Transcripts For FOXNEWSW Americas News HQ 20170525 : compare

Transcripts For FOXNEWSW Americas News HQ 20170525



manchester. rick? >> reporter: stunning news from libya that the suspect may have phoned his mother and said forgive me just hours before the attack as manchester police continue with a fast and furious investigation. not revealing what they've recovered from all of those raids at homes across the city and surrounding suburbs, but saying they were, in fact, items that were very important to the investigation. also saying the arrests so far, eight of them, are significant. they include the bomber salman abedi's father and brother. salman's sister told "the wall street journal" that her brother was motivated by anger over the u.s. air strikes in syria. the british prime minister said the threat level will stay at critical. sandra, the british transpor ad to train some trains for the first time ever. >> sandra: rick, we know at this point there's growing anger over these leaks of this investigation to the u.s. media. what do you know about that? >> reporter: well, there are a lot of people in the british intelligence community who are furious about the leaks that have included the name of the suspect and crime scene photos given out to certain media including "the new york times." one british official told the ap that authorities and police in manchester have stopped sharing information with the u.s. on this investigation. in brussels, president trump released a statement saying, quote, the alleged leaks coming out of government agencies are deeply troubling. my administration will get to the bottom of this. the leaks of sensitive information pose a great threat to our national security. >> we have a special relationship with the usa. it is our deepest security partnership that we have. of course, that partnership is built on trust. part of that trust is knowing that intelligence can be shared confidently. i will be making clear to president trump today that intelligence that is shared between law enforcement agencies must remain secure. >> reporter: meanwhile, sandra, dozens of victims remain in care in area hospitals. many of them still in critical care. and the memorial here behind me continues to grow. >> sandra: rick levinthal, thank you. as rick levinthal just mentioned british prime minister theresa may confronting president trump at the nato summit about intelligence leaks to american journalists from the manchester bombing. the outrage even extending to a british police chief saying quote when the trust is built it under minds the relationships and our investigations. this damage is even greater when it coughs unauthorized disclosure of potential evidence. mean time, canada's prime minister is praising intelligence sharing among nato members and pledges to continue despite the leaks. >> canada is always focused on ensuring that the safety of canadians, of our communities and indeed working with our partners is our top priority. we will always do what is necessary to keep canadians safe, to keep our communities safe and to work with our friends and allies to keep their communities and their citizens safe. >> sandra: john bolten is the former u.s. ambassador to the united nations and fox news contributor. ambassador, thanks for being here. you heard from the president. he's reacted to these leaks, calling them deeply disturbing. british police, they are irate over this, to the point that police have stopped sharing information with the u.s. how extraordinary is this? >> it's pretty extraordinary. i share the concern of the british law enforcement offices and prime minister may. look, the british move their level of security awareness to the highest possible after the manchester attack. they put armed members of the armed forces out on the streets. they took a number of other steps. that's a clear indication they're worried that there's a possibility of one or more follow on attacks. so when you have leaks from the investigation of the manchester attack with vital information that the police and intelligence services now know, you're basically telling the other terrorists, here's some of what we know. that could lead them to modify follow-up attack or give it up because it's too risky. and that obviously, one way or the other, is going to endanger other british citizens. i'm sure they are just amazed that we can't keep our mouths shut. >> sandra: as far as president trump's handling of this, he's condemned the launch. he's called on the justice department and other relevant agencies to complete a review of this matter. he also said, quote, the culprit should be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law. will anyone be held accountable for this, ambassador? >> well, we can only hope so. my experience is it's very hard to find leakers, much less prosecute them. but i think the united states, let's try and take this out of a partisan context for a minute. we've got a severe problem of leaks from our law enforcement and intelligence agencies. and i doesn't matter whether it hurts or harms donald trump or whether it hurt or harmed barack obama. there's just too much talking going on, too much revealing classified information. and i think it's got to stop. i wish we could get bipartisan agreement. this is a priority. all i can say for president trump is some leaks come from his own political appointees. i think there's little doubt of that. he should fire some people. >> sandra: all right. ambassador, as far as the investigation into the manchester bombing, we now know this is squarely focused on libya for many