call the number on your screen now. okay. okay. it s finally friday. okay. it s finally friday. it s time. one busy week it has been for news. we started with celebrity funeral and royal baby on the way. to a new mission in fight terror as we mark 13 years since 9/11. let s take a look back at all these big stories that made this a week we won t soon forget. our friday rewind. it is time for president obama to exercise leadership in launching a response. what we should have is a direct, concerted overwhelming air campaign to take them out. i can announce that america will lead a broad coalition to roll back this terrorist threat. our objective is clear, we will
for exchange. we will get reaction from oliver north. the president repeated the promise over a over again if you wanted to keep your healthcare plan, you could. you will hear a story from a couple among millions of americans dropped from their plan. all this and the rest of your top stories coming up at the top of the hour. hope to see you then. stay with us. first, it was the n.s.a., and now the c.i.a. the intelligence agency reportedly paying at&t $10 million taxpayer bucks every year for your phone records. they say to help fight terror. but you still have a problem. why is that? n.s.a., c.i.a. and just like the t.s.a., this is security theater. this is the government fighting a real war against americans on honest law abiding american and unofficial war against the enemies, a decade plus after
computer read area code 202. that s washington, d.c. martin gellman broke the story. so it s an innocent mistake. it demonstrates however, the ease of which the nsa either by accidental or can pull in volumes of communications. mistakes reflect a tiny fraction of their operations but they say they take every mistake seriously. shepard? shepard: wendell goler from martha s vineyard tonight. more people think that the nsa surveillance program will hurt americans than it will help catch terrorists. we conducted a poll last month long before today s revelation. 47 percent said they thought the snooping would hurt. compare that to 41% who believe it would help fight terror. in egypt, the muslim brotherhood s day of rage has left dozens more dead in the streets of the capital.
minutes. a prison official reportedly ordered the suicide watch as a precaution. powerful reaction from his angry defenders and fans and from the alleged victim. first a look at the other stories we re drilling down on tonight. the nba is a tough game. look at that. but the tough es guy in the league may never have scored a point. the guy in charge of the phoenix suns comes out of the closet and into the arena. and want to take on the bad guys? ask a new york attorney general. no, not that one. the new one. that may be the only way to get the wall street banks who thought they got away with it. i think it should be unacceptable to everyone in the united states. then, friend or foe? which one is pakistan? as new revelations emerge, e.d. hill asks can our enemy s enemy ever be trusted again? now for our headliner segment. what happened inside that hotel room? only two people know. one is sitting in a jail cell. the other one-a hotel maid, is in hiding. she is a widow
officials and families with anything more than political retribution, here in america, we settled our political differences at the ballot box. up to ten members of congress threatened as a result of their votes on healthcare insurance reform overhaul. more from capitol hill police as it comes in. they re treating investigating now and threats against members of congress s lives. it s a criminal act and they re not going to tolerate it you. heard of pepper spray. you sprayed it in the 80s. every woman had it in their purse. think of elevating pepper, pepper spray, into the sort of thing use today fight terror. a pepper who hot is acts like a hand grenade. think of it. we ll get the the heat is on and we ll show you how this new pepper weapon could work. that s next.