have been rescued today from a burning coal mine in turkey but as many as 120 are still trapped inside. the smoke is rising from the openings in the complex. anxious loved ones are offered comfort as throngs of loved ones are gathering outside of the mine. hundreds of people were believed to be inside the mine when a transformer blew up during a shift change. at least 88 people have been rescued. i van watson is in soma with us. >> far more have su comed most likely to the smoke and carbon monoxide poisoning that seems to have been the chief cause of death here. the prime minister has come to visit. he has vowed to investigate the causes behind what could be one of the most deadly mining disasters in turkish history. he went one step further to say that this mine had recently been inspected and it had a clean bill of health. the questions about who could be responsible will be resolved in the days and weeks ahead. >> that is ivan watson reporting from turkey. now to basketball. he says he is a god-fearing man and he's going pray for donald sterling. another exclusive interview with anderson cooper after sterling launched personal attacks against the hall of famer. and now that magic has spoken, the focus shifts back to steriling asteril sterling and his focus to hang on as owner. >> here we are in a league that is over 80%, at least 75% african-americans. he want us to play for him but he doesn't want us in the stands. he want us to help him win a championship but he doesn't want us in the stands. the players have rallied togtd. the only thing they're waiting for is to see what will happen with the vote and the board of governors. >> by the other owners? >> by the other owners. we can't have this kind of action in our league or in our society. >> sterling claims that push comes to shove, he can bide time. the players will play, sponsors will sponsor his team even if he stays there. that money talks and in the end they have got contracts, sponsors want to make money. he clearly believes that there is a root for him to remain owner. >> he can't buy his way out of this one. he has bought his way out of all the other situations. can't do it this time. >> here you have a majority black league. magic said sterling is fighting a losing battle. >> we are hearing from lebron james suggesting that people boycott next season if sterling is still the owner. is that realistic? >> it is talk at this time but it is realistic. and what what the players are stating. and not the sterling family. that should happen prior to the opening game of next year, opening season. and what league aspect this will bring, i don't know. when the board of governors will make a decision and they will make a positive decision to have mr. sterling removed from ownership, i think that it might have some legal ramifications that would ensue later. because of the fact that this could get ugly and nasty. it is a great time for the nba. the nba is doing and go thunder. >> let me stop you there. you have a unique position. you played with magic. what would magic the player, playing right now, causing a revolve, what would he do in that situation? >> he would be the same as lebron james at this time, which he has stated that he would not play next year. and magic is the kind of guy that is upstanding. and up front. during the time that i was playing with magic, i had a drug issue. magic and the players came to me and said we need you to walk away from this situation for the next three games. we were in the championship. and i was suspend ed and we won the championship and things worked themselves out. over the years i have worked hard and diligently to help us out to eradicate drugs and alcohol from our society and magic has done the same thing with hiv. >> raising awareness. >> he has traveled all over, raised awareness, millions of dollars. he has always done the right thing. so, i just think that this is an inopportune time for the nba, especially with our new commissioner adam silver, who is an upfront and forthright person that will do the best thing for all that's involved. there are some things that have to take place at this time. >> i say good on you and good on magic for everything that you both have done. let's talk about the series. i hear you, go thunder. but do you think -- do you think the clippers' loss last night, how might a clippers loss -- sorry clippers fans, how might a clippers' loss affect this at all? >> i don't think it has any effect. as a player you have to perform on the floor and you're going to have adversities that will arise during the season. the clipper players are going to have to just rise up for the next game. and i think this is a seven game series. oklahoma thunder is the super sonics. i love kevin durrant. >> we will also see how this plays out in la and oklahoma city and really it's a bigger story. pleasure having you on. >> and now to this 500-year-old mystery that may have just been solved but already the possible long lost remains are being looted. say it ain't so? we're talking to the man who found it as he makes a desperate plea for help. you have all heard carl rove's comments suggesting she may be suffering from a brain injury? now hillary's husband has something to say about it. bill clinton himself responding next. branches? 24/7. i'm sorry, i'm just really reluctant to try new things. really? what's wrong with trying new things? look! mommy's new vacuum! 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the santa maria is a mystery some 500 years old now under threat. the team of explorers are racing here against time to find a way to pull the ship wreck remains off of haiti, remains that they are sure belong to the ship that was lost way back. we all remember what we learned in grade school, way back in 1492. so barry clifford. i have been waiting all day to talk to you. so, let's just reel back for a minute. you have spent a decade or so looking for this particular ship. can you just take me back to that moment when you said this is it? >> well, that was -- we actually discovered the ship in 2003, but based on some misinterpretation of some art facts the ship was dismissed. we went to another location and basically threw our hands up in the air and then in 2012, i came across documents that i knew at that moment that we had found what we were looking for. >> you thought you had the a-ha moment years ago. be special with me. i don't know if you have a tv where you are and see what we're looking at on the screen. tell me what we're looking at and tell me why you're so sure. >> that is charles beaker, and he is measuring the balice pile. there is the lawn barb. that is 15th century weapon. we found that and the same size pile that we would expect to find on a 15th century vessel. the precise distance from the shore in the precise distance from where columbus said it wrecked? >> is that how you knew where to look? >> columbus kept a diary and he wrote in it every day. >> columbus kept a diary? how about that? >> he did. it was my interpretation of the diary that led me -- basically it's the riddle. in solving columbus's -- in getting into columbus's head and understanding what he was going through led us to the position. when he gave us the position of where naf navidad was and the ship was a league and a half away, we put one end of the come pus and swung the other end out into the bay, went to that spot and found exactly what we were looking for. >> and here you are, you what? weeks later, from what i understand, you went back to haiti and you notice something was awry. what was different? >> a few weeks ago, i heard that rumors that the site may have been looted. and, based on that information, i put an emergency project together together with the history channel. we went down there. dove on the site where we had seen these things before and nothing looked the same. in fact, all of the art facts including what you are seeing right now were looted from the site. >> so they're gone? or just moved. >> they're gone. they're gone. and that's not to say that there's not a lot more there. that's why i'm concerned. of course in situations like this, there are -- it is obvious, a lot more under the pile. i have been working very closely with the haitian government and the president who is very concerned about this. it can be put on display for the public. >> that's what i wanted to ask you about. >> where would you like the public to see this? >> i think that this is an -- i am basically, you know, looking for the ship and we plan to excavate it. and hopefully it's such an important touch stone to this period. 14.92, the world is changing. a third of the population was wiped out with the plague. and then columbus finds a path to the new world and rays of light start coming through this dark cloud. i think this touch stone to this period is so important that every fort must be made to preserve it. >> it makes my blood boil. i hope this is it. thank you so much for joining me. >> thank you so much. >> still to come here, bill clinton firing back at carl rove said. >> and we will take a look inside the 911 museum set to open soon. stay right here. ameriprise asked people a simple question: can you keep your lifestyle in retirement? 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"new york times" announced today that jill abrams says she is leaving as executive editor of the newspaper effective immediately. abramson, she was the first woman to hold this post. the next will be the first african-american editor for the "new york times." >> now to news from washington here. fum downed over suggestions. speaking today, the peterson foundation fiscal summit, clinton strongly came to the defense of his wife's health while also conceding that comments like that are just the beginning as his wife eyes a possible presidential run. >> i have got to give him cred. that embodies that old saying that consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds. first they said she faked her concussion and now they say she's auditioning for a part on the walking dead. i was sort of dumbfounded. look. she works out every week. she is strong and doing great. as far as i can tell, she is in better shape tharn i am. there is nothing too it. >> you have been running around covering hillary clinton. she spoke as well this morning. she did not specifically address remarks from carl rove. what do you make of that strategy? >> i think it leaves the politics to bill clinton. you really don't want to be political if you're thinking of running. right now hillary clinton still has state department kind of shine. so she really doesn't want that to be tarnished at all. we have been following her around. i will say on a fact check on this, she does appear to be very healthy. i spoke with one neurologist who said the schedule that she's keeping and the fact that you see her talking about complex subjects and that she does have stamina that that is a test in itself. >> thank you so much. great to talk to you. her husband speaking out about remarks from rove. >> and racing against time to find survivors. coming up neck xt, we will talk a man who knows all too well how dangerous mining really is. cnn takes you inside the new 911 museum for a preview coming up. those little things still get you. cialis tadalafil for daily use helps you be ready anytime the moment is right. cialis is also the only daily ed tablet approved to treat symptoms of bph, like needing to go frequently. tell your doctor about all your medical conditions and medicines, and ask if your heart is healthy enough for sex. do not take cialis if you take nitrates for chest pain, as it may cause an unsafe drop in blood pressure. do not drink alcohol in excess. side effects may include headache, upset stomach, delayed backache or muscle ache. to avoid long-term injury, get medical help right away for an erection lasting more than four hours. if you have any sudden decrease or loss in hearing or vision, or any allergic reactions like rash, hives, swelling of the lips, tongue or throat, or difficulty breathing or swallowing, stop taking cialis and get medical help right away. ask your doctor about cialis for daily use and a free 30-tablet trial. (music) defiance is in our bones. defiance never grows old. citracal maximum. calcium citrate plus d. highly soluble, easily absorbed. >> first on cnn, a peak inside of the 911 museum, nearly 13 years after the attack that forever changed america. the memorial and museum will soon open at ground zero. and the museum, it is full of painful reminders like this pair of yellow bloody shoes belonging to linda lopez. she took off her heels and ran barefoot across broken glass to escape alive. and this evokes the brilliant blue skies. behind the walls, belongings that are unidentified. the brave captain, ten of his firefighters raced into the tower, trying to save lives. they never returned. here is more with a look inside the memories. >> throughout the museum, chilling reminders of the day. a cross emerging from the wreckage. everyday items simply left behind. >> we hope to tell the story of panic. >> one small exhibit has been the biggest source of controversy. its focus, the terrorists themselves including a film criticized for not making a clear enough distinction between islam and al qaeda. >> visitors will also walk alongside the survivor stairs. >> it seems very appropriate that you end here. >> it again goes right back to this, the messages of hope and remembrance on a very tall column that is still standing strong. >> and that museum officially opens to the public next week. here we go into hour two. we begin with just gut wrenching wait on what could become the deadliest mining accident in turkey's history. this woman, you can hear her cries, she is part of the mop of morners gathered at the goal man about seven hours southwest of istanbul. the death toll is at 245. 