reasons, of which we now know this terrorist visited there previous to the bombing and had proven ties to isis. why has isis been able to build a stronghold in libya? >> well, because after the overthrow of khadafy, state structures in libya collapsed. there is no effective national government. i'm amazed that the libyan authorities were able to detain the father and brothers of the suicide bomber. i don't know what they were foolish enough to be doing in the small amount of territory that the government effectively controls. but this is not a problem peculiar to libya. yemen has broken down, functionally. syria and iraq have all but ceased to function as states. and isis and other terrorist groups have taken advantage of this and are moving out. even if, as i hope we do, destroy the isis center they will go elsewhere as many of their people have done, to keep this terror network in western europe and the united states active. >> sandra: ambassador, the race is on to do just that, to stop this terror network. when you look at the risk that we face here at home, how confident are you, ambassador, that we can prevent an attack like that from happening here next? >> well, i don't have confidence we can prevent it. we can do a lot. i think we've done a lot. i think our defenses have improved. one of the phenomenons that isis has made clear is, they're able to recruit and train and deploy people using social media and the internet. i think they deploy them without necessarily a schedule, when they're going to activate a particular plan. that doesn't make them less dangerous. it makes them more dangerous. i don't think we've done enough to see what we can do actually to prevent these incidents. it's not enough. it's not a law enforcement matter to prosecute somebody after they've committed mass murder. our efforts should be to win this war and prevent the terrorist acts from taking place in the first place. >> sandra: all right, ambassador, thanks for being here. >> thank you. >> sandra: a fox news alert. with the senate intelligence committee meeting behind closed doors at this hour on what is described as intelligence matters. meanwhile, fox news has confirmed the house intelligence committee will try to subpoena former national security adviser michael flynn as part of its own russia investigation. and now a report from "the new york times" that russians talked about how to influence donald trump through his advisers. peter ducey is following the twists and turns of this crazy story live on capitol hill for us. peter, why are some members of the intelligence committee urging caution with this new york times report? >> reporter: sandra, i have spoken to multiple members of the senate intel committee about this. one republican, senator james langford from oklahoma, tells me that the reason for caution is there have been a lot of reports about people in russia wanting to interfere with the election or interfere with campaign staffers, including in this case n this report's case, paul manafort and michael flynn. so far there have been no reports about americans trying to coordinate anything illegal with the russians. >> what they have yet to be able to show is individuals within the american government or any american was trying to reach back out to the russians to say, yes, we want to help. that's very different than the russians trying to reach towards us. >> reporter: i spoke separately to the top democrat on this committee, mark warner from virginia, who spoke about the leak that led to this story and the leaks that have led to many other stories. he said the leaks must be prosecuted -- rather the leaks must be pursued and the leakers must be prosecuted. sandra? >> sandra: do members of the intel committee have any idea what may be coming next in their russia investigation? >> reporter: sandra, one democrat on the committee, ron wyden, from oregon, told me he thinks what's next for these white house staffers who keep being leaked about may be big legal fees. >> press reports indicate that a lot of shoes may be dropping. and as i understand it, the president may have hired counsel and if these press reports are right, those lawyers may have a full closet to deal with. >> reporter: and right now ahead of the holiday weekend, the senate intel committee is meeting behind closed doors here in the heart office building, the heart senate office building. we're hoping to catch some democrats and republicans on their way out to see if anything maybe not classified that they can fill us in on before they all leave town. sandra? >> sandra: all right, peter. thank you. fox news alert. an appeals court weighing in on the president's travel ban. this just happening moments ago. the ruling coming just a short time after the bombing in manchester, england. plus, president trump scores a diplomatic victory at the nato summit in brussels, as he works to rally world leaders around a common cause. >> my travels and meetings have given me renewed hope that nations of many faiths can unite to defeat terrorism, a common threat to all of humanity. tech: when your windshield needs to be fixed... trust safelite autoglass. for these parents, driving around was the only way to get their baby to sleep. so when their windshield got cracked... customer: we can't drive this car. tech: ...they wanted it fixed right. so they scheduled with safelite. our exclusive trueseal technology means a strong, reliable bond, every time. at safelite, we stand behind our work. bye, bye. because the ones you love, sit behind it. 