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tv   Fox News Live  FOX News  February 10, 2024 9:00am-10:00am PST

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>> the white house is looking at the characterization of president biden of an elderly man with a poor memory. and thursday they recommended no charges be brought against the president for handling of classified documents. trump responding to hur's
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decision not to charge biden calling it selective persecution. welcome to fox news live, i'm griff jenkins. hey, aish. aishah: i'm aishah hasnie. they're looking to see if they helped with influencing peddling schemes. hi, lucas. >> it wasn't just our own peter doocy asking the president tough questions. here is cnn. >> for months you've been asked about your age and you would respond with the word watch me and many of the american people have been watching and expressed concerns about your age. >> that is your judgment. >> okay? >> this is your judgment. >> the public-- >> that's not the judgment. press. i'm the most qualified person in this country to be president of the united states and finish the job i started. >> 71% of ballot ground state
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voters say that biden is too hold to be an effective president. some white house officials are outraged they selected a trump appointee robert hur to investigate the president's handling of classified information, including top secret material found in the garage and advisors are worried about the age and decision to skip the super bowl interview. james carville. >> it's the biggest television audience not even close and you get a chance to do a 20, 25 minute interview on that day and you don't do it, that's kind of sign that the staff or yourself doesn't have much confidence in you. there's no other way to read this. >> democratic congressman dean phillips reminded people that biden once said he wants to be the bridge to future democratic leaders. >> he implied he would only
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serve one term, of course. he should be putting both his own legacy and the country most importantly ahead and i think he's making the wrong decision for both by running again. >> no sitting house member of congress has become president since james garfield back in 1 1 1880. aishah: okay, lucas tomlinson live for us at the white house, griff. griff: former president trump, nikki haley and others are reacting to the bombshell justice department report detailing concerns over biden's memory. madeline rivera is live with the latest reactions and they're pretty strong. >> they certainly are. former president trump not holding back at an n.r.a. forum in the battle ground state of pennsylvania on friday. he says the criminal counts
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against him in the documents case should be dropped because special counsel robert hur didn't charge biden. >> we have a sick and two-tiered system of justice in our country, do i know better than anybody. >> hur says there are two differences between how the leaders responded to the probes, trump refusing to turn over and enlisting others to destroy documents. and the statute provides vice-presidential records as well. the campaign trail exactly two weeks to go before the south carolina primary. haley preparing for a showdown with her former boss and in her home state. she's seizing the report as an opportunity not only to slam president biden's mental capacities, but form president trump's too, and seizing on the
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moment in the rally in which he confuses haley for former house speaker nancy pelosi when talking about the january 6th riot. trump and haley are on the stump in the palmetto state today. this is trump's first time back in south carolina in two months and haley's campaign is trolling him sending a rolling billboard by his event this afternoon. clips of trump and biden in an attempt to drive home their message that a rematch between two, quote, two grumpy old men is something that most americans don't want. >> things are heating up in the palmetto state. thank you. >> you've got it. aishah: to help break this down. robert hur's findings, former house judicial house epstein and brian claypool. i want to bring you in first, the idea for not prosecuting for robert hur is baffling.