120 miners may still be alive and all eyes are on what rescuers bring up from deep underground. blankets too often covering the dead on stretchers but there have been a few cheers. [ applause ] at least 788 miners have made it out, some well enough to walk on their own. it's really a miracle considering what happened two-thirds of a mile down. joining me now on the phone is a former assistant secretary of the mine safety administrator. >> let me begin with the fact that we know these rescue workers want to remain hopeful. realistically given your experience, do you expect more bodies to be pulled out or could we really have more survives here? >> you always want to keep hope alive. but the length of time since the explosion occurred, the type of explosion that it is, with fire and with the carbon monoxide, the expectations are that it's pretty dim chances for people to come out alive. >> so as the chances may be grim and having covered a number of explosions at mines, i know that as in turkey there are emergency chambers. there is this hope that some of these minors could be inside these emergency chambers. can you explain to me what could be in there that could help preserve their lives so far? >> the emergency chambers are se up to try to -- for a period of time. that carbon monoxide develops because of fire and for that reason, it is hard to anticipate that there are going to be a number of people who have made it. that's going to be hard because you have got such a toxic atmosphere. it's my understanding that the fire is still burning. >> that's exactly right. the fire is still burning and then there are these reports that workers are pumping oxygen inside of the mine but you're seeing a lot of smoke coming out. with the fire still burning, wouldn't that just fan the flames? >> they reverse the air to get fresh air down there, but in doing so they would have fed the fire so you would increase the likelihood that the fire would grow. do not have a lotd of luck. in getting chambers to work to save lives. >> it's one thing when it's a collapse and quite another when it's an explosion with the toxic environment and carbon monoxide. >> now to this potentially deadly mers virus. it has now spread to an 18th country. the netherlands is reporting a virus that has emerged from the middle east. in this country, two health care workers in orlando, both exposed to a man confirmed to have mers, both have tested negative. a number of people exposed to that man and to the case in indiana, they are being kept in isolation and the cdc, centers for disease control, trying to find people who flew on that plane on may 2 with the man currently in orlando. it was a series of flights that originated in saudi arabia. so think about the possibility of exposure there. health officials have set up a war room now at the cdc headquarters in atlanta. with us now from the cdc, the director for rez pyre tory diseases. thank you so much for joining me here as we talk about mers. it's a relatively new illness. what concerns you more? is it the fear of the unknown? or this mortality rate? 30%, which is incredibly high. >> this is a relatively new virus that does have a high fatality rate. it does not show itself to be easy to spread from person to person. we think it's critical to control this infection in the health care setting. that means we have to have a heightened suspicion of whether a person might be carrying this virus. have you traveled to any place recently when they are evaluating people with fever and seve severe res operatory illness. >> so before we think about all the planes and trains and cars people will be in in the summer months, as you point out, the cdc trying to track down those people on the planes that began in saudi arabia. just take me back a step. how is mers even contracted? yould you get it through air? how do you get this? >> we do not know as much as we would like to. we think some people may be getting this in the environment. a lot of interesting studies coming out about camel s camels see some people getting this virus when they are in close contact with another who has it. we don't have evidence that this is airborne but we're tracking it and trying to understand. >> we appreciate you coming on from the cdc. thank you so muff. coming up next, i want you to take a look at this man. he could be the zodiac killer. that was a sketch of him on the right. compare that to the one on the left. who is this man and why are police just now looking into him? plus the underwater explorer who says he has found christopher columbus's santa maria ship has a warning, get that ship out of the water now before it's too late. what he says is the main danger threatening this potentially huge historic find. we asked people a question, how much money do you think you'll need when you retire? then we gave each person a ribbon to show how many years that amount might last. i was trying to, like, pull it a little further. 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[ male announcer ] in a clinical study, over 80% of treated men had their t levels restored to normal. talk to your doctor about all your symptoms. get the blood tests. change your number. turn it up. androgel 1.62%. >> a man's soul searching quest led him to find that his dad is a serial killer. gary l. stewart believes his father was the zodiac killer who murdered five people in the late 60s. >> the zodiac case has fascinated the public and hollywood for years. now in a book called the most dangerous animal of all, a businessman from louisiana says he has finally cracked the case. a search for his biological father led him to san francisco and to conclusively identify his father as the zodiac killer. stewart writes that he felt it was my and an old sketch of the zodiac. they do seem to bear a striking resemblance. over the years others have come forward proporting to name the killer and no credible leads have come from it. stewart points to a crytogram he sent. ev best jr. >> i feel the knife buried in my back. >> brian heart was one of two survivors who could give a description of the killer. he has rarely spoken pubically. >> he had some clip on glasses that were either fixed to the hood or affixed to glasses underneath. >> on his chest he wore what became known as his symbol. cross hairs and a gun site. at least five people were killed. the killer claimed responsibility in a series of letters to newspapers. he called himself zodiac. as the investigation continued different persons of interest would emerge. this film pointed to a suspect, arthur lee allen. but his fingerprints and handwriting didn't match that of the killers. allen died in 1992 and always man taned his innocence. >> i'm not the damn zodiac. officials are no closer to naming the actual killer than they were all of those years ago. >> you talked to one of the two surviving victims. what does he make of this? >> he doesn't like to speak too often about this case because there are so many theorys that have come out and most of them have proven false. what he wants to say is when he looks at that picture, he says that it's not inconsistent with what he remembers. you also have to remember that the zodiac was wearing a mask during the attack. so he didn't get a clear shot of his face. the high forehead, the shock of dark hair, it's not inconsistent. he wants to learn more. let me tell you what this author is saying about similarities. he says that the handwriting seems to match. he also says that the fingerprint samples that they got from one of the crime scenes seems to match his father's. but here's the thing. none of this information has been given to law enforcement. they are just hearing about this for the first time as well with this book. it is a bit curious that he didn't go to police with this identification. it will be interesting to see. >> now that all of this has comous. police are taking a good long look at this. one would think that now they would take a close look at it. >> this author actually talked today by phone here at cnn. >> i wanted to find out who my father was and it became very personal to me when i found out that he had abandoned me as a four week old infant and walked away. me being raised in a conservative christian home i wanted to extend that forgiveness to him for abandoning me. reportedly more than 1200 people have claimed to have known who the zoed yak killer is. jack, welcome back. and my goodness. hearing all of these people who have come forward over the years and hearing all the details about the handwriting and the crptogram, does that make you look twice at this? >> i would certainly take this seriously. i have to admit that i'm rather skeptical. there have been too many that have come fwrart with handwriting and dna and grifs and nothing has panned out. and i would like the police to take a good look at the fingerprints and the dna in this case and see if there is a match. there are millions of guys who fit a profile of a serial killer who haven't killed anyone. >> how so? >> they are sociopaths. they may sell you a bad used car, pathlogical liars. but killing is not their cup of tea. so they have a character disorder that makes them look like they could be a killer and in fact there are some who are copy cats and might actually collect the mem meal ya of a killer but they're not one themselves. you have this son going figure out who his father was and low and behold he's thinking my goodness, i think this guy was my father. he said listen, the most significant piece of evidence, this, you know, these these word symbol codes. it came out to say ev best and jr. >> is that significant to you? >> it is an amazing co-incidence if it is. >> i hear your skepticism. >> he's not the first person to say that his father or stepfather is the killer. there is evidence in the past that looks pretty much like this. i am not saying that mr. stewart is a liar. i think he really believes it and i think a lot of other people really believe it but that doesn't mean that it's true. thank you so much as always for joining me. it is one of the most famous ships in history and now a diver who says he found the santa maria says the ship is under attack by looters. you will hear straight from him, next. ♪ [ girl ] my mom, she makes underwater fans that are powered by the moon. ♪ she can print amazing things, right from her computer. 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the advertisers certainly -- >> the advertisers are all coming back. the fans will all come if you have a good team. >> even if you're owner? >> what am i? frankenstein? i'm a good person. i say hello to everybody who comes to the team. >> there are some players who have talked about a boycott of the season. >> that's talk. the media pushes that. and suddenly they hate you? is that the way it is? what if a player said i don't like working? what would we do? i wouldn't do anything. i would ask you why i want to make you happy. more money? more attention in more love? >> that, by the way was the first time that sound has hit air. >> again it's unconscionable some of the things he has said. it's tough to see, physically, he looks a little like the cowardly lion. verbally, he sounds like a lost sad man. >> it has been a week since adam silver said he's banned for life. this would be an unprecedented move if the teams come together and say you're out. >> i would be shocked if this were not part of that business. if there were not -- if the vote didn't happen by then, that there weren't steps taken to actually remove from his principle ownership. the collective bargaining agreement is obviously just a piece of paper. but there is also a morality clause and some of it's not even written. if your players don't want a person who has said he doesn't want black people at the games or in the building, if the players want that person out of the league, there is no way that sterling will be the owner of this team. >> so because of the myriad of things that sterling has said, we heard from a former teammate of lebron james saying if he is still setting as the owner of this team, lebron james is absolutely not going to play. how realistic do you think that is? >> the idea of a player boycott is something that you don't want to throw out in leverage cases for just anything. the fact that players are even talking about this means that they are thinking about it and i would be -- i would think that adam silver is going to call roger mason jr., the vice president of the players' association or lebron and they will get on the phone and say let's do this together. let's go my channels first. if things get really tricky in the legal proceedings, then you can do that. but i would think that this is going to be a cooperative effort to get this guy out of the league. if it comes to that, i would expect some of the players to sit out. >> thank you so much. i appreciate you coming on. we just played new sound from anderson. you can watch the rest of it tonight. his exclusive sit down, 8:00 eastern only here on cnn. coming up next we will take you to california. new pictures. look at this, the karls karls bad fire, it's a brush fire. getting new information honestly, the off-season isn't i've got a lot to do. that's why i got my surface. it's great for watching game film and drawing up plays. it's got onenote, so i can stay on top of my to-do list, which has been absolutely absurd since the big game. with skype, it's just really easy to stay in touch with the kids i work with. alright, russell you are good to