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>> reporter: sandra, good afternoon. top republicans are saying the status quo, obamacare is not sustainable so the senate majority leader is challenging democrats to step up. >> senate republicans are working together to move past the problems of obamacare and to help those who have been hurt by it. democrats have already effectively conceded, effectively conceded, that obamacare has failed. now the question is, will they work with us to actually fix this mess? or will they waste more time in some futile attempt to now redirect blame? >> reporter: democrats have said they're willing to improve obamacare. most republicans say they want to scrap obamacare. so right there is a fundamental issue. sandra? >> sandra: mike what are those on the other side saying about people attacking the accuracy of the cbo? an argument we've heard for quite some time. they didn't get it right with obamacare. >> reporter: that's right. and we had quite a showdown in a senate committee today between vermont senator bernie sanders and mick mulvaney over the credibility of the cbo. senator sanders noted it was a republican who picked the current cbo director, dr. tom price. >> your opinion is that the results are terrible. i am suggesting that it was a member of the trump administration who appointed this gentle man. not some kind of radical democrat. >> so we can agree the cbo puts out bad data? >> no, we can't. we can agree that you are beating up a man you appointed because you don't like his results. >> reporter: with lawmakers leaving town for the holiday, they can expect to get an earful from their constituents about health care now and looking forward. >> sandra: mike emanuel, thank you. turning point in the war on terror. what president trump said before today's meeting with nato while he was in saudi arabia that marked a major shift in u.s. foreign policy. plus, drama on the high seas as the u.s. war ship challenges china. managing blood sugar is not a marathon. it's a series of smart choices. and when you replace one meal or snack a day with glucerna made with carbsteady to help minimize blood sugar spikes you can really feel it. glucerna. everyday progress. amanda's mom's appointment hello mom. just got rescheduled - for today. amanda needs right at home. our customized care plans provide as much - or as little help - as her mom requires. whether it's a ride to the doctor or help around the house. oh, of course! tom, i am really sorry. i've gotta go. look, call right at home. get the right care. right at home. mattress firmness? enter sleep number... she likes the bed soft. he's more hardcore. you can both adjust the bed for the best sleep of your life. save $700 on go to sleepnumber.com for a store near you. >> sandra: a fox news alert. the u.s. appeals court in the 4th circuit upheld a ruling to block president trump's travel ban. the first appeal court to rule on the revised ban. doug mcelway is here for us. what more do you have from the washington bureau from us? what more do you have on this? it's just breaking. >> it is, sandra. when this was argued by the court of appeals on may 8th, 13 of the 15 judges on the court were present at the time. majority appointed by democratic presidents. the central issue and the arguments that were heard that day were comments that then candidate trump made on numerous occasions on the campaign trail that pointed to a defacto muslim ban and upholding the district court's decision to halt this executive order, the ban, the 4th circuit noted that the text of president trump's executive order, quote, and i'm reading from the opinion today, speaks with vague words of national security but in context drifts with religious intolerance and discrimination. they added in the opinion, quoting again, on balance, we cannot say that the government's asserted national security interest outweighs the competing harm of the likely -- the vote was 10-3 with two judges recusing themselves. opponents note today's opinion follows monday's terrorist attack in manchester committed by a british citizen by libyan dissent that had just returned from libya and had such a ban been in place there, although this has nothing to do with united states law, but had such a ban been in place there, that attack might not have happened. sandra, lastly, this is most certainly headed to the supreme court, but the administration may want to see what a 9th circuit court rules. that is a far left leaning court which has been overruled by the supreme court on many, many occasions. sandra, back to you. >> sandra: thank you. something president trump said sunday in saudi arabia could mark a real turning point in the war on terror. listen. >> it's a choice between two futures and it is a choice america cannot make for you. a better future is only possible if your nations drive out the terrorists and drive out the extremists. >> sandra: joining me now, ari fleisher who served as white house press secretary for george w. bush. thanks for being here. that moment went largely unnoticed. that call to action, was that more of a policy shift than many are pointing out? >> it's deeply significant for two reasons. number one, combine it with the weapons package the president sold to saudi arabia. the arab/sunni nations will take the lead in doing what they need to do, which is police their own neighborhood and stop the terrorism. they have to be the front line, not us. them. number two, it's a shift from the obama years where we aligned with iran which then met syria and hezbollah and now instead we are supporting the sunnis along egypt, saudi arabia, the gulf states and, more