received suspicious packages or letter with a white powder inside and police respond and hazmat teams respond and the fbi roz joint terrorism task force shows up there s going to be news reports and that happened today. all this stuff was in fact harmless. there will seven envelopes sent to the seven hotels near metlife stadium in new jersey. all had a harmless household product like corn starch or baking soda inside the envelope. so a whole lot of nothing here but of course the police and the fbi and take these things seriously and had to check it out. they did. turned out to be harmless. i wonder if somebody can be charged with that absolutely. they can? what would they be charged with? absolutely. well, insome sort of terrorism-related charge. making a threatening sending a threat through the mail is a charge. could be a state charge or a federal charge. okay. what about giuliani? the former mayor of new york received one of these letters.
we ll show you some new evidence in that case. a popular household product that could be dangerous for small children. what the government is warning and why. well, stocks, hitting record highs this week. the dow rocketing through the 16,000 mark and the s&p passing the 1800 barrier for the first time ever! but not everyone is optimistic about it. veteran investor carl icahn expressed concerns over the gains. lauren simonetti of fox business breaks it all down for us. lauren? he did. hi, jon. we re seeing caution in the markets today sparked by what 77-year-old activist investor carl icahn said yesterday. he told a reuters conference that stock prices seem out of step with reality warning that the market could see a big drop because earnings at many companies have been gooseed by low borrowing costs and that is courtesy of the fed. the federal reserve has been praised and criticized for their easy money policies. a big reason for dow 16,000 and
coming up, a common household product is actually starting fires without a spark. we;ll tell you what it is and how you can keep your home safe. first, the story of a spy, a terrorist, and the wife whose shopping habits may have exposed the entire operation. you re watching world news now. announcer: world news now weather brought to you by united health care. announcer: world news now weather brought to you by united health care. 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 plans, they pick up some of what medicare doesn t pay. and save you up to thousands of dollars in out-of-pocket costs. call today to request a free decision guide
a way they say is and can be respectful of civil rights laws and of course the supreme court could give them that chance, jenna, those who oppose the bill say they will be here to continue to basically influence public opinion, because of course, what happens in court is irrelevant, or at least what they do here today will not influence what happens in court in one way or another. jenna: a few more weeks before we get that decision. we ll continue to watch the story, william, thank you very much. rick: quick break and when we come back, there s a dangerous new trend among teenagers that all parents need to know about, a commonly used household product that you probably have in your house right now that kids may be using to get high. we ll talk about it. plus police in to hisson, planning to wrap you an intense search for a missing six-year-old girl, what they found and what it means for finding little isabel ist bell cellis. we ll tell you.
was chloroform in the car. it was never actually proven. bill: you have high level forensics experts come in and say with certainty, i heard them say it, there was chloroform residue in the trunk of casey anthony s car. so their experts, the best in their field, they come in and they say it. then we have an accusation from or a statement from casey anthony s mother that she herself had researched chloroform. that turned out to be a lie and it looked like she was covering for her daughter there. let s deal with the residue first. did you not believe it? i believed it when the guy said there was chloroform residue in the car or trunk. i believed it. should i notster? i believed it. however, there was testimony that that chloroform or residue could have come from a household product that does include chloroform? bill: like what? any laundry detergent has