reputed gangster, "whitey" bulger. he is accused of playing a role in at least 19 murders. our legal panel will be here to discuss the case. behind the scenes at the white house. a new film about the butter out next week. you have to say and watch this. you've got to. this will be great. jenna: we're speaking to the author of the book the movie is based on. it is all happening now. kelly: there is a new terror threat for americans in pakistan. i'm kelly wright in for jon scott. jenna: our consulate in the city of lahore is at least closed through sunday as a precaution. the state department is warning americans not to travel to pakistan at least for the time being. greg palkot is live in the london bureau with more. gregg? >> reporter: jenna we've been in contact with officials at the u.s. embassy in islamabad, pakistan, and they confirm what they call a drawdown of non-emergency personnel from their consulate in lahore, pakistan. that is a city 180 miles to the southeast of islamabad near the border of india. those staffers were brought back to the capitol. they confirmed it was due to a specific threat against that facility. we've been to lahore. it's a lovely city but there are a lot of very ugly islamist ideologies based in that town. in fact countrywide, pakistan has been seeing a lot of violence in the past couple of weeks. in southwestern pakistan city of quetta today six people were killed when a gunman struck out at a government official outside of a mosque yesterday. there was 30 people killed in a suicide bomber hit there. of quetta, near the afghanistan border, is a base for the taliban and it, pakistan itself, the base for al qaeda central. and its current leader ayman al-zawahiri. the state department today however saying there is no connection between the closure of that consulate in lahore and the shutdown of u.s. diplomatic facilities that we have seen across the muslim world in this past week. one thing in common though, today is the muslim feast day of eid. that ends their ramadan month of fasting. the thinking is, that perhaps one of these religious days could be a trigger for a terror attack somewhere. now most of the diplomatic facilities that had been closed in the past week are going to be opening in the next couple of days but we have been told today that the u.s. consulate in lahore will remain closed for the foreseeable future. also, the warning against any kind of travel, into pakistan by u.s. citizens. that warning put out by the state department in the last 24 hours. that will beholding as well. because in their words, terror groups inside pakistan, that might provide a danger to u.s. citizens in that country. tricky part of the world, jenna. back to you. jenna: a little bit of deja vu, greg. last friday last week we had a similar warnings of a few other consulates and a few other embassies and now as we go into this weekend. something to watch. thank you. >> reporter: thank you. kelly: right now we're waiting the president's first news conference since april. mr. obama will meet with reporters this afternoon. before he begins a week-long family vacation. among the likely topics today, obamacare, the nsa, the terror threat overseas and our bumpy relationship with russia. joining me now for her take on what to expect today is monica crowley, fox news contributor. monica, always good to have you with us here on "happening now." the president, he is facing some questions today from the quote, unquote, news media as opposed to what he did the other night on tuesday with jay leno which is a softer approach. what do you think he is going to face today? >> actually jay leno asked him tougher questions. kelly: good for jay leno. >> sometimes than we see from the white house press corps, right? the president does in press conferences. he runs out the clock and take a question and tends to filibuster. i have a feeling this press conference lasts about an hour which is usually the time frame, he will run out the clock and run out the door to his vacation. i expect he will get a couple questions on nsa. for example he told jay leno earlier this week that the u.s. does not have a domestic spying program yet "the new york times" report this is week the fact of extent on spying of american citizens is much more extensive than anybody thought. that the nsa is looking at content of your emails, texts and phone calls. i expect him to get a couple questions about that and also about al qaeda and this terror threat. kelly: the caveat with that eavesdropping now on our data and our emails that it is related to someone who might be involved in terrorism or overseas. let's get to edward snowden though, the guy actually responsible for a lost leaks at the nsa. let's hear what jay carney, the white house press secretary said during the white house briefing about that and the fact that vladmir putin has now given snowden temporary asylum. the president of course stating that he will not meet with putin during the g20 summit in sent. let's hear what jay carney said. >> he is not a dissident. he is not a whistle-blower. he is wanted on charges for the unauthorized public release of classified information. kelly: monica, based on that, the white house and the president are stating that they have a lot of uphill climb nothing do in terms of getting their relationship right with vladmir putin and russia. what do you think is going on behind the scenes? what does the president have to do to get tougher with russia. because they would like to see snowed snowed come back to this country and face the -- >> will be in russia at least a year. there is a year of leeway to get snowden back to the u.s., to face what he will -- kelly: exactly. >> there are a whole range of issues we have to deal with russia. the president early on tried to extend an olive branch. he called it a reset with russia. remember, kelly, the cold war never ended. the russians are working behind the scenes with iran on their nuclear program. with syria, along with iran the prime sponsors of assad regime in syria which is slaughtering its own people. nuclear proliferation, other weapons proliferation and of course spying. kelly: don't forget north korea. >> north korea right. the russians and chinese drained edward snowden, and interrogated him. they have all the information that snowden has. certainly the president has his work cut out with him with regards to russia. he should be under no illusions this is russia. this is how they behave. kelly: what would you, you were