importantly, israel, who is working with them behind the scenes. geo political strategic realignment. >> sandra: the president meeting with nato leaders today. you and i have been talking about messaging for a long time. you are the messaging guy and have been. how is this trip going and is he getting his message out there? >> i think this has been a shining success for president trump. this is someone who has been a critic when i think he is wrong. he has a very strong anti-terrorism message. he is saying it a man would back from. but when it comes to nato, the fact of the matter is, donald trump was right from the campaign and he's right today. only 5 of the 28 nato nations are paying what they're supposed to pay to be nato members. my former predecessor, george w. bush, decades of republican presidents called nato out in private and nato never changed. don't sld trump is now changing the way we call nato out. donald trump is right. >> sandra: very interesting. according to a new fox news poll, terrorism isn't even at the top of the list as far as issues this country faces today. government spending is the government concern, 80%, followed by number two, the economy. then followed by infrastructure, war with north korea, terrorist attack, job market and russian meddling. government spending, $20 trillion in debt we are approaching this country, ari. how can the president tap into those concerns? >> you can make the case the budget he just leased is a start in doing that. that's also we need the tax reform policies he's pushing to have economic growth. say what you will rrbg this shows the upside of a presidential presidency. if he can refocus on issues like this, he could be a very successful powerful president. to the extent that he tweets and says offensive things, the firing of james comey, this is what's damaged his presidency and taken the focus off the very substantive issues the public cares about. donald trump caused himself so much of these problems. if he can refocus and stay disciplined that poll tells you why donald trump can be successful. >> sandra: does he have it in him? >> i don't know. some days he does. some days he doesn't. i'm hoping he comes back from this trip and says this is how a presidency should work. we all need to be more disciplined starteding with myself and the white house. history shows he doesn't stay to that. >> sandra: and stay on the economy. you look at these concerns facing the country today. the nation's economy, number two. almost tied with government spending. 75% said that's their biggest concern. job market was on there. on a day where the u.s. stock market is sitting at record highs, making new highs, as a matter of fact. >> none of those are the things he likes to tweet about. >> sandra: unbelievable. ari fleisher, good to see you. >> thanks. >> sandra: the u.s. navy conducting exercises in the south china sea, but it's where they're doing it that has beijing upset about it. jane griffin has it all at the pentagon. plus, president trump today lecturing nato leaders about honoring their obligation and paying their fair share. four star general jack keen here to weigh in next. >> nato made their full and complete contributions, then nato would be even stronger than it is today. ♪ depression is a tangle of multiple symptoms. ♪ that's why there's trintellix, a prescription medication for depression. trintellix may help you take a step forward in improving your depression. tell your healthcare professional right away if your depression worsens, or you have unusual changes in mood, behavior or thoughts of suicide. antidepressants can increase these in children, teens and young adults. do not take with maois. tell your healthcare professional about your medications, including migraine, psychiatric and depression medications, to avoid a potentially life-threatening condition. increased risk of bleeding or bruising may occur, especially if taken with nsaid pain relievers, aspirin or blood thinners. manic episodes or vision problems may occur in some people. may cause low sodium levels. the most common side effects were nausea, constipation and vomiting. trintellix had no significant impact on weight in clinical trials. ask your healthcare professional about trintellix. you totanobody's hurt, new car. but there will still be pain. it comes when your insurance company says they'll only pay three-quarters of what it takes to replace it. what are you supposed to do? 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>> reporter: well, that's the question, sandra, that many are asking. it comes at a time when the u.s. needs china's cooperation to curtail north korea's nuclear program. some newspaper reporters questioned whether the trump administration had forestalled these operations to secure china's help with north korea. for the first time since president trump took office an american guided missile destroyer sailed within 12nautical miles of one of china's man made islands. the uss dewey passed near the mischief reef in the spratley chain, one of three islands built by china in the past three years containing a runway and military fortify kaeugs. china began building seven islands starting in 2014 in the south china sea where $5 trillion of trade passed through these waters each year. sandra? >> sandra: what's the reaction we're seeing from china on all this? >> reporter: beijing strongly protested the u.s. action today, deploying two chinese war ships as a warning, urging the u.s. destroyer to change course. here's the spokesman for china's foreign ministry. >> translator: we urge the u.s. to