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i imagine you think this as well because he practically just calls biden, he would be a sympathetic well meaning elderly man with a poor memory that he would basically present as not a great defendant, but that he willfully retained and disclosed classified materials and continues to sort of speak untruths out there. we saw that at the press conference. he's been speaking untruths about where the classified documents were found, a level of classification and then saying that he didn't tell any of the stuff to the ghost writer. so, is it poor memory or is it deceit? >> well, the reason for the non-prosecution, it's a difficult witness to prosecute given his memory issues, look, i think you want to think that everybody plays as a straight shooter and i've been amazed how the defendamocrats have bee
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playing this, and that willfully violated the law. he said and explained that all of this information about his mental status is highly relevant because under hur's reasoning, which is legitimate. biden would not be a witness that could be tried very easily because of his memory issues and might be regarded as a very sympathetic witness in the sense that putting him on trial almost like senior abuse. so, the argument that this information was not relevant in the report is wrong. it's very relevant as to whether he's triable as a witness. i think the left is wrong on that. the left has also been arguing, trump was much worse because he committed obstruction of justice. that's completely irrelevant. the fact that biden did not commit obstruction of justice has no bearing on whether he should be prosecuted on the crime of removing and retaining classified information which he willfully it, which is a violation of the law and probably also a violation of
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the law under the gross negligence standards of the espionage act. there was plenty to prosecute biden for the offenses and it's sort of the hypocrisy on the left here which has been-- which as i say, a democrat, has gone to every length to prosecute trump at every single turn and then when it comes to a question of whether their own should be prosecuted they have to do these intellectual pretzels to sort of explain why not only was he exonerated which was wrong, but why the special counsel report was inappropriate, which they're also wrong about. i'd say thats an a member of the left criticizing the left. aishah: very interesting,let's get brian in here. we have been talking about the memory issue, can't remember when his son beau died and he can't remember when he was vice-president and memory as hazy as hur describes it when
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it comes to the afghanistan debate which was so important to him. and new york congresswoman tenney is now talking about bringing up the 25th amendment. we'll get into that with her walk with me through the memory issue and whether she might have an argument. >> great to be with you, what robert hur is basically saying at trial that doj's got to prove that president biden will any withheld documents, willful, is a very high standard in the legal warld world. and what he's saying if president biden is having problems with the date of his son's death, and if he's able to remember basic facts. should that be weighed into it, i think this decision is devastating to biden in many respects, it shows he's got a
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bad memory, he broke the law. if i am trump-- >> does that show you're supposed to let people off from a crime if they can't remember it? >> a federal prosecutor has two full jobs, did somebody potentially break the law and can they prove it in a court of law, they've got to consider that. they should have considered that with president trump, that was going to be my next point, if i'm trump i'm filing a motion to throw out his charges based on the same lodgics, hey, we can't likely prove this case against biden he's going to be sympathetic. what about president trump you shouldn't be prosecuting him in florida he's very well-liked and zero chance of getting a guilty verdict there. i think the logic was correct, but you have to equally apply that to president trump and he should try to get his charges
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tossed. aishah: julian, you're nodding. >> i don't think at that one case is related to the other. the argument the democrats are making trump is much worse because of the obstruction, and the biden case isn't relevant to the trump case, should being looked at. i don't think that the trump prosecutions are appropriate in the fourth year of the biden presidency. the justice department had ample opportunity to bring charges in year one, year two, year three. bringing these charges in the middle of campaign season i think is very inprep. aishah: let me get to president trump's the scotus arguments this week, fascinating to watch, it seemed, appeared that pretty much everyone is on the is an i am-- same page and skeptical when it comes to the colorado case. >> i've been saying since the beginning. incredible hypocrisy on the left saying they're doing this in the name of protecting democracy. the proposition is, i think all of the supreme court unanimously will reject. a couple of bureaucrats in one
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state should be able to decide an election by removing a major party candidate from the ballot. there are technical reasons i don't think the 14th amendment says that, but the notion that you can remove a major candidate with a couple of bureaucrats in one state or a couple of states. >> it's going to be a 9-0 vote on this. they need to find that any state cannot invoke a state decision to usurp a federal election, a state can't jump into federal territory, if use that basis, that would preempt every other state in this country. aishah: it would be chaotic, thanks for joining us, we had a lot to get to. griff: a 15-year-old migrants now in custody and facing attempted murder charges less than 24 hours after shooting in time square that left a tourist
