radio here in new york. i m not concerned because i have nothing to hide. no one has ever claimed that i ve done anything wrong because i never did. i never worked with any russians. i have never spoke to any russians that i m aware of. i have nothing to hide, and what i want to do is make sure that if anybody did collude or cooperate to try to impact the outcome of a u.s. election, those people spend the rest of their lives in jail. here to talk about this, jennifer rogers, former u.s. assistant attorney, now director of the law school for public integrity. and chris watts, former fbi special agent formerly with the joint terror task force, currently a security analyst, welcome both of you. clint, what does it mean for the investigation, that the house prong of this is getting potentially these three names in short order? what s interesting about it is you get a preview of what
if anybody did collude or cooperate to try to impact the outcome of a u.s. election, those people spend the rest of their lives in jail. here to talk about this, jennifer rogers, former u.s. assistant attorney, now director of the law school for public integrity. and chris watts, former fbi special agent formerly with the joint terror task force, currently a security analyst, welcome both of you. clint, what does it mean for the investigation, that the house prong of this is getting potentially these three names in short order? what s interesting about it is you get a preview of what they re going to say. really this all comes down to
initial conclusion, john, is what we reported early sere ties an accident, not terrorism. but in looking at this response, you see the joint terror task force would respond that there is an injured person that could be trapped under a vehicle. they re moving us back now. they re establishing an even greater perimeter saying at least 1,000 feet because they do have an explosive squad coming in just to check things out. i know jonathan says at this point they re looking at it as an accident and not terror. we re told they are bringing in explosive teams to try and just double-check and make sure there
the hospital perhaps in serious condition. molly: greg talcott, thank you. gregg: so the question now is how do you track down this guy who allegedly had contact with an isis recruiter and is known to have used at least six aliases in the past? rob o neill joins us, former navy seal who tracked down and killed osama bin laden back in 2011. good to see you. thanks for having me. gregg: so there s 100,000 euro reward for this guy, an intense manhunt. what s the likelihood he ll be caught x how do they do that? i m thinking he ll get caught. they need to step up their surveillance a little bit. germny s germany doesn t have a lot of cameras in places, and they re really worried about civil rights as far as who you can surveil. i m hoping they get a joint terror task force where they can whom he was speaking about being radicalized, the i moms. i m hoping imams.
on maximum alert as an international manhunt continues for the world s most wanted fugitive tied to the paris attacks. friends say salah abdeslam the eighth attacker who ran to brussels after the attack and he is now reportedly hiding there, telling people he d, quote, love to be with isis, his isis friends in syria. paris police believe there may have been a ninth attacker. ed? despite all this, the u.s. is not on any sort of terror alert. in fact the national terrorism advisory system has not issued any asserts since it started in 2011. how much does the public know about terror threats and how much of a responsibility does the government have to tell us? here to discuss former new york director of homeland security, former secret service agent and former fbi of the joint terror task force and retired lieutenant commander with the office of naval intelligence. good morning, kind of sort through fact and fiction right now. americans waking up to severe threats all around the world.