go! alright, fellas. alright, russ. back to work! . >> we can show you some of the pictures, you can see the line of the brush fire along the greenery here and the massive plumes of smoke. here's what we know, 11,000 people have been contacted to evacuate because of what we're calling the poinsettia fire. i can tell you as far as schools go, if you live in this neck of the woods, middle schools are being evacuated to brighten gardens. we have learned that the death toll from the coal mine in turkey has risen again, up to over 274 confirmed dead. but as the number of miners who escaped rises, 88 miners rescued and 274 miners again declared dead. rescuers are racing. in situations like this time is of the essence to find and rescue as many miners as they can. >> tell me, set the scene. i imagine, equally grim since the last time we spoke. >> it's pretty unpleasant and pretty tragic to see the bodies of miners who were unfortunate enough to be in the bowls of the earth on tuesday. being brought out one after another, rescue workers one after another. bringing out these bodies on stretchers and carrying them to waiting ambulances. it's the faces of the people who are waiting. relatives who are performing this very grim vigil, waiting for news of their loved ones who have been missing now. again, you sited these figures. raising the death toll to what some had feared would become the deadliest mine disaster in turkish history. there was one who resulted there are coal mine disasters in turkey year after year. this is a dangerous job. but the sheer scale of this. it has shocked the nation which has turned out for three days of mourning as a result of this terrible disaster. >> we will stay in close contact with you as these numbers do change. i want to turn to the president. he is talking economy. we will take a listen. obviously he wants to push more money into roads and bridges. let's listen. we are announcing 11 more projects to accelerate to get moving fast. we are cutting bureaucratic red tape. we are launching a new national center to implement these reforms. we are aiming to put every major project on a dash board so everybody can track our progress, hold us accountable, make sure things are coming in on time. that's our goal. >> now all of these steps we can do without congress. all of these steps mean more good jobs. suddenly they wore off the job. that's why the recovery act back in 2009, 2010, included the most important public works jobs program jump starting more than 15,000 construction projects around the country. >> we have heard him time and time again trying to improve the economy, talking about putting hard working americans back to work, specifically talking bridges and roads and infrastructure. >> hear what the families are saying next. life with crohn's disease or ulcerative colitis is a daily game of "what if's". what if my abdominal pain and cramps end our night before it even starts? what if i eat the wrong thing? what if? what if i suddenly have to go? what if? but what if the most important question is the one you're not asking? what if the underlying cause of your symptoms is damaging inflammation? for help getting the answers you need, talk to your doctor and visit crohnsandcolitisadvocates.com to connect with a patient advocate from abbvie for one-to-one support and education. that's a good thing, but it doesn't cover everything. only about 80% of your part b medical expenses. the rest is up to you. so consider an aarp medicare supplement insurance plan, insured by unitedhealthcare insurance company. like all standardized medicare supplement insurance plans, they pick up some of what medicare doesn't pay and could save you in out-of-pocket medical costs. call today to request a free decision guide to help you better understand what medicare is all about and which aarp medicare supplement plan works best for you. with these types of plans, you'll be able to visit any doctor or hospital that accepts medicare patients... plus, there are no networks, and virtually no referrals needed. there's a range of plans to choose from, too, and they all travel with you anywhere in the country. join the millions who have already enrolled in the only medicare supplement insurance plans endorsed by aarp... an organization serving the needs of people 50 and over for generations... and provided by unitedhealthcare insurance company, which has over 30 years of experience behind it. ♪ call today. remember, medicare supplement insurance helps cover some of what medicare doesn't pay. expenses that could really add up. these kinds of plans could save you in out-of-pocket medical costs. you'll be able to choose any doctor who accepts medicare patients. and there are virtually no referrals needed. so don't wait. with all the good years ahead, look for the experience and commitment to go the distance with you. call now to request your free decision guide. this easy-to-understand guide will answer some of your questions and help you find the aarp medicare supplement plan that's right for you. >> take a look at the picture. you can see hunter biden's dad. he has been elected to the board of a private gas provider in ukraine. at least one report says that the firm that hired biden is run by a cronie of the former president of ukraine ousted by popular protest with being too tight with moscow. so no conflict of interest according to the white house. as you know, russia is threatening ukraine with military action. the white house is saying, again, no conflict of interest. that biden's son is running the legal department of ukraine's number one private gas supplier. we asked you to just help us. you reached out and you have heard from the vice president's office. what are they saying? >> the white house refers all callers to the vice president's office. the vice president's office has very little to say. that hunter biden is a private citizen and a lawyer and that the vice president does not endorse any company and has no involvement in this company. basically what they are saying is that this happens a lot more than people think. >> really? >> the relatives, brothers, sons, daughters, sons, spouses of people making important policy decisions often have financial stakes in things that are going on. >> it's a small an incestuous town here in washington, d.c. >> get out of here. it is? >> yes, this individual, devin aernlg was roommates and is business partners with chris heinz, secretary kerry's stepson. that doesn't mean anything regarding secretary kerry. we have no evidence that it does. it's a small town. there's a lot more of this than you think. >> i know it's a small town. you're calling the white house, they're referring you to the vice president's office. is this the kind of thing the vice president would have had to run it to the boss? >> i would suspect. and i have not been able to get through to hunter biden. and the company he works for is not involved in this deal. so they didn't have anything to say. i would suspect it's the kind of thing that hunter biden keeps separate from his father and doesn't tell one way or the other so his father has plausible deany bny bl-- deniab. that's just a hunch. >> thank you, jake. >> thanks, brooke. straight is to california. breaking news. paul vercammen is on the scene. what do you know? >> reporter: we were in one of the leading flanks of the blaze burning in a neighborhood here in carlsbad. this is all brush. let me give you perspective. it burned all the way through here. you can see right down in this canyon, another flare-up. the blaze breaking out this morning. hot, windy, dry conditions. a wind-driven fire being whipped up right now. we're going to give you more perspective. one home so far destroyed. mo smoke indicating in that area that we have several flanks of flames. firefighters using roads and everything else possible to make a stand here. they've been able to hit this with helicopters. via the air. but, it's difrlt to gficult to of the crews and engines in the canyons. the firefighters have moved further on up the road to go into full structure protection. we think this is 1 of 4 fires burning now in a very dry, very hot san diego county. >> paul, is it windy? you said dry and hot. is it windy? >> reporter: yes, about the best indicator. these are thin eucalyptus trees slightly blowing. it's not so windy that they can't fly air support. so that's a good sign. but, again, they have to make choices between houses and canyons, such as this one. and so far, so good. we haven't seen mass destruction of homes. of course this is one of those cases where you're on the ground. it could be that someowhere off another half mile, there are houses destroyed. we have only heard of one house lost so far. another blaze burning near fa fallbrook. another down from yesterday, rancho san bernardo. we saw a truck catch fire on the way to cover this blaze. pins and needles here in san diego county today, brooke. >> that's frightening. i have family in that area. i know who i'm calling when i finish the show. paul vercammen, thank you so much. back after this. rs are impressi. over 400,000 new private sector jobs... making new york state number two in the nation in new private sector job creation... with 10 regional development strategies to fit your business needs. and now it's even better because they've introduced startup new york... with the state creating dozens of tax-free zones where businesses pay no taxes for ten years. become the next business to discover the new new york. [ male announcer ] see if your business qualifies. bget together for overss tostarting at $6.99.ionsyork. all part of olive garden's entirely new pronto lunch menu. choose from handmade sandwiches and flatbreads. paired with unlimited soup or salad. 70 lunch combinations starting at $6.99. at olive garden. his voice spoke to a generation delivering the long-distance dedications. counting down the hits. >> thank you and hello, again, everybody. welcome to america's top ten. let's turn right to the action on the billboard pop singles chart and count down the ten most popular songs on the charts this week. >> the legendary deejay casey kasem is 82 years old. he has a form of dementia. he's missing. allegedly taken away by his wife. his children say their step mother may be trying to take him out of the country. his daughter plans to file a missing persons report. she's asking for your help to find her dad. >> we want as many people to know, be on the lookout for our dad. if you see him, know his whereabouts. please call the police. we want to stop her from moving. we think she's moved him quite a few times. this is terrible for his health. man in his condition should not be continue waally be moved. especially with a disease, he should not be moved. >> frightening. i watched your interview, bill weir. they were tipped off that the step mother might be trying to take their father out of the country. >> exactly. a cousin by marriage. i heard she's going to take him to an indian reservation with a single airstrip and be carried out of the country without scrutiny. it's an unbelievable situation of family dysfunction. casey married jean. you remember "cheers." s jean ca jean kasem was on there. she wanted nothing to do with his kids. there were times they would go visit their fair ather and thers an armed guard. this is a long, historic, deep, bitter battle. now they're trying to put out their own two-person amber alert. if you see casey kasem, with a tall blonde, call the cops. >> a manhunt for casey kasem. did you ever think you could see this? >> if he knows who we are, he was able to respond appropriately to simple questions or simple things we said to him. and it was very clear he was able to smile. able to say i love you. when we told him we'll be back, dad, we'll be back. he looked at us and said when? which was heartbreaking. any way, so, you know, it's -- there's so much more meaningful communication we can have with him. we want him back. >> that was something else. you asked them, when was the last time you saw your father. they said, last tuesday. clearly, by the daughters explaining, he said he loved them. wondering when he would see them again. it's heart-breaking. >> it is one of the daughters is a trained medical practitioner. she had no idea what he had. she thought he had parkinson's. he has a disease called louis body's disease. i don't know if you have the video of what jean case m lokas like now. >> we had it. >> that may be the best way to identify. >> on the left side of the screen, if you see this woman, call authorities. bill weir, thank you for joining me and for the interview last night. let's remind the viewers, you anchor cnn tonight each and every week day night. tonight, you're looking at the wave of sexual assault on college campuses. what schools are now doing. thank you, bill. thanks to all of you for watching. thank you, all. i'm brooke baldwin. thank you. is this the beginning of a global pandemic. jake tapper. this is the lead. 17 countries, make that 18 countries now, all with confirmed cases of middle east respiratory syndrome, including the u.s. everything you need to know about the deadly spreading virus that has no vaccine. the politics lead. >> first they said she faked her concussion. now they say she's auditions

