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tv   The Five  FOX News  October 24, 2014 1:00am-2:01am PDT

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jogging and a restaurant. there is going to be a lot of tracing coming up. stay tuned a special edition of the "kelly fififififile" is com next, thanks for joining us. >> and our continuing coverage of these two major breaking news continues now. first, what may have been a lone wolf terrorist attack in new york city. this is surveillance video of the suspect just moments before he ambushed two police officers with an axe. those two police officers have been hospitalized with arm and head injuries the most severe is listed as critical but stage the suspect shot and killed by police and tonight the authorities are not ruling out lone wolf terrorism. more on this developing story in just moments. also breaking tonight another confirmed case of ebola in america the first-ever case in new york city. the 34-year-old patient five
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days ago and a popular bowling ally. today, including a 103 degree fever. hazmat teams transporting him to bellevue hospital he remains in isolation and a short time ago, new york state governor cuomo sought to calm fears >> we're hoping it didn't happen but this is new york people come to new york ñ new york airports. so we kpt say this is unexpected. >> trace ghallager is live with the latest. trace? >> and megyn we have learned doctor spencer got to guinea in mid september working in guinea treating ebola patients. he says hecuvs# does not believ protective gear had been breeched he left guinea october 14th,
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arriving at jfk airport october 17th. new york authorities say he came in direct contact with very few people, but that could be largely unknown. here is why. dr. spencer says he began feeling sluggish tuesday of this week. he says he did not have a fever but yesterday, went for a three-mile jog. later took the subway. three different trains to brooklyn. he went to a bowling alley he says at the time he felt fine except for some fatigue. he took uber back home, uber says the cdc and new york health department told them that neither the driver or subsequent passengers were at risk. it's important to note he may not have come into contact with many people, but on dry surfaces ebola can live several hours. in body fluids can live several days and the disease can be transmitted by sweat. the cdc said that people being
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monitored for ebola should not be on airplanes well, what about subways? and taxi cabs? dr. spencer says it wasn't until 10:00 or 11:00 this morning until he experienced fever. >> emf brought him in with proper protective gear. he was brought to the isolation area that bellevue hospital established for patients who could have ebola. >> dr. spencer has acknowledged being in close contact with his fiancee and two close friends, those people are being quarantined but so far showing no symptoms. >> trace, thank you the first case in new york city is confirmed from a doctor that treated patients in west africa. the kelly file on what the cdc recommends one should do if one has been treating ebola patients in west africa, then returning to the united states. first, quote, if you have been exposed to ebola but are not
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sick you'll have to arrange a charter flight home orh]™ stay westto6rñ africa for 21 days un authorities assure it's safe to travel once you're home, monitor your health, 21 days if you were in an area with an ebola outbreak. during the time, you can continue yournn including work. continue your normal activities. but here is the last word. latest word from the cdc. according to the public health authorities, guidelines do not go into affect until this coming monday, the 27th of october. what? are you as confused as i am? dr. manyr,c phone. good of you to be here. here is the bottom line. self monitor is the protocol even if you're a doctor treating patients.
