dallas, chicago, miami and affected. donald trump is happy with the way he was treated during last night s debate. the republican front-runner is in new hampshire today where hillary clinton is also campaigning. trump is scheduled to hold a town hall tonight, just a few hours from now in rochester. it s the last day of school suspension for ahmed muhammad ninth grade ar rested in texas after his home made clock always specced of being a hoax bomb. he wants to transfer to a different school after his ordeal. and he told chris hayes the whole experience made him feel like a terrorist. i felt i felt like i was a criminal. i felt like i was a terrorist. i felt like all of the names i was called. what do you mean all of the names you why called? i was called in middle school a terrorist, called a bombmaker just because of my race and
to another teacher who confiscated it. he was eventually pulled out of class, searched and interrogated and searched in which he was not allowed to even call his parents. officers then placed him in handcuffs and took him into custody. i felt like i was a criminal. i felt like i was a terrorist. i felt like all the names i was called. what do you mean, all the names you were called? i was called in middle school i was called a terrorist, called a bombmaker just because of my race. and religion. and were the officers saying things like that to you? one of the officers did comment on me walking into the room. what did he say? he got back in the reclined chair, and he relaxed. and he said, that s who i thought it was. irving s police chief announced yesterday no charges
bombmaker for a group that advocated through violence for puerto rican independence. he lost all of this fingers and his hands are scared, even partially lost his description yet still managed to escape from prison help fled to mexico, was arrested there and then sent to cuba so the big question is what will happen to those guy and the 60 something other fugitives. to answer. not yet. thank you. still a dramatic change of course today. more than five decade after the u.s. cut diplomatic ties with cuba under president eisenhower, and steve harrigan is live in havana. reaction there steve? reporter: a remarkably positive reaction, especially in this neighborhood which has been the center of anti-american protests. we re seeing things we don t really see very often around here. people carrying american flags wearing american shirts, cubans holding up signs saying, welcome, america. a lot of cuban wes talked to who were out in line 59:00 a.m.,
we have the north american premier on friday. it will be a sellout. one of the ones you liked is day one. tell me about day one. they one is a great film directed by an army veteran. it s based on a story that happened to him when he was in afghanistan. it s the story of a female intrrperater goes on their first mission. they capture the bombmaker and the bombmaker s life goes into labor. she helps deliver the baby. it s a thrilling film. tickets are still available. we hope you can watch them with us. another two people taking action when they don t like something, change it. laura and brandon, thank you for joining us. congratulations on the festival. thank you. all right. 28 minutes after the hour. this segment was part of our #proudamerican series.
several airliners but that a prominent bombmaker linked to other holiday terror plots may be alive and well despite reports that he was killed in u.s. air strikes. chief intelligence correspondent catherine herridge live here with more. the head of the tsa told fox news that the threat is worse than it was when he first took the job. with that being said, we also have better insights into who the potential bombers are. the u.s.-led bombing campaign against isis and the al qaeda-led course in syria. he specializes in nonmetallic bombs that traditional airport screening can miss. without going into detail about what that they look like from a classified intelligence perspective, we remain concerned that there is active plotting going on. that s why procedures implemented in july requiring passengers to turn on their