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injured. the teenager is suspected the shooting the tourist and firing at a police officer in a robbery gone wrong. cb cotton is live in time square. not too far from where that happened with the latest, hey, cb. >> hi, griff. yeah, that's right, police say this 15-year-old was armed with a .45 caliber handgun and investigators say his behavior was reckless and happened less than six months after the teen arrived here to the big apple from venezuela. per the n.y.p.d. figueroa now faces multiple charges to include two counts of attempted murder and two counts of criminal possession of a weapon. he was taken into custody friday afternoon in yonkers less than 20 miles from new york city. the teen had been staying at a shelter in the city when he and two high school buddies came into a store and began shoplifting. when the teens were confronted he fired towards a security
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guard, but instead a tourist was struck in the leg when officers were called to the scene and went after the suspects, that's when figueroa fired twice toward an officer while running away, but the n.y.p.d. says the officer did not return fire because of the crowds of people. a former n.y.p.d. inspector says it highlights new challanges for the city officers. >> you have a 15-year-old who admitted to the country on our dime, and pay for passage and when they're here and rather than the gratitude you expect from new americans, brazen unconscionable crime and looking at organized criminals who are operating with very little fear of authority. >> now, police say he's also the suspect in two other crimes, a bronx armed robbery and a shots fired case in midtown manhattan. griff, you who in, this is the
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second high profile involving migrants in the city and police just the past week, the manhattan d.a. announced a grand jury indicted a total of seven migrant men for their alleged roles during the assault on two new york city police officers. griff, back to you. >> yeah, and your reporting is so important because it really brings home the fact that that migrant crisis doesn't stay at the southern border. cb cotton live for us in times square. thank you. aishah: some denver area dmv and recreation centers will are cutting back hours because of the strain on the city's budget stemming from the migrant crisis. according to the democratic mayor mike johnson who says that the cuts with save $5 million this year. >> this is a plan for shared sacrifice. this is what could people do in hard situations and want to continue to be a city that does not have women and children out on the street in tents in 20 degree weather and we also want to be a state that provides all of our constituents with the service that is they deserve
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and that they expect. we want to do both of those. >> over 3500 migrants are currently sheltering in shelters and other spaces around the area. griff: as lawmakers fight over migrants flow in d.c. the crisis is shifting from texas out west to arizona and california. fox news senior correspondent casey stegall is on the ground in eagle pass, texas with the latest. >> griff good to see you. as you well know lonestar state crossings have certainly dropped, but not halted altogether. instead of thousands in a single day, now they're dealing with hundreds in a single day and right here in the del rio sector where we are, in fact, activity has shifted away from this spotten and further up and down river. north and south of here, from the 47-acre military zone now controlled mostly by the state,
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our cameras captured more large groups coming across away from shelby park, like this one, roughly 100 in size and it included some small children, as you can see. how handfuls of migrants are still apprehended inside the city park which was once the epicenter of the crisis and now the governor says an average of 10 per day are arriving. and check this out. yesterday, over in the rio grande valley sector, wild pictures, smugglers trying to flee from troopers drove their car into the rio grande river. nobody was hurt, those migrants were rescued, the driver swam to the mexican side of the river and got away. >> the fact that shelby park is now secured, our state troopers can now give back to the main corridors, those highways used for human smuggling and while national guard soldiers continue to place more barriers and secure other areas along
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the border. >> over in the el paso sector this week, agents disrupted yet another stash house. this one contained 31 migrants and included one with an extensive criminal record according to officials. that makes close to 100 stash houses in that one sector since the new fiscal year began back on october 1st. by the way, agents here on the ground have told us that they are disappointed the border bill did not pass this week in washington, saying that there were components of it that would have greatly helped them out here on the front lines, griff. griff: all right, casey stegall live in eagle pass and we're going to dive right into that because coming up, the national border patrol council president to break down that failed border bill and what aspects would have helped and what the president might be able to do now to fix the migrant crisis. stay tuned, we'll be back. okay everyone, our mission is to provide complete, balanced nutrition for strength and energy.