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>> they stormed the local market, firing indiscriminantly, firing into the crowds, sending people fleeing into the bush. and really, it was an attack that took place over 12 hours we are told. and at the end of it, some 150 people were dead. they have only now returned to that area. so afraid and now they have come back and what are they finding? they are. >> horrific details. there are police efforts, or there is supposed to be. there is reward money. they say they have dispatched helicopters and search planes. why haven't we seen any results of their efforts. boka haram has killed 1500 people this year alone. it is isolated from the capital. there is a huge forested area that is believed that militants have used as their base. and it is so dangerous that we keep hearing that nigerian military don't want to get into it. so, there are a lot of logistical challenges on the ground but at the end of the day we are talking about 200 plus girls who have gone missing. the government needs to do everything that it can and provide information to back up the statement that they are doing everything they can. information which until recently that they were very unforthcoming with. >> they were certainly to stay today. now many of the parents whose children were kidnapped have avoided the media out of fear for their daughter's lives. but we spoke with one family about their ordeal. they described the shocking moment when they arrived at the burned down dorm stories. s. >> you heard earlier saying that some of the parents were fleeing in the forest. some say they were sleeping in the bushes for protection and they openly criticized the federal government and accused nigerian officials of hiding the truth. >> i have never seen such a thing. >> the nigerian government has waited three weeks to pubically acknowledge. i want to bring in someone who knows the area very well. he is the author of revolution by other means, the challenge of the emerging generation. thanks so much for being with me. we heard the father of two kidnapped girls saying he has not seen a military presence. what's your reaction to that. >> well, thank you for having me. yeah, the truth is that military presence has suffered in deficits. the nigerian military is incapable of covering every inch of ground in that territory. i have to say that the initial response to this debacle lacks intensity and urgency. a lot of protest and anger on the ground here. >> can i ask you, i mean, we're talking about a number of girls here and obviously the hope is so much that they will be returned safely. what should be done to make sure that they are safe moving forward. will it ever be safe for girls to get an education there? >> the group has evolved over time from having a new islamist agenda. right now this is simply pure criminal an arky going on. there is no alternative to defeating this group. we are not dealing with people interested in peace. there is no at terntive to defeating this group and securing those communities. there is no alternative to that. >> and just as someone who does know this area, just tell us a little bit more about this group and also its leader who we have seen in this video. >> it's important to note that this group has evolved over the last five years. it started as a small group with local concerns. after the first crack down on the group in 2009, it simply demanded that the mosque be rebuilt. it demanded to remove the state's governor and demanded the prosecution of the police officer, guilty of killing its leader. it launched a series of bomb attacks on churches. it's aim was to start a sectarian war. there were no reprisals. and it has never had a base among mainstream muslims. that's important to note as well. the best would be to compare to the resistance army in northern uganda. you have a group that started in 1986 that started in 1986 with great support but over time its brutal method cost it support and now it has degenerated into a transnational anarchist group. if it is not contained in nigh g -- nigeria, chances are high that it will destabilize neighboring countries. >> and certainly that is a reason why people should be paying attention to this. thank you so much for your perspective. really appreciate it. now moving on to another story, thousands of packages of illegal substances, bath salts, spice, all seized in a nationwide crack down on the synthetic drug trade. you are looking at exclusive video of border patrol agents testing suspicious packages. synthetic drugs can have unpredictable effects on the mind and body. evan perez with us here in washington. he has been tracking this story. evan, tell us about today's drug raids and how many people are we talking about when it comes to these arrests? what makes the drugs particularly enticing is things packaged. these drugs are commonly called synthetic marijuana and bath salts. and they are causing heart attacks mental health issues. >> this is a big issue. i have interviewed parents who have lost children to these readily available synthetic drugs. there is something else now that is grabbing our focus, which has to do with terrorism. explain this. >> part of the problem here is that some profits from the synthetic drug trade is winding up in the hands of terrorists. the government says that some of it is ending up in the hands of it is concern that money from the drug trade is helping to fund terrorism and some of these groups are taking advantage of the drug business to make money. >> and taking advantage of kids. you can almost tell by the packaging as well. evan perez, thank you so much. day 62 in the search for the missing plane and now we are entering what is called phase two. what officials are saying will be the next steps. also ahead, vladimir putin says russian troops have with drawn. we are live in moscow. >> plus donald sterling has reportedly hired a high profile celebrity lawyer. we have a close up look at who could be representing the la clipper's owner as he fights to keep his team. >> 62 days after flight 370 went missing, we are about to shift. officials from malaysia, china and australia met today to determine the frame work for future search operations. they are expected to re-examine data and determine where exactly the search area will be and decide what is up coming forward. who should continue. joining me now, richard quest, cnn aviation correspondent. at what point does it not make sense to keep searching. >> there is no question that they are going to keep searching. that is not even an issue. now many of those costs, to be frank, they are by and large, they are fixed costs anyway. you have got the ships. you have got the staff and navies and air forces. but moving forward as they decide which assets they're going to need. which private contractors they're going to have to bring in. so you move from a question of what you need to how you're going to pay for it. >> and who all is going to pitch in. i want to dig deeper into this poll. you have 57% of respondents think that terrorists were responsible. there is flight crew overlap as well. >> a very clever way of what do i think happened, which i have avoided answering. in that survey, what is fascinating about that survey is that half think it could still be mechanical. it's when you look at the half that think it wasn't mechanical that you start to look deeper. more people, once you have said you don't think it's mechanical, then you start to say terrorism or the pilots. most people seem to believe it's the pilots or one of the pilots was involved. it really does come down to there is substantial evidence for the nefarious option and i know some people will go full throttle on that. wasn't made because of political problem. >> we also do know that officials met today to discuss this next phase. you have been looking at this for weeks now. what is the best way to tackle the search going forward? >> very difficult question. you really have to get down to the knitty gritty. what they are doing is a fundamental recognition that what they have done so fares has not worked. what we have heard again and again is the best evidence. it has not yielded results. what d you do in this situation. you look at all the evidence that you have got. you have got the turn of the top and the primary radar for the malaysians. what we will be doing anywhere else is reviewing it. but i warn you this, if they decide there is something fundamentally flawed in the data from which they have been working, they have nothing else to back it up with. that is why it's fine and dandy. but if they're wrong, then, that plane could be anywhere. >> remember, it took a couple years to find that air france plane. at least the remnants that were at the butt tottom of the ocean. thank you so much for that. coming up, vladimir putin says that russian troops are with drawn as separatists continue to ramp up the violence. we are live next. plus he was caught on tape making racist statements and now donald sterling could be in a legal battle to try and keep the clippers. over 400,000 new private sector jobs... making new york state number two in the nation in new private sector job creation... with 10 regional development strategies to fit your business needs. and now it's even better because they've introduced startup new york... with the state creating dozens of tax-free zones where businesses pay no taxes for ten years. become the next business to discover the new new york. 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>> if he has any chance of keeping this, clippers owner donald sterling has to fight this. and he is going to need a go for the jugular no holds barred lawyer. the kind who defends clients like paula dean after she was caught using a racial slur in 2013. >> i want to apologize to everybody for the wrong that i have done. >> that lawyer, according to tmz sports, is patty glazer, who would not confirm that she is working for sterling but is certainly a logical choice. glazer got the charges against dean thrown out. she also successfully defended kelsey grammer. >> he doesn't want to be treated specially because he's a celebrity but he doesn't want to be penalized for it either. >> and glazer successfully represented conan o'brien during contract talks. >> how can i get nbc to screw me over? >> if she comes in there and represents the interest of the trust, i think she's on much more solid legal ground than if she comes in and just represents sterling. >> and it's not just glazer. sterling is talking to a number of high profile lawyers. one of the first orders of business for in lawyer sterling potentially hires will likely be figuring out whether the tapes were recorded legally under california law, second, whether it's legal to force a sale of such a valuable team. >> the players' association for the league needs to start thinking about the contingency plan. what are you going to do for those clippers players who no longer want to play for a man profiting off of their skills and talent. >> lawyers could hire investigators to dig up dirt on the opposition. one time friends, now potential enemies. >> the owners may have to give up information that they may not want out in the public. that is why part of any litigation is whether or not donald sterling will win but what do the other parties have to lose if this case goes to litigation? >> and of course there is the question of who actually owns the clippers. is it donald? wife shelly? is it both through the family trust? that strategy could very well apply ultimately to ownership of the team. >> thank you. let's bring in sonny. why wouldn't a law firm want to take this? you would definitely get publicity even if it's not definitely positive and certainly you would make a lot of money. >> and you get paid which is one of the reasons why lawyers sometimes don't take cases. i think there is that notion perhaps among lawyers that they don't want to be affiliated with a known biggot or racist. i don't think that he's going to have a problem actually finding a very, very good lawyer. there is just no question about it. many lawyers i have spoken to feel that the nba cushionstitut is less than clear. i think a lot of lawyers will want to be up to that challenge. >> that he has a legal if not moral case? >> right. >> when sterling hires an attorney, what is the first thing that that lawyer needs to do? >> get his or her arms around the facts. that lawyer is going to try to stop this train. he has already been suspended for life. and looking forward to what seemingly is going to happen, which is forcing him to sell the team. >> coming up, monica lewinski is back in the spotlight. why now? it is believed to have all been staged by the clintons. we will be discussing that right after this. 