there and at today's briefing at 3:00, what would you ask him. >> so many questions i could probably eat up the whole hour myself. new questions about the terror alert and as you and jenna reported we're evacuating diplomatic personnel from lahore from pakistan because of specific threats. this president last year during the campaign you claimed that al qaeda was decimated and on the run. do you still believe that? if so, then why do you need such a massive nsa domestic spying program and why are you closing our embassies and consulates around the world if they are really so decimated. that would be the first question. kelly: what do you think the message has been so far from the white house as it relates to the terror threat and al qaeda being quote, unquote, on the run? >> i think the president has a political problem. as i mentioned last year he clade made all the claims about al qaeda being decimated an on the run and clearly it is not. he has a political problem and national security problem because of those claims. we're living in a post-usama bin laden world but not living in a post-al qaeda world. the problem with the president is to try to square that circle because claims he himself and his administration made about al qaeda. kelly: we'll see what unfolds this afternoon as the president goes to the podium for a news briefing with white house correspondents that will ask him at love tough questions. as you mentioned, jay leno did the same thing. maybe not as tough as the white house bureau. >> don't forget, obamacare. is he willing to shut down the government in order to get his funding for obamacare? it would be -- kelly: five-week recess. they should stay on capitol hill to get the job done. >> i prefer when they're on vacation and not trying to help us, kelly. kelly: monica. we thank you for that. >> a pleasure. thank you. kelly: jenna? jenna: kelly, thank you very much. we look forward to the press conference again, 3:00 p.m. eastern time. meantime a fox news alert on the manhunt for a missing teenager and a murder suspect. the search now in its sixth day stretching up and down the west coast. cops revealing james dimaggio may have rigged his car with booby traps. they believe he kidnapped 16-year-old hannah anderson earlier this week after leaving her mother and possibly her little brother dead in his torched home. will carr has been following the story since it began. he is live in los angeles. this is new information today. why do police think he has homemade explosives? >> reporter: jenna, i want to start off by he telling you there are amber alerts in almost half a dozen states right now and that the authorities are also looking for him in mexico and canada. they also think that he's an avid camper. so he could be camping in the middle of nowhere in some very isolated areas. police also want to you keep an eye out for his car that blue nissan versa we've been telling you about. like you just mentioned they potentially believe he has homemade devices in there, homemade bombs in that car. so they're asking for anybody who sees the car to call 911 if they do see that car. because arson investigators believe that dimaggio actually caught his house on fire sunday using homemade bombs. they also want to point out they say that fire started on sunday. they think that he had a 24-hour head start. they didn't realize he was a suspect until monday. so he had enough time to get out on the run to end up wherever he is right now, jenna. jenna: such a scary, such a sad story too, will as we watch the footage on that home burning. have they identified bottomed different the child that was found inside that home? >> reporter: you know, so far they have not. they're actually waiting on dna results to see if it is indeed hannah's brother, 8-year-old ethan. also hand gnaw's grandparents told a local newspaper in san diego they believe this was premeditated. they say that dimaggio invited the family over. told them that his home was foreclosed on. that he was moving to texas and that he just wanted to say good-bye. family members say that is the last time they heard from hannah and her brother and her mother. more and more friend say hannah was creeped out by dimaggio, saying he was infatuated by her. her father says while they're waiting on dna results and hoping hannah is okay and he is still trying to absorb everything that has happened in the last week. >> i believe the hardest thing emotionally is still to come when i have to go and start, cleaning out their apartments and rooms. >> reporter: "the l.a. times" is now reporting that hannah's mom may have died from a blunt force trauma. and they say she could have been killed with a crowbar before that home was ever set on fire. jenna. jenna: our hearts go out to that father. will, thank you very much. >> reporter: thank you. kelly: reports that actress amanda bynes could be headed back to court. she has been held in a psychiatric hospital after some bizarre behavior. what a she plans to ask a judge now. and another court case buys toyota back in the hot seat or puts toyota back in the hot seat i should say. a family claims their loved one got killed when her accelerator got stuck, bringing tragedies of people killed in other situations caught on this 911 call which cause the problem to light. >> going 120 in mission george. we're in trouble. there are no brakes. we're approaching a intersection. hold on. brake. other. oh. >> hello. jenna: a fox news alert and a heightened terror alert around the world as we have been reporting to you over the last 10 days or so and big news out of paris, france, as we're learning from reuters that the i've fell tower has been evacuated after a bomb threat. apparently this happened earlier today. and the entire iconic symbol in paris has been evacuated. just a single report from one police official to reuters talking about the having wakes and considering environment of news we're in right now, we wanted to tell you about it. as we learn more we will bring you those developments. kelly: new pictures of a fire burning at a trucking facility outside cleveland in copley, ohio, about 28 children were evacuated from the kids academy of copley friday morning because of a nearby fire that prompted fears of chemical exposure. the fire broke out at the roadway terminal, a trucking company. according to the director of the day care, the students were being taken to copley high school where they may be picked up by their parents. it was not immediately known how