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>> because congressional republicans are choosing partisan politics over our national security, over the coming weeks, ice will be forced to reduce operations because of budget shortfalls. >> as long as we're stuck having to deal with a migrant influx, we cannot be out on
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patrol. we need more technology, we need more infrastructure, we need more equipment. griff: that was white house press secretary, and chief jason owens how they're handling the border influx. and here on set with us, the border patrol council president, brandon judd. what a week it was, the border, senate border bill is somewhere floating at the bottom of the potomac river. it was an interesting exercise as you saw chief owens admits things there that were good and cbp and put on the highlights you can see here. tell me, you know, with of course, who doesn't-- who is going to turn down 20 billion. the attempt in catch and release, there's a debate whether it would have fully done that and the expansion of
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the border wall and mandatory shutdown at 5,000 encounters, that was really a fiery part of all of this. your thoughts on what happened, what was good about it and what needs to be in the next attempt? >> well, griff, it's interesting seeing you in studio normally i see you out on the border and we appreciate everything that you do out there. a lot of what you just saw right there is what we have to have in a border security bill and it all has to start with the talk of mandatory detention, you have to end catch and release. if you don't start with that conversation you're not going to have anything, but then you also have to raise the credible fear bar. if you don't do that you're going to be releasing people once they prove they have a credible fear. that bar right now is so low it's got to be raised so we have to have that discussion as well. one of the things that i really liked in the bill as well it removed judicial review. if you look at the backlog that we currently have. we're talking up to seven years, until they see a judge and if they appeal that judge's decision we're talking several
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years. individuals that cross our borders illegally are never going to be removed talking up to 10 years so that, you know, fast track, that process and it removed the judiciary out of this equation and that was very important. those are some things that we talk to that have to be in a bill and if we can get those things we can start controlling the border tomorrow. griff: you and i disagreed. it doesn't matter what i think you're the border guy, a committed leader and thank you for your service. but i was getting a lot of feedback during the process from other senior border leaders that were concerned that essentially that 5,000,parts of that bill with 5,000 cap was going to codify, if you will, something new in the bill and they saw it as, brandon, all of a sudden you turn the entire border into a port of entry, allowing people to come. you say that's not the case. >> that's a political talking
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point and nothing more than that. what the detractors the maintaining they talked about. in reality they'll look at that. codify 12,000 arrest which is what we had in december. this was a trigger to shut down the border. right now we don't have a trigger right now in laws that allow us to shut down the border, it would have went into place at 5,000, it doesn't allow up to 5,000 people. our current laws allow as many people as the cartels can cross the border. griff: stop you there for one second. there's a lot of debate put it to rest. could, if president biden and this administration, alejandro mayorkas wanted to tell migrants crossing that river today right now in eagle pass where casey was and say, no, turn around and go back to mexico, could they do that? does that power exist? >> it does exist, but it would be subject to challenges under the law. the a.c.l.u. would file an immediate lawsuit saying what's the emergency and they would have to prove emergency and do it on a case by case basis,
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whereas this law would have given an automatic, this bill would have given an automatic trigger that can't be challenged because you're allowed to pass laws. administration can use executive authorities, but those are subject to judicial review. look at trump's harp and pacer programs, he raised the bar of credible fear, but it was struck down by the courts because they said that it was an executive branch overreach. griff: good point. >> you have to look at that and you have to start with laws. griff: you really put an emphasis and opened my eyes a little bit to one of the positive benefits which was for single adults. >> yes. griff: particularly single adult men that are now being released, you said that ends that. and i remember in the more than two careers of covering this border being down there, you know, the behind the scenes the agents thought well they're never going to release single adult military aged males and now they're all getting released and i want you to tell
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me about the significance of that and also the trends we're seeing now out west in san diego of influx of single adult men. >> so, i'm hoping to see you out to san diego here really soon. i want to take you to hacumba and show you exactly what's happening and show you all of the chinese nationals crossing our borders illegally. these are single adult men are military age. that's a very scary prospect. we know that china does not like us. we know that we are know the cross-hairs of china and they are exporting so many people to our country and you have to really fear about that. so when we look at that, this bill would have held single adults in custody without the prospect of release minus law enforcement agent finding there was an exigent circumstance. remember, we trust law enforcement and we should trust law enforcement. if it's law enforcement making that determination, why
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wouldn't we go for that. there are some really, really good things in this bill and see if that conversation brought back up. griff: is part of why you supported this born out of national security concerns? >> it is. this is not political for me, it's not political for the agents. we want a secure border, we want the secure border today. don't want it tomorrow, 11 months from now, we want the secure border today, but we also recognize that a bill-- i'm sorry, a law last passed an administration, a new administration can't just come in and change the law. so, we want something codified in law that will give us the tools that are necessary to secure the border and there was a lot of good in this bill. griff: you talked about the politics of it. last question. are you concerned that some of the politicians, lawmakers on capitol hill are not prioritizing national security? >> so, when i look at it, i'm not going to blame the-- those that voted against the bill. what they wanted was they wanted hr-2.