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>> i love this theory. >> so three alleged clinton conspiracies in the course of a mere month. let's talk about monica lewinski. we have a republican commentator and democrat strategist. some say hey, this is good for hillary clinton. it gets the monica issue well out of the way. others are saying this is designed to hurt her. you're not buying either of these, right? >> i don't think there is any political conspiracy in the works here. not everything has to be a political conspiracy. i can tell you that i have talked to many republicans. i was on the hill today. nobody's talking about this. nobody wants to talk about this. this is a no winner. there is no way to win with this topic in politics. it does not hurt hillary. they have survived in politics for all of thoo tiis time. she became a senator. and it really is a toxic issue. i think this is about monica lewinski turning 40. it makes you take stock of your life, look back and say what do i do, what do i need to do. i think that's where she is and she's trying to take the narrative back. i think it would be a heck of a experience involving vanity fair and monica lewinski and the clintons. it sounds a little surreal to me. >> i have to agree with you on that. when you're talking about this dredging up the 90s and you heard -- a lot of people just don't want to do this. whether it's good or bad or neutral, on a personal level, this is not what she wants people focused on. this was a terribly painful time for her. how does this story affect her calculus as she decides whether to run, whether she wants stuff like this coming out here in the next couple of years? >> i don't think it really affects her calculus. if there's one thing we have learned about hillary, it's that her strength is immeasurable. i think what her calculus will be in terms of whether she's going to run or not is what does she have to offer this country. she's talking about every single issue that is facing our country today. she did it yesterday, she is doing it today. she is on the circuit with speeches about income equality for women. about girl's and women's leadership around the world. those are the things that are going to be actually making the calculus in hillary clinton's mind as to whether she's going to run or not. this was absolutely incredibly painful episode for her. this issue, back in the 90s, had absolutely nothing to do with hillary and it will have nothing to do with her politically if she decides to run. >> so rand paul, possibly republican white house hopeful, he's taken to calling bill clinton a predator. again, dating back to lewinski. let's listen back to what he said very recently. >> the democrats can't say we're the great defenders of women's rights in the workplace and we will defend you against some kind of abusive bos ths that us their position of authority to take advantage of a young woman when the leader in their party is bill clinton who is a perpetrator of that kind of sexual harassment. >> so he was ask this, he was responding to a very specific question about this. but whether one agrees with what rand paul is saying or not, it's sounding pretty 90s. here we are in 2014. what kind of strategy is this? it doesn't sound like you think it's a winning one. >> what's old is new again. i think we have picked out with cheney and rand paul, two rare voices in the republican party. i have also heard people, today, on tv, say that it's a vast republican conspiracy to get this out. i think it's neither. and i think the majority of republicans are not shaking this mantle. are not trying to wave this banner. this is not a good political issue. particularly for my party. we have a problem with women. and i don't know any woman who wants to drudge up a painful episode for another woman. i think we need to scrutinize hillary clinton's record. she's got a record as a first lady, as a senator, in the private sector and she's got a record as secretary of state. if anything this distracts from looking at that record. she needs to stand on her accomplishments and failures in her career but this has no place in scrutinizing hillary clinton. >> have a more substancetive kafgs conversation. i have talked with a whole bunch of young voters. this is a big group. there are many voters who did not vote in 2008 who don't give two hoots about the 90s. it just doesn't resonate with them. do people even care? no. and i think this is the problem in the right wing conspiracy including lyn cheney. it's not a winning strategy for republicans. sensible republicans understand that. but there are still those for whom this is political crack for the voter base. that's why they were talking about it last night on bill o'reil o'reilly. it will backfire not only because the republicans have a huge problem with women and they don't want to alienate them more than they already have. but to your point, today's elect rat is very different than what it was in the 90s. this is certainly not an issue that speaks to young voters, to african-american voters, to women that are making up this america. it will be a losing proposition. >> a lot of agreement on this panel. >> i think we do have to point out that no potential republican candidate is really out talking about this issue involving monica. >> rand paul brought it up. let's hope that he doesn't any more. >> now there is video of that young man climbing out of the plane and you really have to see this. stay with us. 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[ male announcer ] open your eyes... to the 6-cylinder, 8-speed lexus gs. with more standard horsepower than any of its german competitors. this is a wake-up call. ♪ >> incredible images coming from nasa. you're looking at the clearest images from a solar explosion. joining me now to tell us exactly what this is, cnn chad myers. it's not a solar flare. >> it's cool pictures. it's a piece of plasma that got stuck between two magnetic fields. just really cool stuff. there it is. all of the sudden shot off into space. you can see pictures like this all the time at nasa.gov. this is actually what our sun looks like right now. please don't go out and look at it. look at it on the website. it's cooler here because the solar dynamics observe tory takes this. the pictures that we see from the sun are phenomenal. you can't get anything like this looking at it. so please do not. use nasa.gov. cool pictures. >> childhood 101, do not look at the sun. >> exactly. >> thanks for that. and coming up next, remember that young stow away who hopped a flight to hawaii? well, there is video of him now climbing out of that plane. >> watch this closely. video of that 15-year-old who stowed away in the wheel well of a jet has finally been released. here is cnn's dan simon. >> this newly released video clearly shows someone emerging from the rear of the plane. authorities say it's the 15-year-old california stow away coming out of the wheel well of the boeing 767 that landed in hawaii. moments later it appears the young man is dazed. >> you can see he is obviously affected by 5.5 hours well above 3500 feet. he is clearly affected. >> the boy continues walking until he gets past the stairs of the jetway. eventually you see him talking with an airport worker. if there were any lingering doubts about the story this video should put that skepticism to death. >> he was a really shy person. he didn't talk a lot. >> the reserved high school sophomore identified as yaya told investigators he was trying to get to somalia to see his mother and had no clue where the plane was headed. it's believed that he hopped a fence shortly after 1:00 a.m. on april 20 and stayed on the grounds for nearly seven hours before the plane took off. medical experts say the lack of oxygen and sub zero temperatures put the boy in a state of hibernation. >> he may not have needed as much oxygen. >> he is now back in california and in the custody of child welfare officials. local police want to conduct another round of interviews. they have not ruled out charges. if it's anything it would be trespassing. his journey would have been punishment enough. dan simon, cnn, san francisco. >> it's worth more than 300,000 dollars. attacked another nigerian town and the border town. at least 150 people were killed. the sense of urgency is spreading a day after women senate leaders condemn the kidnappings. some of their congressional counter parts did the same. >> the militant terrorist group is now planning to sell these young women into sex slavery for just $12 a girl. we cannot stand idly by by fear and violence oppress the freedom and dreams of women around the world. >> it will take the efforts of the niany yearian government an the international government to rescue the young girls. >> it appears the international support is well in the works. nice to have you along with us. nigeria has accepted help from the united states and britain so what are the next steps? >> well, the next steps are when these teams arrive here on the ground which we are told will arrive here in the next couple of days. when it comes to intelligence gathering and equipment that will be necessary and just critical and skills needed to compliment the effort here that has been gone yoing for some three weeks. the government has said, the president said on camera on sunday, they have no idea where these girls are. they need help. he said this is not a time for pride. this is not a time for a kind of embarrassment on the part of the government. they need to accept all help wherever it's coming from because they need to bring these girls back home. >> there has been a lot of criticism. it's been a few weeks since these girls were kidnapped and a lot of people said the government was dragging its feet. until there was a big movement on social media, that's when they started to finally take action, it seemed. what is the sense there among parents and others in anigeria and others in how they have responded. >> there is no doubt about it. there is a sense of utter disappointment, outright condemnation in some parts in the way the government has handled this. we want to be absolutely clear. cnn has been on the story from the very beginning. we have been speaking to the parents of the children that have gone missing and they have told us that until quite recently, there was no mass movement of troops on the ground to the area where the girls are taken to. speaking to this lacking, that is what we're hearing from the parents affected by all of this. that is obviously fed down throughout the rest of the country and people are angry and they have every right to be. 200 plus girls are missing. the government saying they are doing everything they can to find them, saying they are following up on every lead but until recently, refusing to provide the operational detail to back up the statements. a lot of mistrust, a lot of anger and someone can say, a break down in trust between the government and some of the people here on the ground in any year ya. >> now there is just a question of where they are, it seems that no one knows. thank you so much for your report. so, how is the u.s. specifically going to help? the pentagon has started planning according to a senior american military official and several say the u.s. will probably be limited to intelligence, mission planning and hostage negotiations. and they say it's unlikely u.s. troops would help in operations there. also britain is sending a small team of experts to assist the united states. jane asher grew up in nigeria. nice to see you. i want to bring you into this conversation to get some perspective here. if you could, give us a sense of who this group is and do you think the nigerian government is capable of defeating them or will it take something more? >> that is honestly the million dollar question. they are an islamic extremist group. and they are opposed to westernization and the reason why education specifically is so offensive to them is that in their mind, education is the ultimate symbol of westernization. so in terms of answering your next question about whether or not the government can do anything to really cripple this group, part of the problem is they have to destroy the funding for boka haram. the way they raise their money is not only through drug trafficking but also through kidnapping innocent people and holding them ransom. better armed and better equipped. when you talk to people on the ground, there is this fear that if the u.s. comes in and swoops in and either rescues these girls or really kills the leader or other leaders of boka haram, people are worried what are the consequences going to be. that is the state that people have to live in constantly. this constant fear in the northeastern region. >> tell us about your personal experience in nigeria. i just looked at some data. it seemed there was a spike in kidnappings. were you and family members affected by situations like kidnappings? >> my family is from the southern, eastern part of any ye -- nigeria. in my region, kidnapping is also a huge issue as well. it's mainly for ransom. i did have an uncle. he was coming back to any year ya. he was drifing into the compo d compound. when kidnappers basically hit him over the head, they took over the vehicle. they drove the vehicle for five hours into the night honestly, nobody is surprised. one of the most dangerous times as a westerner is really during christmas. you have a lot who are based abroad. that is when kidnappers roll up their sleeves and get to work. pamela? >> in light of that, i don't know how often you return to nigeria but are you ever fearful to return? >> sometimes i am. you know? it's just a situation that where you're told by your parents, one of the things my parents always tell me is when you go back to nigeria, don't tell anyone where you're staying, don't announce your arrival and any time you stay at any location, make sure it's not for too long, especially when you're traveling over the christmas holidays. 26% of all kidnapping in the world occur in nigeria. 