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congratulationses from the new york state governor that this system apparently works. well, the system may;m picking the guy up in hazmat outfits, but did it work when you have a guy who has 103 degree fever, diarrhea and vom knitting this.3saz morning at 1 a.m bowling and on subways and using an uber cab 12 hours earlier in manhattan in new york city? >> i prays-÷ he gets better bu highly irresponsible the word is irresponsible. he should have known as a that if he was in west africa, taking care of patients with ebola, how contagious ebola is. upon registering with the health department if he chose to, he should have stayed home, and self quarantined in the highest level. as a doctor, i'm sorry,
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irresponsible. also is the guidelines of the cdc when it comes to all of this self kwauren teevenlt who is going to monitor? listen. 21 days, doesn't seem like a long many days but people get cabin fever. of course, you know human spirit takes over you want to do whatever you want to do. you're going to do things like go out, bowling and go out maybe to dinner. and? n.a city like new york this is very problematic. people travel in subways streets are very crowded a lot of intimacy between people in new york city i call this doctor and i pray for his health but he was irresponsible. >> now? to what extent are the people in new york city in need of concern tonight? he authorities are telling us -- here is dr. seigel
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telling us not to worry. there he is. hey, doc. they're telling us if situation has been contained and he wasn't symptom mattic while running around doing a bowling alley. yet, you hear though symptoms and fever is a tell sale symptom you might be contagious ifuj2kd don't have a fever. >> one of the -- that is true. you know? listen, i hope, i pray symptoms were within 24 hours and he realized he was not heading in the right direction'#j' that h self quarantined again. he went out wednesday afternoon or wednesday night. whatever the casewxu may be. look. right now, those people thatrxe came into contact with will need to be quarantined. you know? health inspectors will be monitoring their conditions and we'll go through the same tri e triaging dozens of people,
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thousands of dollars of cost over again. but listen. not keep repeating these issues of people not realizing that they're infectious. protocols need to be ?- if the president is not going to call for a travel ban, fine. if people are going to come from that part of the world, going to come to cities like new york or any other metropolitan city, better accountability has to be made people who are at risk for those 21 days, someone, something has to monitor their quarantine they have to be kept m a place they know where they are. >> we realize there ain't no quarantine. thank you. >> you got it. >> officials say dr. k4kwspenced everything he was supposed to do, house oversight subcommittee chairman tim murphy tonight is urging the cdc and the president
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to follow his recommendation. for a mandatory 21 day quarantine period for health workers when those doctors come home. congressman thank you for being with us here today. does that >> yes. i think it might need to be closer to 42 days. people who are already infected  into a
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places? these are things people are concerned about. >> we've got to be calm, cool, collective. odds are nobody is -- you're not going get it but this person went running, went on a jog is one of the reports. it is transferred by sweat that can be left and actually could be contanlus several hours in that sweat. again this is a doctor with the biggest heart in the world. don't you love a person who goes to africa to fight ebola? but for the public good you're
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going to have to get more stringe stringent. there should be a travel ban. iñ you've come into contact you're going to have to go through mandatory quarantine. >> what is wrong with that? is it price you pay for doing such a good deed? there are financial issues as well. perhaps medical facilities in order to encourage this work. you can see the scares the people he was in quarantine with are in danger, and the average person doesn't understand the nuances. thank you. good to see you. >> thank you. >> we're going to follow that hearing tomorrow, we'll have breaking news on that as it
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comes in tomorrow during the day, then, full coverage tomorrow night on "kelly file". and also, a different threat here in new york city we learn a man took a hashit to a group of nypd officers today has been expressing seriously radical views on social media sometime. wait until you hear what we have now uncovered. plus, more breaking developments > diagnosed with eeb yoela. up next a report from outside of the bowling alley where the doctor was just 12 hours before reporting his symptoms. >> every hospital in the city is prepared in the event other patttttt
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the doctor went to two separate bowling alleys. fox reporter joey walledon filed this report. >> this is the bowling alley just a stone's throw from mid town manhattan. this was a concert scheduled here but manager came down and said it was being cancelled due to unforeseen circumstances now, those circumstances are clearer the department of health in new york city saying dr. craig spencer bowled here last night and because of that, the bowling alley is closed dr. spencer used an on demand car service, uber. to get around the city this, is not the only place he stopped he stopped at avenue here in new york city. there are concert goers going to see a show there
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the department of health says out of caution, they're send sending a team of health care professionals here to the area to make sure things in fact okay. >> joining me now with more is dr. mark seigel. following the city for us all night. dr. seigel, as we have seen here moments ago, we just got a to have day. finish your regular course of certain drugs. be within symptoms of fever. contact us if there is any symptom that's develop. but it begs a question whether those are adequate.
