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Added on the 13/10/2016 09:56:40 - Copyright : Wochit
Seth Rich was a Democratic National Committee staffer who was killed in July 2016, in Washington, D.C. Following his death, the Fox News Network and several of its personalities peddled a baseless conspiracy theory about the likely motivation for the homicide. According to Business Insider, Fox News said Rich may have been murdered in retribution for sharing internal DNC emails with Wikileaks. Now, Business Insider reports Rich's parents, Joel and Mary Rich, have settled with the network for an undisclosed sum. Police say Rich was likely the victim of a botched robbery.
Hillary Clinton's campaign chief John Podesta says he believes Donald Trump's campaign "had advanced warning" before WikiLeaks published his private emails. Rough Cut (no reporter narration).
'Snowden' director and producer Oliver Stone gave an interview in New York on Friday, speaking about his upcoming new movie about renowned US whistleblowers Edward Snowden. Stone shared his thoughts on the whistleblower as well as the recent Democratic National Committee (DNC) email leak implicating DNC collusion against presidential hopefule Bernie Sanders and on the threat of cyberwarfare attacks.
As a presidential candidate, Donald Trump famously denied that the late Arizona Sen. John McCain was a hero. Trump said he liked people who 'didn't get caught.' Now, former McCain aide Mark Salter claims in a new book that the senator had a tense phone call with President Donald Trump, shortly after the 2017 inauguration. According to Business Insider, Salter says in the book that Trump appeared angry about McCain's withdrawing his endorsement during the presidential election. After some back-and-forth, McCain said he'd withdrawn his endorsement of Trump over the notorious Access Hollywood recording. But the call calmed down and Trump gave McCain his cellphone number. However, McCain later told his aide he 'lost the number.'
Donald Trump criticises the FBI's finding that no criminal charges are warranted in the Hillary Clinton email row. Paul Chapman reports.
Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton says she welcomes the FBI to look at her emails, saying "there is no case here." But some undecided voters say the controversy could hurt the Democrat at the polls. Jillian Kitchener reports.