171 million people. but also there is a general lawlessness. >> amazing to hear your perspectives. thank you so much. >> of course. >> the kidnapping stuck a nerve with teen aged activist who was kidnapped for standing up for educational rights. she sat down in an exclusive interview with cnn and urged nigeria's leaders to take action. >> when i heard about girls in nigeria being abducted, i felt very sad and i said my sisters are in prison now. i thought that -- i felt it as if i should speak up for them. i felt a responsibility. i believe that we are being sent to this earth as a community and it's our responsibility that we take care of each other. so girls in nigeria are my sisters and it's my responsibility that i speak up for my sisters. i feel like i should speak up for them and raise my voice for their rights. >> what did you think when you saw the leader of boka haram laughing and saying i have your girls. i'm going to sell them at the market. there's a market for human beings. sell them into slavery. what did you think? >> boka haram are extremists. they don't understand islam. they are abusing the name of islam. >> and no surprise here. she fully supports the bring back our girls campaign. >> ever get lost in traffic? i certainly have to admit. that is the reason a man ended up. the incident sent the white house into lock down. more on this, let's go to white house correspondent for the full story here. sounds like we should actually feel sorry for this driver. >> when we first heard what had actually happened, i thought oh my gosh, i could see that happening to me. you're new in this town. you have got traffic circle and you can get a little turned around. it was -- you know, a little bit disturbing. you have the white house and the entire he was around a traffic circle. he had no idea that he was following a motorcade into the grounds and immediately he was stopped by a uniform secret service and arrested. he's in court this afternoon. and nobody has really talked to him yet. but you can imagine the confusion when you realize the traffic that you thought you were following actually went over the barriers and into the white house. here on pennsylvania avenue on both sides it is shut off to automobile traffic. how can the secret service let him pass those barriers. it seems to be a timing issue. that those barriers were down to let the motorcade go through. he is following closely behind. there was not time enough to put them up again. so the secret service made the judgment to just pounce on that car as soon as he got through. pam. >> wow, michelle, thank you. >> today vladimir putin said russian troop are withdrawing. that and more after this break. that's correct. cause i'm really nervous about getting trapped. why's that? 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[ male announcer ] don't wait. call today to request your free decision guide and find the aarp medicare supplement plan to go the distance with you. go long. >> p mutin is calling on prorussian separatists. he says this could create more room for diplomacy and he has said he's pulling back russian troops some 40 to 50,000 fighters in all. the pentagon says it has seen no sign of that. it is an odd choice today, could putin be blinking? all right. so eli, we have checked our sources. there is no sign of a pull back as we have seen. putin is claiming this. what are you hearing? >> it should be noted that some of the pro russian separatists are not following this particular order yet from moscow. i think our reporter on the ground right now is reporting this as potentially as a pause. one of the things that is going on is there is still a campaign from the ukrainian military to restore order in the east. so in that situation, given that there is still conflict and fighting, it's difficult to have the referendum that they had in crimea where pretty much they took over the peninsula and then they were ready for a referendum and there was very little push back. right now you are seeing that push back and i think that that, you know, the best laid plans always have to deal with the moves of theed a vir sarry. >> these announcements coming from putin, the supposed pull back and saying that the votes should be postponed. some suggest that putin may be blinking. >> until we see some of those troops actually move, i don't think we can call it a blink yet. i think it's probably safer to say that it's a pause. and there is, i think, not only significant international diplomatic opposition but the ukrainian opposition is trying its best to restore order at this point. it seems he is still very much interested. >> it's interesting. i was reading your article in the daily beast about how ukraine can learn from georgia saying that the ukraine crisis is not an outlier. there might be lessons in there. explain who you would talk to and what lessons could be learned. >> what he said is you really emphasize the importance of having younger western oriented. he says frankly those people are going to be moles and probably will have divided loyalties. it's better to have a younger generation coming in. he is said to be very wary of pro russian separatists ngos. and it's important to get to that problem early before russia's -- giving them a pretext to fully invade. >> all right. thank you. >> thank you. >> and coming up right here on newsroom, an update to the controversy surrounding historic beverly hills hotels. and now hotel workers are speaking out saying they are caught in the middle. plus this. >> you made sure we ate. you went to sleep hungry. you sacrificed for us. you the real mvp. >> all right. that was nba player kevin durrant accepting the mvp award playing tribute to his mother. he had so much more to say. we're going to play that for you and talk to his mother live. you won't want to miss it. we will be right back. you really love, what would you do?" ♪ [ woman ] i'd be a writer. 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[ woman ] i'd be an architect. what if i told you someone could pay you and what if that person were you? ♪ when you think about it, isn't that what retirement should be, paying ourselves to do what we love? ♪ paying ourselves to do what we love? peoi go to angie's listt for all kinds of reasons. to gauge whether or not the projects will be done in a timely fashion and within budget. angie's list members can tell you which provider is the best in town. you'll find reviews on everything from home repair to healthcare. now that we're expecting, i like the fact i can go onto angie's list and look for pediatricians. the service providers that i've found on angie's list actually have blown me away. find out why more than two million members count on angie's list. angie's list -- reviews you can trust. >> the target of the big name boycott. stars like jay leno and ellen degeneres are speaking out because his sulton has just instituted a severe law. and one author who wrote this book about her life in a harem has said that his brother gifted her to the sulton. >> i am a witness to the fact that, you know, the sulton was drinking, was committing adultery, was, you know, not exactly living on the straight and narrow. >> it's maybe indicative of the way a lot of people in power behave. it's one rule for them and another rule for the rest of the people who don't have so much money and don't have so much power. >> it's not quite clear if any of this has made an impact but what is certain is that u.s. employees say if the boycott goes on they will be the ones who will pay the price. >> beverly hills hotel employees packing a meeting. >> it strangles our livelihood. it causes us to be unable to support our children, families, my sick grandmother in vietnam. >> it's a tremendous honor, yes. >> the beverly hills city council targets this man, the sulton of brunei, a small southeast asian country. with flogging and stoning. the sulton is reportedly worth more than $20 billion. >> maybe people just become aware. >> celebrities now vowing to boycott the entire hotel and the chain. >> the hotel says the boycott has already costed more than a million dollars but will try to avoid lay offs. >> it's going to hurt our employees. >> everybody is turned out. >> jay leno's wife believes os t tra si-- ostracizing the chain the only way. >> as hard as it is on the hotels being shunned, it's a little bit harder to be executed in a public square and stoned to death. >> cnn, beverly hills, california. >> ahead this hour, thousands of packages of synthetic drug packages seized. how popular are these drugs. more importantly how dangerous are they? we'll find out. first the search for the missing plane now entering phase two. the next steps in the long difficult search. in pursuit of all things awesome, amazing, and that's epic, bro, we've forgotten just how good good is. good is setting a personal best before going for a world record. good is swinging to get on base before swinging for a home run. [ crowd cheering ] good is choosing not to overshoot the moon, but to land right on it and do some experiments. ♪ so start your day off good with a coffee that's good cup after cup. maxwell house. ♪ good to the last drop maxwell house. those little cialis tadalafil for daily use helps you be ready anytime the moment is right. cialis is also the only daily ed tablet approved to treat symptoms of bph, like needing to go frequently. tell your doctor about all your medical conditions and medicines, and ask if your heart is healthy enough for sex. do not take cialis if you take nitrates for chest pain, as it may cause an unsafe drop in blood pressure. do not drink alcohol in excess. side effects may include headache, upset stomach, delayed backache or muscle ache. to avoid long-term injury, get medical help right away for an erection lasting more than four hours. if you have any sudden decrease or loss in hearing or vision, or any allergic reactions like rash, hives, swelling of the lips, 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orders. she is extraordinarily impressive. i don't know what she's going be doing in the future but i know lit be something great. more than any disaster it is that dedication and commitment that truly defines this town. so the people and all the other towns devastated by the storm understand there is a lot of work. your country's going to be here for you. we're going to support you every step of the way. you are in our thoughts and prayers, mr. mayor. thank you for the great leadership you have shown. i know you can count on your governor to make sure that every resources we have available to you is going to be there. and one of the things that the mayor expressed to me that we have got some concerns about is when this happens in a town like this, it's not just the infrastructure and the buildings that are torn down. you also lose part of your sales tax base. so we're going to have to figure out how you can make sure that you get back on your feet. but, i could not be more impressed by the spirit of the community that is here. as important as possessions are, nothing is more important than family. those families, they are still morning those they lost. but they couldn't be more grateful and thankful for the way the communities responded. this is a testament to the strength of this community, the strength of arkansas and the strength of america and i could not be more proud of everybody who has participated in the recovery process. >> president obama is offering words of comfort to all of the people there cleaning up saying that the country stands behind them. >> shifting to the hunt for malaysian airliner flight 370. a new cnn poll finds nearly one in five americans believe that flight 370 survivors are out there. 79% believes that no one survived and a slight majority of americans think the plane went down near the search area. 51% believes that flight 370 is in the south indian ocean and 46% think searchers are looking in the wrong place. officials from malaysia, china and australia will regroup to determine the next search area. can you believe it? 62 days passengers families have waited in limbo. no signs of their loved ones or debris. the next search phase may cost $60 million. >> the international team of expects will be meeting again tomorrow just hours from now. this is a similar team that met here in the initial days and weeks after the plane went miss ing they are going to be looking, calculating, doing simulations to be sure that they still believe that searchers are looking in the right place in the southern indian ocean. it's very important that they take this second look at all of the information. some of it newly collected in the search for this plane. the reason why it's so important that they look is because they're about to invest a considerable amount of time, resources and energy searching this area. it's a huge area. so far the blue fin 21 has covered less than 200 square miles but this is 23,000 square miles. they will need to bring in additional technology. some of it from private companies working along with agency tosser ch for this plane. >> we will find out just how popular these drugs are and more importantly, how dangerous they are. >> a massive nation-wide drug bust. agents on the move across the country targeting synthetic or designer drugs. among them, bath salts and spice. police raiding places across many states. >> there have been more than 100 reported overdozes from synthetic pot. elizabeth, it's frightening to think just how easy it can be to get your hands on these drugs. how popular are they? >> they have become very popular. take a look at these numbers from a national data base. if you go back to 2009, there were only 15 reports of synthetic marijuana at that year. in 2012, more than 41,000 reports of synthetic marijuana, and again that's just marijuana. that doesn't include other drugs. teenagers especially don't appreciate the dangers of these drugs. >> and these drugs can obviously have unpredictable effects on the monday and body. tell us about how dangerous they are. >> they can give all sorts of terrible side effects. seizures have been reported, racing heartbeat, hallucinations, dilutielusions. you sometimes get clusters of problems from one particularly bad patch. so in texas, in just five days, more than 100 overdoses. so you see these clusters happen and it's really just tragic. >> some places are trying to crack down on these drugs so i wonder if the people are putting in new ingredients that can make them more dangerous. >> and the dea and others have been trying to crack down. they find one of these drugs, they look at the chemicals and say this chemical combination is illegal and then the folks