correct its mistake immediately and stop provocative actions that hurt china's sovereignty and security interests so as to avoid hurting peace and stability of the region and the long-term cooperation between the two countries. >> reporter: the u.s. navy has not sailed near these contested islands since october. today they did, sandra. >> sandra: jennifer griffin, thank you. welsh president trump trying to rally nato leaders behind a common cause. one of the most serious issues facing the alliance, the rise of isis. former president obama also in europe speaking out about the crisis that has developed in syria, due in part to the spread of the islamic state. >> i look at something, a place like syria, where despite our best efforts and this is something we worked on a lot, you still have a vicious war taking place. you still have millions of people displaced, hundreds of thousands killed. as president, i did not always have the tools that i wanted to affect those kinds of changes, but at least we tried. >> sandra: a retired four star general, former vice chief of staff of the army, chairman of the institute for the study of war and a fox news military analyst. general keen, good to see you. >> good to see you, sandra. >> sandra: your reaction to what you heard from the former president on saying that he didn't always have the tools that he wanted to affect those kind of changes. talking about despite his best efforts and our country's best efforts we still have this war taking place in syria. >> let's look at what he said in the context of those people that are surrounding donald trump at the nato conference. the thing he has in common with them, they're all white. after that, believe me, the problem he's got with them, most of them lack moral and national will to defend their own people. it's actually shameful what has taken place with nato. isis has successfully conducted 32 attacks against 8 nato countries, killing hundreds of nato citizens. and you have the head of nato in "the wall street journal" today saying terrorism is threatening our values, our freedom and our very way of life. yet in the same article he said, but we're not going to be involved in combat operations against isis. that is fundamentally a lack of will. these are leaders who are not going to stand up and defend their countries. this is how far nato has dropped in terms of its effectiveness. after hundreds of people are killed, they're still not willing to ask their soldiers to risk their lives to protect their own citizens. that is the problem mr. trump has with nato. while he has financial issues with them to be sure. they're not taking up the burdens financially of supporting the alliance. the real issue that's more significant is the lack of political and moral will. >> sandra: to use your own words, general, you said isis is at war with nato, but nato is not at war with isis. >> yeah, absolutely. isis is intending, as is all radical islamists are doing is disrupt world order. one of the main stays of national world order has been the successful political and military alliance we refer to as the north atlantic treaty organization. but the leaders we have today are mere shadows of the leaders we used to have. they're not serious. they're not willing to come to grips with the world as it truly is. isis formed its sanctuary, sandra, in 2012. it grew from several hundred to 30,000 fighters when they invaded iraq in 2014. that sanctuary, that safe haven in syria should have been crushed over two years ago and it still exists today. it's shameful. >> sandra: i wanted to get your reaction, general to, the u.s. patrolling near the south china sea, the war ship, challenging china. you just heard from jennifer griffin at the pentagon. beijing is not happy. they have deployed war ships. what do you think of all this? >> we're not challenging china. last time we sailed a war ship around there was five months ago. they got some rhetoric for public relations. we have no strategy to deal with china's militarization of the east china sea and the south china sea and how they're trampling over our allies. the trump administration has got to come to grips with the china strategy to counter their aggression. regardless of what is going on in north korea. the tougher we are with china and encountering their aggression and dominating and controlling the pacific will help us with china influencing north korea. because then they know that the united states is dead serious. we need a strategy that involves push back politically, diplomatically, economically and certainly militarily. sailing a ship by every five months is not a strategy. >> sandra: all right, general ke your perspective. thank you. >> good talking to you. >> sandra: a big problem at the border that president trump said he wants to fix. drug cartels bringing cocaine, crystal meth and heroin into the u.s. the rio grande has seen double taplt of drugs in the past year, even though the number of people crossing into the country illegally has declined. national correspondent william loganess is live for us. what do you know? >> reporter: well, i can tell you president trump's rhetoric and his policies have led to a significant decline in illegal immigration. so smugglers have been forced to replace that revenue by importing more illegal drugs. >> on a typical day a few months ago you would see three, four, five rafts coming across. now, as you can see, there's not very much going on. >> reporter: but a few miles away, smugglers are busy. not moving people, but drugs. in texas, smugglers float fully loaded trucks filled with marijuana across the rio grande. this one got turned back by border patrol, forcing the driver to ditch it in the river. coworkers tried to swim back to mexico. when we were there, it happened again. so moments ago this pick up was on the u.s. side filled with marijuana. border patrol gave chase. they turned around, dumped it in the rio grande. we got ab half the marijuana. the other half went back to mexico on a raft. most pot is backpacked over the border. 