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they wanted to see hr-2 brought it to light. they did it, but pulled out e-verify and never brought the full package to light. if you're not going to give us a vote on what was passed in the house, why would we support something that's lesser. there's no doubt that this bill is lesser than hr-2. it was a part stand bill so it's never going to pass. and i'd rather have 60, 70% than nothing. griff: has the border ever been this much of a security risk? it's not. when you look at those on the terror watch list, and men not just from china, but all over the world. we're dealing with countries we've never seen before on a regular basis so we've got to look at that and we've got to say that this is a crisis, but not just because of the economic aspect of it, we also have to look at the security ak inspect of it. griff: sobering insight as always. thank you in studio with me,
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brandon judd. maybe i'll be on the border and come visit me there soon enough. >> thank you. griff: aishah. aishah: looking at why a private jet had to make an emergency landing on a florida interstate with five people on board. and that struck a vehicle and sparking a fiery crash and leaving two people dead. the officials have not released further details on that horrible, horrible crash. griff. griff: palestinians are bracing for a new israeli offensive in southern gaza where over a million have evacuated to. we've got more on that next. yg out of control. get a newday 100 va cash out loan at lower mortgage rates to pay off those high rate car loans. here's to getting better with age. here's to beating these two every thursday. help fuel today with boost high protein,
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safer for our navy and merchant vessels. aishah. aishah: prime minister benjamin netanyahu ordering his military preparing to evacuate rafah ahead of an expected invasion of the area where hundreds of thousands of people are trapped in desperate conditions. fox news senior correspondent mike tobin has the latest on this move. >> hi, aishah. prime minister benjamin netanyahu despite what israel has executed in the northern part of the gaza, four battalions remain in the south. high value targets, said to be a planner of october 7th remain at large and rocket fire out of the gaza strip although severely diminished and over 100 hostages has yet to return home. en route to what he calls complete victory, prime minister netanyahu has ordered his commanders to come up with
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a plan to evacuate a million and a half people, most refugees sheltering in rafah at the same time sending in troops to target hamas. >> going to rafah, hamas' last bastion and do so as they've done for now, providing the civilian population to safe passage to safe zones in spite of hamas' evil attempt to stop the civilians from leaving at gun point. >> i was in the gaza strip two days ago, our observation to where the israeli troops took us, i didn't see a building that didn't have severe damage, i didn't see a stone unturned while the soldiers are looking for the hostages. when the refugees ultimately return to the northern half of the gaza strip they've got nothing, but devastation waiting for them. aishah: stay safe, thanks, m mike. griff: and for more on the rising tensions in the middle
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east, mark dewitt, ceo of the defense for democracies joining us now and you heard great reporting there, mike tobin on all things. i want to turn your attention here, first, to rafah. right here on the southernmost border, obviously, with egypt. egypt by reports now is starting to put their military up there, they're worried about palestinian refugees pouring in by great numbers there. what do you make of the situation? >> well, first egyptian president wants no palestinians in his country and worried about the threats. and remarkable in the north and center and two-thirds of the hamas fighters and 70% of hamas battalions. in rafah there are four battalions left including the hamas leadership. israelis need to go in and clear up rafah doing something