who make them they change the chemical around so technically it's not illegal any more. it's a cat and mouse and constant race to keep up with the folks who are making this stuff. that is one of the things that has made this a particularly difficult phenomenon to try to stop. >> it's certainly frightening especially for parents who have teenagers considering how popular they are especially among teens. up next -- >> never give up hope. >> just one year ago. that one woman was held prisoner in a cleveland basement. more of her emotional remarks. more after this break. honestly, the off-season isn't really off for me. i've got a lot to do. that's why i got my surface. it's great for watching game film and drawing up plays. it's got onenote, so i can stay on top of my to-do list, which has been absolutely absurd since the big game. with skype, it's just really easy to stay in touch with the kids i work with. alright, russell you are good to go! alright, fellas. alright, russ. back to work! tdd#: 1-800-345-255050 tjust waiting to be found. ties tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 at schwab, we're here to help tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 bring what inspires you tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 out there... in here. tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 out there, tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 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horrors, two of the three women were honored last night. amanda berry and regina received the center for missing and exploited children's award for resilience. >> it's an honor to be here tonight accepting the hope award. it is really special to be here with gina and our families. it means more than you will ever know. i want to thank the center for everything they have done and continue to do, not just for us, but for all the missing kids and their families. if i could say only one thing it would be this. never give up hope because miracles do happen. [ applause ] >> i want to say that i'm glad to be here with you guys to accept this award and always believe in hope even though you sometime it is hard to believe in hope, just pray to god and god will give you that hope. [ applause ] 6. >> the third kidnapping victim michelle knight has been talking with anderson cooper and you can catch part three of by the way, remember this guy right here, charles ramsey in he became a national hero and internet sensation after rescuing the cleveland women. jake tapper is here. jake had an opportunity to talk to ramsey. we'll learn about that in the next hour. tell me, he's had an interesting year since he rescued the women, right? >> an interesting year. i haven't met him yet. he's going be live on "the lead" in the next hour. his new book "charles ramsey, dead give away, the rescue, hamburgers and white folks" it doesn't begin to tell the story. a very engaging and hilarious read. very honest, very candid. talks about when he gets a call from the white house, incredibly dispinted, excited it's president obama, dispinted it's a cabinet secretary, then a call from snoop dogg, and it goes on a great read. >> i was in cleveland covering the story. i tried interview charles ramsey, his publicist would in the give me an interview. good for you for landing it. tune into that for "the lead." did you hear what newly crowned nba mvp kevin duran said about his mother yesterday? >> when you didn't eat, you made sure we ate. you went to sleep hungry. you sacrificed for us and you're the real mvp. >> those are a few of the words durant said about his mom. next, kevin durant's mom joins us live to talk about sweet and emotional words. hiwe just love scouring flea markets for special treasures. but with my type 2 diabetes, we now spend all our time at the pharmacy. with med-care, i don't have to! they deliver everything i need right to my door! with free shipping! plus, med-care takes private policies, medicaid, even my medicare! sleep apnea machines, nebulizers, med-care has all the finest medical supplies. the best part...med-care saves us money! med-care allows us the time to do the things we love. med-care. we deliver a better life. oklahoma city's kevin durant nba's most valuable player of the year but didn't accept his trophy without leaving one woman in particular in tears. she wasn't the only one. his mother, right here you see her, overwhelmed with emotion last night as her son, kevin, gave her what may be the most memorable mother's day gift of her life. thanking her for years of sacrifice for him and his brother and told the world she's the real mvp. >> and, last, my mom. i don't think you know what you did. you had my brother, when you were 18 years old, three years later i came out. the odds were stacked against us. single parent with two boys by the time you were 21 years old. we weren't supposed to be here. you made us believe. you kept us off the street. put clothes on our backs, food on the table. when you didn't eat, you made sure we ate. you went to sleep hungry. you sacrificed for us. you're the real mvp. >> wanda i was watching you as your son spoke there again and it looks like you were getting choked up listening to him. i can't imagine how that must have felt, even for me watching it, i was overcome with emotion. tell me what that was like to hear those heartfell words from your son. >> it was -- it was overwhe overwhelming. the thing that resonated is that i remember exactly what he's talking about and it was really heart warming that he remembered. and i didn't flow that it was a part of him never giving up. i was not expecting to be honored in the manner in which he did. so it was all very surprising to me. >> so you said you were surprised when he talked about that everyone said we weren't supposed to be here. he talked about that moment and the apartment when there was no furniture, you were all huddled together holding each other. had you ever talked about that before? what did he mean by that? >> no. it was the first apartment that i had as a single mom. we shared a home with my mother and my mother had encouraged me and pushed me in telling me it was time for me to stand on my own with my children. and i was afraid at that time. and there that was the first apartment that we had. all of our belongings hadn't been brought into the home yet but i had taken the boys there so that they could see that this is where we were going to be staying and this was our new home. we just sat there and kind of held each other and they were really excited about it, just as i was. >> wow. and then when kevin got drafted, wanda, what did that mean for you? >> it meant that all of the hard work ta he had put in really paid off. and he was living out his dreams and i knew that he had worked really hard. he had worked literally from age 8 or 9 to get to that point. and it paid off for him. i was really happy that he was able to live out his dreams. >> he made it clear, wanda, you were instrumental in his success. were you aware of that? did you know how big of an impact you had on your son? >> no, i did not. i've always known -- excuse me -- that my sons love me but i didn't know that it was such a part of his foundation of who he become as a man. i tried to instill the best that i could and it seemed that it did resonate with him. so i'm really grateful for that. but it was a surprise to me. >> and it's incredible when he talked about the fact you were 18 when you had your first son, 21 when you had him. i can't imagine how difficult it was for you being a young, single working mother. what was that like for you raising kevin dur can'ant, a hua star, what was that like? >> it was -- in the early years it was really scary. but i'm thankful for my mom because she did, she pushed me and knew i had to stand before my children in a manner in which i could be honored and respected, so i accepted the challenge. i knew that they depended upon me. i knew that they looked to me for all of the answers. they looked to me for -- >> wanda pratt -- i hate to interrupt you. we have to go to the next hour. we commend you, all of the single working moms. thank you, wanda pratt. i'm pamela brown. "the lead" with jake tapper starts now. >> did vladimir putin strong like bear turn tail like rabbit? this "the lead." the 40,000, 50,000 russian troops, putin said he's pulling them back. that vote on sunday that could break away southeastern ukraine, well, putin says, move that back. naturally the white house is skeptical of it all. also in world news, terrorist whose vow to

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Transcripts For FOXNEWSW Bulls Bears 20170603

this is bulls and bears. gary smith, john wayfield, lee carter and julie, welcome to everybody. what impact will withdrawing from the paris climate accord have on american jobs? >>say. it would be hugely positive. this is just the kind of liberal boondoggle that we elected donald trump to get us out of. this was always they used to say in my day sleeves out of the best. other countries gave up nothing. china said we will reduce our emissions in 2030 just when we would have estimated even without the paris accord they would reduce emissions. pakistan said they would reduce emissions to the fullest extent possible which means nothing. those countries gave up nothing. the paris accord is fine if we gave up nothing, we didn't. we are pledge it to spend $100 billion a year. think what $100 billion could be for jobs around here. you could build a wall. you could fund the next thousand teslas. you could give the money back to the citizens of the united states and corporations so they could come up with innovative technologies. donald trump is right to do this. it was some liberal vacation for europe and everyone else. it hurt us, he's doing the right thing. dagen: good for jobs in the states. >> i don't think either side is right. it is not good for jobs and i don't think staying in it was going to be bad for jobs. i think both sides have overstated the importance of this climate accord in paris. since 2008 we tripled our capacity of renewable energy. renewable energy jobs growing 12 times the rate of the normal economy and to it a half for jobs to one job in renewable energy than there are in fossil fuels right now. companies are already doing this. greenhouse gas emissions were at a 25 year low in 2016 and you are seeing co2 emissions of dropped 16% to 18% in the same time period so the trend is going to continue. renewable energy creates a ton of jobs, good paying jobs, veterans will continue which is good for the climate. dagen: you made the case for not being in the paris climate agreement and in fact we didn't enforce under president bush the kyoto pact from 1997 and you still had a collapse in emissions and rise in green jobs. what do you say? >> first of all this is a donald trump move, he gave a positive speech in the rose garden, exactly what he promised the american people he would do. my concern about jobs is this is going to be a distraction from the agenda, losing any good faith he had left with the left which was not much at all, a lot of fence sitters are going away from him, running away from him, he had elon musk resigned. a lot of people saying enough is enough. my fear is they won't compromise on tax reform or healthcare and tax reform is the key to economic growth. dagen: if you look at a recent poll, government spending, russian meddling and the economy were all more important issues than climate change. >> that is frankly shortsighted. i understand those things are immediate concerns when it comes to the safety and prosperity of our country but climate change is something that is crucial, something that impact every single one of us and something like this, withdrawing from the paris accord is ultimately going to be bad for american jobs because things are moving in the direction of renewable energy but so much of what happens when it comes to a record like this is about peer pressure and all these countries are in it, we will make our individual contributions and figure out ways to help climate change and that incentivizes american companies to find new ways to invest in renewable fuel and when you see people in charge of tesla, ge, goldman sachs saying by removing ourselves from the climate accord we are going to be ceding those jobs and technology in renewable energy to other countries overseas that is not going to help us as a superpower. that will allow china to say we are leading the charge and that is the last thing we want. dagen: we can lead it without being in the pact, apple as an example, apple and facebook increasing their use of renewable energy, apple's new campus 100% renewable energy without being in a global climate agreement. >> apple's new building doesn't make any economic sense. they have cash to burn and it is a multi-billion-dollar company headquarters and it is cool but it is -- as most environmental things are, not economically feasible. getting out of it won't hurt us because it was such a toothless agreement. this many countries involved in something and they're all in agreement it probably won't do anything. if this doesn't cause a recession the united states and china it is not strong enough to healthy environment. you are talking about a need to curb consumption, not spend more on alternatives. it doesn't tax consumption, doesn't cut income to offset that, won't do anything. bottom line, these jobs, solar jobs like we heard from john because it is such an efficient way to make power when you compare the people in solar compared to gas powered plants or nuclear or call it is absurdly high to the deck of the panel is all over and it is not an economically