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>> i don't think they are. because when you stay in contact with an ebola patient who is very sick, you're in contact with a lot ofzy?ñ secretions, i don't see any reasons why health care workers won'ts6cdñ quarant themselves for 21 days. that is number one. and there is nowhere in evidence making statements. what about the head of health and human services? the cdc made excuse after excuse. but i'll tell you one thing. this doctor may have put a lot of people at risk though remote risk byxúu traveling around th city on taxi cabs and bowling, jogging. but for new york city, the
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response has been extraordinary. new york city has a hazardous materials tactical unit. they picked him up, brought him to bellevue hospital he's being isolated at bellevue hospital which has more experience than any other hospital in the country at treating contagious diseases and he's being isolated. let's hope health care workers taking care of him are safe. >> sure. >> so it's safe forn=1ñ new yor city so far. >> people are going to be freaked out. now, you know we're going to have people that don't want to get on the l train or a train. people aren't going to want to go and is this overreaction? is it not? >> it's overreaction, megyn.
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when you see something isn't being taken care of, you worry you're at risk. but that the fear component it's normal. it's not really scientific in the sense that people are not going to catch this from having ridden on the same subway train any more than they would have caught it from flying on the same plane as that nurse we need better protocols. >> that is the thing. to prevent natural fear coming out of such a deadly disease. doctor, thank you. we're also following another major breaking story tonight a possible lone wolf, what may be a terrorist attack. be a terrorist attack. they're saying he has a link to
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breaking tonight, what could be a terrorist attack in new york city today he launches a hatchett attack on four new york city police officers. >> we have the suspect's name but fox news confirmed he does have a felony record in california. it's unclear what for we know police are looking at his record and social media fooy print to see if there is any connection to terrorism or terror groups. the attack happened in a busy commercial district of queens a photographer asked four rookie police officers to position for a picture, a man pulled a hatchet and attacked the officers hitting one in the arm and another in the back of the head the officer is listed
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inconsiderate dal but stable condition other two officers shot and killed. one bullet hit a woman walking by. her injury not life threatening. the suspect's facebook page has been concerning content, including a statement that seems to support home grown terrorist attack reads quoting america's military is strong abroad but have never faced an internal mass revolt.
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saying what the newly confirmed case of ebola. this one in new york city. we've been preparing for the threat posed by ebola. we have clear, strong protocols followed and were followed in this instance. and bellevue hospital is especially designed for isolation and identification, treat
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it is friday, october 24th. a fox news alert. ebola now in america's largest city. a new york city doctor hospitalized, in isolation. the big question now, who else is at risk? good morning. welcome to an early edition of "fox and friends" first this morning. >> more on the ebola patient in
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new york city just in a moment here. but first we begin with another fox news alert. a terrifying ax attack on new york city police officers in what could be a lone wolf terror attack. a hatchet-wielding man charging two nypd officers, slicing one's arm and hitting the other in the back of the head. two other officers opened fire, killing that suspect right there on the scene. that man identified in multiple reports as zale thompson, a 32-year-old from queens believed to be a muslim with ties to radical islam. the fbi now joining the investigation after detectives find what's believed to be his facebook page with posts about terrorism. kenneth healey, the officer hit in the head, is in critical condition at this hour. the other officer, joseph meeker, expected to be released from the hospital. a woman, a bystander, hit by a stray nypd bullet in the back, now in stable condition. >> the ax-wielding man's alleged
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facebook posts calling for a revolution on american soil. joining us is former nypd detective and private investigator thomas russkin. good morning, thanks for joining us. what are you hearing this morning? >> we know that the officer was in critical condition last night. he went through hours of surgery after being hit in the head with that ax. the other officer who tried to help him got cut on the arm. the other two officers we know fired shots that killed the suspect. >> okay, we're hearing that there were some facebook posts. i'm going to pull some of those and put those on the screen for you. let's take a look at those now. this man had been posting on facebook saying things like america's military is strong abroad but they have never faced an internal mass revolt. they are weaker at home. we are scattered and decentralized. we can use this as advantage. they are centralized and strong which can be exploited as a weakness. think of a swarm of bees that surround and attack an elephant,