many other people were being evacuated. more as we get it and we'll bring it to you. jenna: right now toyota is trying to defend itself in a new lawsuit. the company has dealt with hundreds of lawsuits involving stuck accelerators. what could be a landmark cases underway in california this controversial when the story first broke a lost questions about it. harris faulkner with the details from our breaking newsdesk. >> the family suing toyota lost their 66-year-old wife and mom. she ran a family business with her husband. the attorney representing the family said they believe and they can show what happened six months ago. that the gas pedal didn't just stick. and this is him demonstrating it in court yesterday. it completely accelerated to the floor. her hand brake pulled up but the car still wouldn't stop, turning it into what he called a deathtrap. she was seen traveling 100 miles an hour trapped inside the karzai rocketing out of control. she hit a curb. the vehicle then rolled over, hit a true and of course that killed her. the family is filing a wrongful death lawsuit. they claim toyota received hundreds of claims of sudden acceleration on generation 6 camry which she was driving, dating back nearly a decade. here's the woman's son. >> asked strange questions about my mom's car. they ultimately told me that, i'm sorry, your mom has been involved in a serious car accident. she didn't make it. looked like toyota knew there was something wrong with it. they just didn't say anything. >> install a break override system so that we don't have a repeat of these types of incidents. >> so you hear the attorney there, saying what hopes the company will do. that they will recall these vehicles an fix them. toyota argues that this was a case of driver error. but toyota motor car as you may know has battled hundred of lawsuits in recent years related to sudden acceleration. jenna, you played that 911 call from one of those cases. by the way toyota today is dealing with another problem the corporation is recalling 342,000 tacoma trucks to repair an issue with seatbelts. back to you. jenna: i remember when the story first broke about the sudden acceleration there was question whether the floor mats weren't fitting right. >> like they were sticking underneath. jenna: this will be very interesting to see what happens with this case. as you mention, a landmark case. harris, thank you very much. >> sure. kelly: new information on the irs scandal. the agency is still targeting tea party groups three months after we first learned about the controversy. that is what came out of a closed-door hearing on capitol hill yesterday. irs agent telling lawmakers requests for special tax status from conservative groups go into a special secondary screening because no new guidance has been given on how to judge the groups. well chief congressional correspondent mike emanuel is live in washington with more details on this. mike, this is startling to a lot of people out there. what more do we know about the latest revelations coming out about the irs? >> reporter: kelly, good morning that irs agent told sveltetores from the house ways and means committee if the tea party group paperwork came in he would send the application for secondary screening. he says that the is guide distance from his current manager which house ways and means manager dave camp calls outrageous. the fact that the irs still continues to treat the tea party differently and subject them to additional target something outrageous and must stop immediately. i spoke with a key gop senator a few moments ago who offered this reaction. >> this is an outrage. it shows that the allegation that this practice had been discontinued is false and it bears more investigation. i hope the mainstream media will continue to follow up on this too because the american people need to get to the truth. >> reporter: i reached out to the irs for comment via email and phone. we expect we will get it shortly but they told the publication, "the hill," irs policy is now clear screen something based on activity, not words and the name. kelly. kelly: irs still under a lot of scrutiny. we'll be right back. 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[ female announcer ] get smooth from pantene, the world's no. 1 haircare brand. hair so healthy it shines. jenna: right now some new questions about our privacy as two major secure email service providers shut down entirely over the last 24 hours. one of them is called, lava bit. it's a service reportedly used by nsa leaker edward snowden to communicate over email without surveilance the company announces its suspension saying it could not legally explain why but it didn't want to be complicit in crimes against the american people. that is their quote. that may be of interest to investigators looking into snowden's leak. after that announcement another company did almost the same thing. silent circle, shutting its email service as a protected measure and destroying its own servers. the closures are raising some new concerns that even if email is encrypted, the government can still get to them. judge andrew napolitano, fox news senior judicial analyst is joining us. i want to share with you, judge, what the owner of lava bit had to say in an open letter if anyone is interested. he said, this experience has taught me one very important lesson. without congressional action or a strong judicial precedent i would strongly recommend against anyone trusting their private data to a company with physical ties to the united states. what do you make of that? >> well to a company with physical ties to the united states, meaning that the united states government will come knocking on the door of computer servers to say you have an obligation to help us out and if you don't help us out we'll get court orders requiring you to help us out. even if you believe the service provider, even those court orders would be up down constitutional in my view and view of many of us who follow it they were at least the one edward snowden revealed, then you have no choice but to shut down because the failure to comply with a valid, even though illegal and unconstitutional, valid, signed by a real judge, court order could subject you to punishment yourself so -- jenna: what are they getting, judge? we can't even talk about what happened. >> the government must have come knocking saying we want to hook into your system so that we can access the people who are using you, thinking they are immune from our