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which few do, a corridor to get a million palestinians out of rafah back into the north. >> back into the north. you think if you were advising the idf, you say it's important to go into rafah? >> if they don't go back into rafah, hamas will win because on the ralfah border with egypt is where they get their resupply. the egyptians have done a lousy job in enforcing that border and through the tunnels in rafah into gaza is where hamas gets the resupply and hamas will win again idf come in and the final border. griff: i want to take you to a different map and you talk about missiles and strikes, 168 attacks on u.s. forces since october 17th. what do you make of it? it just doesn't seem to stop. it's almost as if iran is not getting a message. >> well, iran is not getting the message and the problem is because the united states by
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biden administration is playing into proxy tactics, so iranians are able to strike at us 168 attacks after october 17th, and 90 attacks before that under the biden administration and playing whack-a-mole with the iranians proxies, instead of striking here, here, here, against the proxies, they need to hit the islamic revolutionary guard corps, the stormtroopers, you kill americans we're coming after you directly. griff: that's interesting, you talk who is taken out. i want to go to the next map because we did see here in baghdad on wednesday, the u.s. using a drone hit in a car in the city of baghdad a top commander, al-saadi, who is the leader of the military commander of katab hezbollah, one of the leading proxies
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hitting our guys. >> a strike, and deadly terrorist and always worth taking them off the battlefield. at the end of the day, it's the proxy and iran's supreme leader is ready to fight america to the last iraqi and what he is biden is doing going after proxies. not only did president trump hit hezbollah, but soleimani, and took him out and before biden was elected they stopped. griff: a quick short question are there irgc targets in this neighborhood to hit or is it just in iran that you need to strike? >> well, there certainly were. the problem the biden administration has been telegraphing its punches, leaking to the media they're going to strike in syria and these guys got out of dodge and they left and we don't know how
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value targets are left. griff: here maybe, this is the area where the strikes are. >> back in there. griff: lastly before we run out of time here, i do want to take you to the news, obviously, president zelenskyy top commander is now replaced. as you look at really the battle front, the eastern dombas it hasn't moved. it's a stalemate. >> that's j president zelenskyy got rid of his top military commander, last year, the southern offensive froze and ran into the russian military and it froze. i would say this, i mean, i think we have an opportunity, we the united states, to resupply the ukrainians, give them what they need and impose severe costs against our second most dangerous enemy, our most dangerous enemy, china, russia, iran. the ukrainians are fighting against the russians, the israelis are fighting against the iranians and we need to provide what they need to finish the job. griff: in a political spot obviously debating in the senate the aid to ukraine,
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important, not significant to the bigger picture? >> it's critical. we don't want to be out there fighting. we don't want to send our men and women to die fighting in defense of ukraine or israel, but we've got to supply them. the influential democrats are trying to cut to israel and republicans to ukraine. and what is the messageway send to xi in china. griff: and thank you, sir. great insight indeed. that's what it looks like from here, aishah. aishah: great work, thanks, griff. two earthquakes just hours apart rattled both hawaii and southern california. what officials are saying happens next.
