at 5:00 eastern. [bright totone] - i want some! - it s the monopoly game, only at mcdonald s! with over 50 million prizes, it s supersized excitement. - mononopoly. do not p pass go. gogo directly y to mcdonala. - ifif you were e around back in n the 90s... - nonow at mcdononald s, momonopoly is s more than n a g! yoyou can playay it. - you u heard it e everywhe. - - the game m monopoly is bacack at mcdononald s, bigger and better ththan eve. - - this year,r, there s more p prizes thanan . - - mcdonald s s ran the monopopoly game for year. - hey,y, collect the righght game pieieces.. - and win $2 millionon. - - [gasps] - but no o one. knew t the truth a about the game b being playeyed. no one.. [ been c caught steaealing by jane e s addictioion] - peopople everywhwhere arare winning g big! - i ve bebeen cacaught stealaling once whenen i was fivive i enjoy s stealing - the mcdodonald s pririzes cocould be carars, boatats, $100,00000 upup to the mimillion dolll.
but they are trained in how to use the device and where to be for maximum effect to kill as many people as possible. reporter: a view of the ied is under review and the shrapnel is considered a vital clue in this case because investigators are tracing it back to manufacturers. they can ultimately identify where it was sold, shannon. shannon: that will give them some good clues, we hope. now, what are we hearing about the father s potential connection to terrorist groups? reporter: counter terrorism told fox the father is a member of the lisg, this is the libyan islamic fighting group. that is an al qaeda affiliate in libya. it really goes back to that period around the fall of the libyan dictator moammar khadafy. at that time the group splintered off with some members being loyal to al qaeda and others joining isis in libya. there s potentially another important tie to manchester. this memo shows that in 2014, a
if they are this bright, then this is dangerous, a sign of where we are headed. eric: and jamila, you know, uc berkeley claims to be the birthplace of free speech. the free speech on milo s part, he wasn t allowed to get up and speak. he wasn t allowed to get up and read a list of illegals and get up and give information so that those that would do harm to such students could find them. could find their professors. find their families and friend. that s what they were protesting. eric: so let me repeat your words. so let me repeat your words. he wasn t allowed to read a lisg or give information.ea he wasn t allowed to do that. yet the protesters were allowed to be riotous and violent. horace? yeah. this is an argument that somehow something someone is going to say gives me a heckler s veto not just to interject myself but to burn the place down, to threaten and assault and attack people.
was founded in 1995 to set up an islamist state or emirate inside libya, u.s. state department has designated the lifg a terrorist organization with links to al-qaeda, belhaaj fought against the soviets in 19 199 #, he lived and travels to 22 countries, including pakistan, turkey and the sudan, was arrested in malaysia in 22 on 20044 and later imprisoned in libya as part of a rehabilitation program. military analysts say bahaaj underscores a larger problem we don t know who s going to be in charge of the overall government. by all accounts right now, the very fabric of society is falling apart, and this is where we got in trouble in iraq. reporter: for context, the lisg claimed in march it was supporting the revolt against qaddafi and now under the national transitional council. then the lsig rebranded
yets he worked as a faulk driver for one of the companies in sudan. that, he became a military commander for the libyan islamic fighting group, lisg, which but banned as al-qaeda affiliate. the lisg provided one of the key lifelines for the insurgency in iraq. from 2003 to today. we know that libya was leading source of jihadi. reporter: after guantanamo, he transferred to prison with he was released by muammar gaddafi as part of a prisoner amnesty. before the transfer, the documents state the libyan government considers detainee a dangerous man with no qualms about committing terrorist acts. as the u.s. government and nato throws more is up port behind the rebels the white house spokesman said there was more to learn. we don t know the mote is motives or politics of every member of the opposition in that country. reporter: opposition now are against the libyan leader but if gaddafi goes no one knows the true intention and whether the goal is islamic