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america, to death. helicopters, big military will be useless on their own soil. they will not be able to defeat our people if we use guerilla warfare, attack their weak flanks. if you get wounded who cares, if you die who cares, eventually they will surrender and then the war will be over. so what are you making of these facebook posts? >> they're definitely radical postings and they're definitely towards jihadists and al qaeda. but they're not going to the extreme of citing the koran which makes me think that he may have been what we call an edp, emotionally disturbed person, who may have picked this up. maybe after the ottawa shooting of that military seasonal who was murdered by the nut up there, the terrorist up there, this guy may have picked up and decided, take it out on some new york city police officers. >> certainly concerning, people who are self-radicalized at home in their garages. this is something that's very
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give rut. i know from my own experience it's difficult for intelligence to predict this type of attack because they're not communicating with potential groups like islamic state group isis in syria. >> as you know from your days in the intelligence division, the chances of finding a lone wolf, if they're truly a lone wolf and sitting in their garage or basement or their apartment and not communicating with anyone, communicating online, is fear to none. that is the fear of law enforcement around this country, that a lone wolf could do something to a group of people or blow themselves up, walk into a station and do something horrific, and there's very little chance that police or law enforcement could detect it before it happens. >> thank you so much for joining us this morning. we talked earlier today. see something, say something. >> sure. more now on our other fox news alert, ebola in america's biggest city. dr. craig spencer, in isolation
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at this hour at bellevue hospital in new york city after testing positive for the deadly virus. the doctor developing symptoms yesterday, a week after returning from west africa where he was treating ebola patients. just one day before that fever broke spencer was out and about in the city. he was riding the subway, taking a cab, even going bowling in brooklyn. officials now urging the public not to panic. >> we have had a full, coordinated effort that has been working literally night and day, coordinating city, state and federal resources. >> ebola is very difficult to contract. being on the same subway car or living near a person with ebola does not in itself put someone at risk. >> spencer's fiancee is quarantined at bellevue, being monitored. three others including two of his friends and a cab driver also being monitored as a precaution. the big question now, who else could be at risk?
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and how widespread could ebola get in the nation's biggest city? >> joining us now to weigh in from fox news's medical a-team, dr. mark segal, good morning. >> hi, how are you if. >> what are you hearing this morning? >> inside bellevue hospital itself was calm. there was no panic in there. people were going about business as usual. there were patients that had fevers, other patients that were having heart attacks. there wasn't a lot of the attention paid. he's upstairs in an isolation room. as is his girlfriend. but the key here is that on october 12th, looked like it was the last time that he came in contact with an ebola patient in guinea. then he returned to the united states on october 16th -- october 17th. he first started feeling symptoms on october 21st. he felt tired, fatigued. then on the 22nd, with those symptoms, he traveled on the new york city subway to the bowling alley, took a cab, was out jogging. on the 23rd he first felt his symptoms of fever, went up as high as 103.
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he was brought in by the hazard unit. it's called a tactical unit for hazardous materials that the fire department has. they have a lot of training in this. they brought him in to bellevue hospital and he was immediately isolated. i think the key here is that people will be concerned about when they can come in contact with him on the 22nd when he was already feeling symptoms of fatigue. >> dr. segal, i see a lot of problems first of all with this timeline. let's talk about when he started feeling symptoms. he felt that fever of course yesterday. but he started feeling tired and fatigued on the 21st. so technically speaking, symptoms began two days before he was actually taken to bellevue hospital and put into quarantine. he's been around his fiancee, several others, subways, uber cab, he went bowling, he ran three miles, obviously sweat during both of those physical activities. so this doctor, knowing all and well that he had been in direct contact with ebola patients in guinea, came to the united