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i'm sholeh, and i lost 75 pounds with golo. i went from a size 20 to a size 6. before golo, nothing seemed to work. i was exercising for over an hour every day. it was really discouraging. but golo's so easy, the weight just falls off. >> listen to this, the first february tornado ever recorded in wisconsin came on a day that broke records for warmth, at least one tornado confirmed
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south of madison. and the national weather service is now investigating reports of several more, thankfully no major injuries reported, but left quite a mess there. griff: from tornados to earthquakes rocking hawaii and southern california friday, striking just hours apart. christina coleman is live with more on the quakes which must have been frightening, christina. >> hi, griff. it hit near malibu yesterday afternoon. it was felt around a good portion here in southern california. take a look at this video. the epicenter of the quake was about three miles northwest of popular el matador state beach and over a dozen aftershocks followed and rattled shelves. >> all of a sudden you see the window sills and the glass literally shake back and forth. very scary. >> i was in the mall at a candy
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store and so the whole outside was glass and i was standing there to pay and it was like a ka kaboom. >> and this camera in santa monica captured the moment the quake hit just before 2:00 p.m. in the afternoon yesterday. there were no reports of major damage, but many felt a strong jolt from the quake and the aftershocks and local seismologist says every quake in california has a 5% chance of being followed by something bigger in the next couple of days. >> this is on the higher side, extreme and we haven't seen a big difference in what that means about the event. it does have like every earthquake in california some probability of being followed by an aftershock that's bigger than the first one, which would then require us to rename the first one and name it a foreshock and the triggered larger would become the main shock. >> less than two hours earlier
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further out west and hawaii's big island, a larger earthquake, magnitude 5.7 quake struck the world's largest active volcano mon loa cutting off power to nearby communities. no serious injuries were reported from the one that hit hawaii or here in southern california. griff: christina coleman, live from l.a. aishah: griff, you're a swifty. swift's tokyo show is behind her and expecting the next stop to be las vegas. griff: thank goodness. aishah: we'll check how sin city is getting ready for its first super bowl next. there's nothing better than a subway series footlong. except when you add on an all new footlong sidekick. we're talking a $2 footlong churro. $3 footlong pretzel and a five dollar footlong cookie. every epic footlong deserves the perfect sidekick. order one with your favorite subway series sub today. there's something going around the gordon home. good thing gertrude found delsym.
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>> oh, boy, here we go. the countdown is on for the final nfl showdown. season as the san francisco 49ers and the kansas city chiefs go head to head tomorrow in the 58th super bowl with taylor swift wrapping her tour dates in tokyo early this morning and possibly headed to vegas. matt finn has the assignment of the year as the las vegas super bowl and thank goodness, matt, i've been reassured by aishah that taylor will be there so i can rest easy and breathe. >> yeah, you know, here in
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vegas there's as much buzz about this game as there is taylor swift. apparently arriving here to watch it. tomorrow here at allegiant stadium, the kansas city chiefs hope to win their second consecutive super bowl and the 49ers fifth in franchise history and the super bowl is tier one national security event. it gets extensive federal safety operation, in part the department of homeland security says it held bomb prevention work shops and u.s. border and custom detection looking at narcotics, weapons and explosives. the sheriff of this town thinks they'll handle the super bowl so well there will be more to come in the city. expect today generate more than 600 million dollars and attract 330,000 people. >> it's crazy already, just all the fans are going crazy just walking around and talking to people and it's exciting. >> bang, bang 9er game.
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here to party with the fans and have a good time and sadly go home and watch football. >> have you placed any bets? >> no, are you going to place any bets? >> no, not a gambler? >> not a gambler. don't trust myself. i would bet it all, go homeless. >> i'm glad the nfl is vegas now. >> a lot of buzz with taylor swift whether she'll arrive on time or at all for tomorrow's game after performing in tokyo. the japanese embassy saying it can be done if taylor swift wants to make it here on time she has the ability to do so. we'll keep you updated here from vegas, griff, aishah. griff: she can't be late to her proposal from travis kelce. aishah: that's not going to happen. griff: we all know that travis kelce is going to get on one knee. they told each other they loved each other at the last game. the ring is coming this one. aishah: griff and i made a bet,
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>> a venezuelan migrant facing charges after shooting in times a square the lefty tourist injured in a robbery gone wrong.

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