81% of hard drugs cross at the ports of entry. in cars. >> we've seen tphar cot eubgs come in shaped like carrots, wine, watermelon. they'll take advantage of whatever is there. >> reporter: agents best defense walks on four legs not two. >> it doesn't really matter. cocaine, heroin. >> reporter: americans get 95% of their heroin, coke, meth from mexico. hidden in tires, bumpers and buckets. the rio grande valley, seizures have more than doubled from last year. >> they need to make their profits somewhere. now they're trying to narcotics. >> reporter: so the president's budget does call for more man power, roads and fences, but the drugs are harder to stop than people, sandra. especially because u.s. demand is increasing. i'm told we stop less than 50% of all drugs crossing the border. >> sandra: thank you. $18 million and counting. the runoff race for a house seat setting a spending record. so who's ahead? plus this -- >> there is no time where a physical altercation should occur with the press or just between human beings. so that is wrong and it should not have happened. should the gentle man apologize? yeah, i think he should apologize. >> sandra: a candidate in montana sparking calls for an apology. he was supposed to be here right about now. so could it cost him the race? i joined the army in july of '98. i did active duty 11 years. and two in the reserves. our 18 year old was in an accident. when i call usaa it was that voice asking me, "is your daughter ok?" that's where i felt relief. it actually helped to know that somebody else cared and wanted make sure that i was okay. that was really great. we're the rivera family, and we will be with usaa for life. usaa. we know what it means to serve. call today to talk about your insurance needs. ♪ the sun'll come out for people with heart failure, tomorrow is not a given. but entresto is a medicine that helps make more tomorrows possible. ♪ tomorrow, tomorrow... ♪ i love ya, tomorrow in the largest heart failure study ever, entresto helped more people stay alive and out of the hospital than a leading heart failure medicine. women who are pregnant must not take entresto. it can cause harm or death to an unborn baby. don't take entresto with an ace inhibitor or aliskiren. if you've had angioedema while taking an ace or arb medicine, don't take entresto. the most serious side effects are angioedema, low blood pressure... ...kidney problems, or high potassium in your blood. ♪ tomorrow, tomorrow i love ya, tomorrow ♪ ask your heart doctor about entresto. and help make tomorrow possible. ♪ you're only a day away. rthat post lunch, post dinner, i need something sweet craving. new sargento sweet balanced breaks, natural cheese on one side, and sweetness on the other. new sargento sweet balanced breaks, find it in our cheese section. >> much more ahead on the report out of "the new york times" that claims top russian officials bragged that they could use donald trump's own advisers to influence them and the 2016 election. we'll have reaction from members of the senate intelligence committee that is leading its own russian investigation. that's top of the hour on shepard smith reporting. see you then. >> sandra: welsh a runoff race in georgia closer than expected. and the most expensive in history. democrat john osoff running a tight race formerly held by tom price who is now secretary of health and human services. he's battling karen handle in a very closely watched race where both parties had the potential bell weather for the 2018 midterm election. outside groups pouring more than $18 million into that contest. from georgia to montana, the race for a seat on capitol hill takes an unexpected turn when a republican candidate attacks a news reporter. the whole thing was witnessed by a fox news crew. >> i'll talk to you about that later. >> there's not going to be time. >> sick and tired of you guys! the last time that came in here did the same thing. get the hell outta here. the last time you did the same thing. are you with the guardian? >> yes. you just broke my glasses. >> last guy did the same thing. >> you body slammed me and broke my glasses. >> sandra: he was actually scheduled to be on our show today, but he cancelled, saying he wasn't going to do any national interviews at all today. what did you witness last night exactly? >> hi, sandra. well, i was standing about two to three feet from those men when that started. we were setting up for an interview. i say we, i mean our photographer and our field producer both work for fox news. we were setting up. this is the headquarters for his campaign here. we just started talking about just general small talk exchange before you do an interview. two minutes into that, that's when ben jacobs from the guardian came in. he was recording. he had his recorder. he put his recorder up, as you just heard, started asking about the cbo score. mr. giaforte verbally said later. and then jacobs kind of kept going. and that's when gianforte put both hands -- i saw both hands on his neck area, grabbed him, kind of pulled him and slammed him to the ground, jumped on him and started punching him two or three times