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states and was supposedly expected to self-monitor himself? is that self-monitoring? >> julie, i agree with your view of this completely. and i have said that back in the 14th century, they understood that plague, people who took care of plague victims were supposed to isolate themselves for 14 days without contacting another single human. and it would be nice if we learned something in 700 years. reality is that he wasn't a self-isolating, with all the contact he did. to your point he already was having symptoms. it's possible that someone else could contract it in that way. although i'm much more concerned about his girlfriend and people that had closest contact in the last day once he started the fever. the more symptoms you have, the more likely you are to spread this. >> okay, thank you, dr. segal. >> we'll see you at 5:30 in an hour. a countdown to the midterms. with less than two weeks to go more and more democrats are
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distancing themselves from president obama. some even calling him "not relevant." live in washington with the latest dash from democrats. >> good morning. democrat candidates are speaking publicly and vocally about ways they disagree with the president. you of course remember the senate candidate in kentucky who famously wouldn't say if she voted for president obama. senator mark begich had a slightly different take, telling the "washington examiner" "i did but that's irrelevant. the president's not relevant. he is gone in two years." >> he certainly -- again, senator begich is entitled to his opinion. i think the vast majority of americans would agree whoever the sitting president of the united states happens to be is relevant in a lot of important ways. >> and while democrats around the country seem to enjoy the money the president brings in to fund-raisers, they don't exactly
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want him to come visit. >> why don't you want president obama to come to new hampshire and campaign with you? >> well, i never said i didn't want president obama to come and campaign. the fact is, he's busy in washington. >> do you want him to come here in these final days and campaign for you? >> we have a lot going on. i don't think it makes sense for the president to come to new hampshire right now. >> and it's not just the white house trying to answer tough questions about the president's coattails or lack thereof. yesterday congresswoman debbie wasserman schultz who serves as chair of the dnc couldn't come up with a single race to back up her claim that the president was campaigning in competitive senate races. the time is now 41 minutes after the hour and brand 95 new video just released of that masked shooter running through canada's capital city. new audio recordings from a brawl involving the palin family in september. how does the mainstream media
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react? >> this is quite possibly the best minute and a half of audio we've ever across. in a long time anyway. >> would that reaction be different if the family was liberal? laura ingram weighs in.
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surveillance footage showing the moment a lone gunman storms
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the canadian parliament before opening fire. >> new details shedding light on what may have led the attack by the radicalized muslim. >> david lee miller with the latest. >> reporter: canadian police released very i don't showing the gunman arriving at the country's parliament where the shooting spree took place. authorities say he had dual canadian/libyan citizenship and was in the process of trying to travel overseas. >> we have learned this individual has been in ottawa since at least october 2nd, 2014. that he was in town to deal with a passport issue but then he was also hoping to leave for syria. >> reporter: in an e-mail statement, bibeau's parents said "we have no explanation to offer. i am mad at our son. i don't understand. and part of me wants to hate him at this time." earlier today parliament convened as scheduled. the first order of business, a standing ovation for sergeant at arms kevin vickers who shot and
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killed the gunman. vickers, seen in this video moments after he confronted the gunman, saved countless lives. the 30-year law enforcement veteran never shot anyone until yesterday. canadian prime minister stephen harper speaking before parliament said the country will not be intimidated by terrorism. >> we will be vigilant but we will not run scared. we will be prudent but we will not panic. >> reporter: the terror caused by the shooting reverberated with 911 calls. >> the war memorial, call for shots fired. we may have multiple patients. one soldier has been hit. >> reporter: that soldier, 24-year-old corporal nathan cerillo, serving as an honor guard at the war memorial when he was shot at nearly point-blank range. a family member revealed he was
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shot in the back. >> david lee miller reporting. cnn taking the shot at sarah palin's family in early september. there was a fight in alaska involving sync, her husband, and some of her children. anchorage police releasing audio of 24-year-old bristol palin being interviewed and cnn waste nothing time jumping on it. >> i'm going to come out and say it, this is quite possibly the best minute and a half of audio we've ever come across, in a long time anyway. a massive brawl in anchorage, alaska, reportingly involving sarah palin and her kids and husband, sparked after someone pushed one of her daughters at a party. that's what bristol palin told police in an interview after the incident. now police have released audio. it does include some rather colorful language from bristol. here is bristol's recollection of how that night unfolded. sit back and enjoy. >> i'm going to defend my sister. she's 20 years old. a guy comes out of nowhere and pushes me on the ground.