efficient way to make energy and doesn't deal with the core problem which is overconsuming energy and negative output so it is wrong on so many fronts. dagen: if you look at the climate agreement, to meet the emissions target president obama put into place you would have to essentially cripple with regulation and potentially taxes whole industries. steel, farmers in this country, cattle ranchers in this country. that is not a job creator. >> add in call. i will give credit to our guests julie for raising my already high blood pressure to astronomical levels. this speech that i just heard was unbelievable. even if everything went right with this accord we would lower the temperature on the earth by 2/10 of a degree celsius by the year 2100. that is based on current computer models which have been wrong but i don't want to get into that. let's say charitably we don't know what is going to happen. fine. if china wants to take the lead and we definitely can trust china to take the lead on this just like north korea will probably take the lead also, what we know for a fact is two things. it is going to hurt jobs around here and not to belabor my earlier point, $100 billion a year in hard cash going from the us out of the us, money we can use and instead we spent it on some hocus-pocus thing that is unproven galls me. i give credit to julie for that for getting me hyped up. dagen: i will let you respond. >> i understand your concerns but what i'm most concerned about is readers are going to be the ones impacted by this for millennial women and we are the ones when we are 50 and 70 dealing with the impact of flooding and food shortages and disease and the fact that we no longer have governmental regulations in place that will incentivize us to innovate and not only dealing with the effects of climate change but the effects of a market that is behind the global economy. dagen: you know what is an incentive to innovate and produce cleanburning inexpensive energy is a thriving economy. if you have a climate agreement -- >> why do you think fracking and natural gas industries took off? because people found out they could make money there. lowering emissions was a byproduct of that. that is what happens when you have a growing economy blues people have an incentive to make money. dagen: cavuto and business 20 minutes from now. what have you got? >> the mainstream media, donald trump on climate change, russia, where is the rush to judge the positive news that is happening. a fair and balanced report, don't look now but there is a new push to make healthcare free by taxing the just about everything else. find out where. dagen: we can't wait. coming up why someone is saying the biggest threat to donald trump's tax cuts is not distraction from until leakers but from gop lawmakers. they will explain next. 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(vo) call, click or come in today to learn how to start your better days. miracle-ear...hear a better day. ostriches don't really stick their heads in the sand. a peanut is not a nut. and a real john deere is actually real affordable. you learn something new every day. the surprisingly affordable john deere e series tractors. now you can own america's tractor for just 99 dollars a month. learn more at your john deere dealer. >> live from washington good saturday morning, a shoot out in laredo, texas lease with the police officers wounded and a murder suspect did. the officers had been searching for the suspect when they spotted him at a convenience store. the suspect opens fire at the officer who was approaching him, no word on their condition yet but one had to be lifted to a local hospital. protests against donald trump are taking shape this saturday. you are looking at life pictures from new york city where demonstrators are gathering. the march for truth rallies are expected to take place in more than 100 cities around the globe. they are calling for an independent commission to investigate links between donald trump's presidential campaign and russia. in washington dc, we send it back to to bowls and bears. dagen: donald from pushing congress again to pass healthcare and tax reform. some say the mess over all these intel leaks is delaying the white house's agenda, rush limbaugh thinks it is something closer to home. >> the republican party ostensibly the party of the president, they owe their majority to him particularly the senate. are road blocking donald trump more than the democrats are. dagen: what do you say? >> that is spot on. you always had leaks, george washington had a leak from one of his own generals, he was able to win a pretty big war that pounded our country. the leaks are bad but are not the problem. the problem is the gop had 7 used to get repeal and replace obamacare on the president's desk. what have they been doing? democrats also want to fix it, they haven't offered any alternative to fix it but republicans to me are the ones -- you have tax cuts, tax reform, you don't know the border adjusted taxes in their or how to make it revenue neutral, they don't have an idea what corporate tax rate they want, they don't even know the rate. trump has his faults but he could be a cross between abraham lincoln and teddy roosevelt and wouldn't get anything done with these horrible congressman we have in dc. dagen: is at leakers or gop lawmakers who are fouling things up for everybody? >> the leaking is letting trump become the fall guy for essentially his failure with congress which is they don't make any sense, they are trying to be vague and pretend somehow you can solve these problems of the long-term deficit with foodstamp and medicaid cuts and tax cuts and have it worked out and not touch any benefit their constituents get. windows come up from republicans, mortgage deductions, they throw it away, forget disability, medicare, social security, that can't happen so they can't make a policy that will balance the budget because they have to address benefits their own constituents get. not the fuse a think only the other side gets. it is being exposed and blaming it on trump for not solving it but there is no map that is going to work your come you can't balance the budget on foodstamp cuts alone or in pr. dagen: who is to blame? >> it would be easy to blame them on the leaks if you wanted to. the real problem is i think it is lack of messaging. of the healthcare plan exists and they put it forward as they say they have, how is that it is less popular today than when they started it? they haven't sold the thing. haven't told us what is in it, why it is better, how it will help the american people are help the economy. they have not sold it. tax reform likewise, they did not sell it. they had a great first two days we steve mnuchin was talking about tying it to the economy and jobs, a great start and we heard nothing since. they need a message, discipline and everybody across the board saying the same thing as you know we need to get donald trump not to tweet about russia, the white house saying we are not talking about russia and the next day he is talking about russia. not just leaks the discipline. dagen: if you go to donald trump's twitter feed it will be about healthcare and tax cut and the economy and russia. >> when i'm in a bad mood i check it to see what he is talking about. i have to agree there is a messageing problem in the gop. a lot of distractions going on. is not on message but the problem with getting trump's agenda passed through his trump agenda. that we should honestly give round of applause to people in the gop who are saying that health care bill is not good for my constituents and i won't put it through. we are talking a healthcare bill that will take away healthcare for 23 million people. dagen: some lose it by choice because i won't be mandated to buy it. >> some are choosing not to buy it because they have to buy rent and food otherwise. reductions are being eliminated and it is much less affordable for a lot of low-income people. i am saying the issue is not people are stalling these things in congress it is the fact that these bills are not addressing the needs of the american people and bravo to the republican saying these do not suit the needs of my constituents and i won't pass it. dagen: the republicans had 7 used to come up with an obamacare of placement and they don't have it. what about tax reform? people have been crying for it, where is it? >> i agree with everything you said. is will we have another eight years of that wonderful obamaadministration. here is my take. it is a little bit of intel, it is on the gop. they need to get a spine. this is a golden opportunity, they could get some stuff done. surely as john said, they can come up with something better than obamacare, the most despised piece of legislation ever, they need to get their act together, we are going to have another eight years of whatever, chelsea clinton administration. dagen: this is selling spines to folks cashing in an hour from now. what have you got coming up? >> donald trump telling world elites to buzz off from pulling out of the paris climate deal to blunt talk on fair trade and nations paying their fair share. is this what we need in our president, the protect us workers and taxpayers, plus hillary blames fake news and the mainstream media loves it but they hated when trump does it. cashing in, see you all at 11:30. dagen: we will be watching but up first kathy griffin losing gigs and deals after this controversial anti-trump photo and she is blaming the president. we asked people to write down the things they love to do most on these balloons. travel with my daughter. roller derby. ♪ now give up half of 'em. do i have to? this is a tough financial choice we could face when we retire. but, if we start saving even just 1% more of our annual income... we could keep doing all the things we love. prudential. bring your challenges. dagen: kathy griffin loses shows and deals over her controversial photo of donald trump. she blames the first family but is it her dagen: kathy griffin blaming the trump family for losing her comedy gig and other deal say they are trying to ruin her career over the photo she took holding the president's severed head. it is not a trumps, the free-market telling her she went too far. >> she went way too far. in a crisis response situation, watch this for what not to do. first thing she should have done is taken responsibility, she has no business blaming anybody but herself. >> she tried to be provocative, tried to be out there, tried to appeal to her liberal cronies out there. it didn't work. now she's getting what she paid for. i say all is fair. dagen: first amendment will protect speech but won't save your job. >> i support her first amendment right to make statements like this was i think it was over the line. i also think it was cheap. there is a ton of material when it comes to donald trump. there is a lot to make fun of. a lot of statements to make. this is not the right one. dagen: to say that trump after she did this broke her, blaming his family now, this is victim chic at its worst. >> it is unfathomable, you have freedom of speech in this country but don't have freedom of responsibility and when you're a shock comedian and do something like this you have to take the back lash, to take the victim route is a horrible way, america sees through that and she is suffering that economically and she should. dagen: even senator al franken said don't show up at this beverly hills book thing going on. come on. >> can someone say the outrage machine is out of control. i understand this is absurd. can't you just not to go to her concerts? where advertisers have to make stands last, chelsea clinton has to weigh in to brands which side of this. dagen: it is about her blaming the trump family for destroying her. that is what it is about. she took a too far rather than saying i'm sorry and apologizing to the president. thanks, everybody, thanks for joining us. the winner of the nba championship won't just to be the calf or the warriors, the other winning name that will be a slamdunk for your wallet. fees? what did you have in mind? i don't know. $4.95 per trade? uhhh. and i was wondering if your brokerage offers some sort of guarantee? guarantee? where we can get our fees and commissions back if we're not happy. so can you offer me what schwab is offering? what's with all the questions? ask your broker if they're offering $4.95 online equity trades and a satisfaction guarantee. if you don't like their answer, ask again at schwab. dagen: predictions, gary? >> walmart wants employees to start delivering packages on the way home. when i hear that i think one thing, by target. target stock up 21%. >> diametrically opposed. dagen: your prediction? >> lebron james is the best basketball player in the world but i don't think it will be enough against the golden state warriors and kevin durrant. stock is up 20%. >> overpriced nba players. >> national donut day, my favorite american holiday is come and tim morton is owned by restaurant international. dagen: sums up or thumbs down gary be? neil now. >> always in a rush to get it long. lots of rushing to what we know or don't know about russia or the -- not rushing to what we do know about our economy and these incredible markets, glad to have you, neil cavuto and not saying the media should not cover the climate debate or the kremlin or the white house and all that. i'm saying how about covering what is going on and a lot of other issues, high wages for americans and housing. not to mention the atlanta federal reserve putting out a model that shows the economy growing at better than 3.5% this quarter, the

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