and i just pray that they find comfort and they find healing. bill: a lot of emotion there. jennifer reardon died of blunt force trauma. she was only 43, executive at wells fargo. she was also the mother of two children. wow. president trump: there has been no collusion. they won t find any collusion. it doesn t exist. as far as the two gentlemen you told me about, they ve been saying i m going to get rid of them for the last three months, four months, five months, and they are still here. sandra: that was president trump pushing back against speculation he plans to fire special counsel robert mueller or deputy attorney general rod rosenstein. ohio congressman brad wenstrup
quite a scare. delta says passengers were put on a different flight so thankfully everybody is okay. sandra: what have we learned about how that fatality was caused on tuesday s southwest flight? spokesperson for the philadelphia department of public health confirmed reardon s cause of death was blunt impact trauma. her death is listed as an accident. blade number 24 had come off that engine which caused it to explode. the debris smashed the window seated next to her and she was struck in the head by the debris. the faa is ordering inspections on these types of engines because it has happened before with a blade breaking off. sandra: so tragic. thank you, julie. bill: the clock can be ticking on the controversial iran nuclear deal. president trump said he could walk away from it but a different picture from north korea. the president talking up the
of the pressure that this captain was under. about 20 minutes into the flight, i hear a loud boom. as you can imagine, everyone on the plane was kind of zoned out and doing their own thing and you hear this boom and i think everybody s thoughts were, did you just hear that? martha: that s terrifying. it is and that s heartbreaking even though they brought the plane down safely and save all those lives, it s just so tragic for that young woman to have died. i know tammy joe feels so much sadness and her crew does, but also thankful that all of those other people made it out alive. martha: it could have been so much worse. all of us look at jennifer reardon and you feel for her. she was on a business trip, she wants to get home to her kids,
martha: today, airlines across america are busy checking the fan blades on their planes. there is talk that perhaps only a sort of sonogram machine inspection could really detect the where that led to the boeing 737 shredding an engine and sending shrapnel flying and piercing a window and that killed passenger jennifer reardon, what a sad story. she had two small children that she left behind. tim mcginty, a texas firefighter andrew needham helped to pull her back through the window. they tried valiantly to save he her. i felt a calling to get up and do something, stand up and act. anyways, at that time, i went to the rear of the plane. what took place back there, i m
nobody was hurt. this as the ntsb investigates yesterday s nightmare. jennifer reardon, a banking executive and mother was killed after engine failure caused shrapnel to break a window on board a 737. the aircraft made an emergency landing in florida. the pilot, tammie jo schultz being praised for preventing this to become worse. a full report coming up at 11:30 eastern time. extremely dangerous weather conditions fuelling fast-moving wild fires in western oklahoma. how firefighters are battling the flames. plus, a divide in the golden state. san diego county backing president trump in his suit against california s sanctuary laws. why more californians are taking sides. it was a big day for san diego. today marks the day that we sent