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takes me by my feet and my dress, my thong dress in front of everybody. come on you [ bleep ]. come on you [ bleep ], [ bleep ]. i don't know this guy, i've never seen this guy in my life. [ bleep ]. >> i think that long beep was my favorite part. >> i'm not laughing, are you? cnn's carol costello has since apologized for her remarks. that brings us to "look who's talking." laura ingram on "the o'reilly factor" raising big questions about how the mainstream media covered the story. >> if she had been let's say the daughter of a renowned and revered liberal, then i have a feeling there wouldn't be this cute kind of funny smirk on an anchor. i don't think they'd be throwing to this audio in the same way. i don't know if they'd be throwing to it at all. so i think, look, the palins are
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the favorite whipping posts of the left because i think the left thinks they're the easy targets. if we demean or ridicule them or -- then maybe it will make us look a little better or maybe conservatism look less intelligent, something like that. i would be careful to judge anyone's private life when it involves a family member who's a daughter, who's not in politics as far as i can tell. >> the time now just about 10 minutes before the top of the hour. an ice cream truck driver attacked with bricks and a knife after accidentally running down a young child. the hunt for the attackers. a mad dash to the midterms. vice president biden in the political spotlight. how will it impact the races? a look at the biden effect.
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>> canada is making their final push as candidates distance themselves from president obama the vice president has become more visible. >> mike emanuel looked at the biden effect. >> the president's point man on dealing with iraq, cutting government waste and the 2009 stimulus plan. he has had controversial moments and overall it is complicated. >> while testing the waters for a run for president vice president joe biden piers to be buildi -- appears to be building more power. ron clklain is the new ebola czar. he is a loyalist at mr. obama's side. loyalty comes headaches.
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while the president vice prides himself on foreign policy biden earlier this month committed a diplomatic faux paus suggesting america's friends were helping the enemy in syria. >> our biggest problem is our allies. our allies in the region. >> he apologized to officials from turkey, the uae shortly after that comment. he offended some in the asian community with politically incorrect. >> i stopped in singapore to talk to lee kwan u which they say is the most wisest in the orient. >> his 44-year-old son hunter had been discharged from the navy reserve after testing positive for cocaine. despite the embarrassment he says biden can be helpful to
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democratics. >> he established through out his career over decades a profile of someone who has woken up every morning, gone to work, ready to fight for middle class families. >> some suggest biden should be a bigger draw in the campaign trail like former president bill clinton or wife hillary. biden isn't because he's too closely associated with administrative policies and is prone to the verbal slipup. >> four minutes to the top of the hour. ebola now america's largest city and new york city doctor hospitalized in isolation. the big question now, who else is at risk?
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>> ebola in america's largest city. a new york city doctor hospitalized in isolation. four others being monitored. two else is at risk? >> a man attacked two new york
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city police officers one with a lone wolf attack. the analysts on possible terrorists. >> an ice dream driver attacked with bricks and knives after accidentally running down the child. the hunt right now for the attackers. "fox & friends first" starts right now. >> good morning everyone. you are watching "fox & friends first" on this friday morning. i am julie banderas in for heather childers. >> i am lea gabrielle for ainsley earhardt. >> an attack on new yorksy is it officers a hatchett wielding man charging two officers slicing one arm and hitting another in the head. that man shot and killed by two officers. he is identified as a 32-year-old from queens believed to have muslims with ties to razz cal islam.
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detectives find what is believed to be his facebook page with posts about terrorism. kenneth healy the officer hit in the head is in critical condition. the other officer expected to be released from the hospital. a woman hit by a stray nypd bullet now in stable condition. >> concerns about links to terror coming from the facebook posts. thompson calling for a revolution on american soil. joining us now is private investigator thomas ruskin. thank you for joining us. obviously it comes from social media. facebook calling for guerrilla air force. helicopters big military will be useless on their own soil. they will not be able to defeat our people if we use guerilla warfare. attack the weak link. if you get wounded who cares. if you die who cares? eventually they will surrender and

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