collecting a paycheck this entire time to the tune of nearly $300,000 and that is money he could pay back now to some of the victims and others, bill. an interesting day. we re on top of it. as soon as we get this sentence it will be delivered here live on fox. bill: a whole paycheck thing has a lot of folks shaking their head as you well know going back to november of 2009. casey stiegel, thanks, watching that for us at fort hood. martha. martha: as the white house weighs its options on syria there are new questions today about what happens after a possible military strike. what about iran? what would their next move be? peter king is going to join us live on that. bill: also check it out. it was the shot of a lifetime. martha: wow, sure was. bill: one woman s close encounter, close indeed. that is a humpback whale on the other side of her kayak. she is here live to tell us about how this whole thing went down. [ male announcer ] come to the lexus golden opportunity sales event
casualties, and the military side of the airport in kabul where u.s. and nato military forces operate, chuck. there are casualties, we just don t know how many right now. jim miklaszewski at the pentagon with breaking news for us this morning. thanks. let s do our trivia. which senator s charitable foundation lost most of its $14 million by investing with bernard madoff? well, it was democratic senator frank lautenberg who by the way, have you no idea but most of you get a pay stub from a firm that frank lautenberg founded, the adp firm, the paycheck thing, not paychecks. that s a competitor but adp. so that s where he made all of his money. figuring out how to give payrolls to the world. anyway, coming up. not a little trivia. a wall street titan facing charges of free frauding the american public. nbc news senior investigative correspondent lisa myers on how the government says goldman sachs rigged the game. but first, the white house soup of the day.