saying, i'm sick and tired of this. something to that effect. finally jacobs scrambled away and he grabbed his glasses and said, you broke my glasses and you body slammed me. he said he wanted to call the cops. mr. giaforte apologized to us. the authorities were called. we spent about three hours with sheriff deputies here talking about -- doing our witness statement. >> sandra: he was supposed to be on this program today, but he did cancel interviews. so we're still left wondering what all this means for the race and could it cost him the election? >> that's the question on everyone's mind at this point. it's not something that i have the answer to, but i will tell you that the voters of montana have been voting for about four weeks now, sending in their absentee votes. as of this morning 37% had already turned in their ballots. under law here, they cannot change their vote even if they wanted to. there is a big question of what will happen. this has been a tense race here with the democrat. as a result of what happened yesterday and this morning mr. giaforte woke up to three different endorsements by the three biggest newspapers here in the state. they had rescinded those endorsements. so that's where things stand tonight. the polls here, sandra, close at 8 p.m. mountain time. hopefully, we'll have those results near after. >> sandra: quickly changing story. thank you. well, amazon is going back to the basics, they say, at a time when more and more retailers are turning to the internet for sales. the internet giant is doing the opposite. welcome to the amazon store. plus this -- >> i don't think it's fully sunk in how really bad that could have been. i know it's not the right decision, but it was my gut instinct. >> sandra: how that woman sprang into action during a carjacking to save her car. boost. it's about moving forward, not back. it's looking up, not down. it's being in motion. in body, in spirit, in the now. boost® high protein it's intelligent nutrition with 15 grams of protein and 26 vitamins and minerals. for when you need a little extra. boost® the number one high protein complete nutritional drink. be up for it ayou don't have to choose just one thing. choose your trio with any 3 of 9 selections for $15.99. like new creamy lobster pasta toasted parmesan shrimp and southern-style crab cakes. come create your trio before it ends. mmmm. mmmm. mmmm... ugh. nothing spoils a moment like heartburn. try new alka-seltzer ultra strength heartburn relief chews. it's fast, powerful relief with no chalky taste. [ sings high note ] ultra strength, new from alka-seltzer. enjoy the relief. >> sandra: file this under do not try this at home. a woman in wisconsin prevents a carjacking by jumping onto the hood of her car. it was all caught on surveillance video. >> this is not happening to me today. ran around, got on the car, grabbed on to my windshield wipers and didn't let go. >> sandra: yes. don't try this at home. eventually the teen jumped out, left the car in gear. smith had to chase it. the thief took off with her purse, her phone, but not the car. milwaukee police say smith should have just called 911 but are glad that she's okay. hmm. all right. after 20 years of selling stuff online, amazon getting into the book business again. actual bookstores that is with walls, a ceiling, shelves lined with best sellers. amazon has opened several earth bound locations including its first in new york city today. fox business network's tracy krosco is live from the amazon store in midtown manhattan. seems like the opposite direction things have been going. >> reporter: it really is. things have been shutting down, these bookstores, but here we are at a store opening up. 20 years ago amazon turned the book industry upside down. i want to show you exactly what they're doing here. this store is driven by databased on their website. so all of the books here all have ratings from the website. they are all also cover-ups so customers can come in and see exactly what they're getting. now, the other interesting thing as far as price. now, there are no price tags on the books. so you come up to one of the scanners, put the book underneath. you can see prime members, they pay one price. if you're not a prime member, you pay the list price. also, you can pay with the amazon app, you can pay with credit cards. no cash is allowed. we asked an amazon executive why the decision to open up a store when their website is doing so well? this is what she had to say. >> we knew that we could take 20 years of online book selling experience, we have lots of information ab how customers read, why they read, what they read. we wanted to bring that into a physical space, into a store, to help customers discover books that they would love. >> reporter: now, there are also leck tropbices out here on sale, there are tech experts that will help you out. the one interesting thing, there are no chair, no areas, so people aren't really encouraged to kind of linger around here. so as you can see, it's a pretty busy opening day. sandra. >> sandra: that's such a good point. they don't want them sitting there with their coffee getting too comfortable. buy the book. tracy, thank you. one, two, three, four, i declare a thumb war. the president's getting dropped for his overseas trip, props, i'm sorry, from both sides of the aisle. the only moment of tension so far may be this handshake. we'll let you decide who won. and then there's this -- >> the officer came up and he said, mister, are you aware that there's a body on your trunk? 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