tv America Reports FOX News February 26, 2024 10:00am-11:00am PST
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houthis. but that's interesting. wonder if we will hear more from the pentagon. >> we have not hit iran like donald trump did, it's not houthis doing this, not the proxies, it's tehran and what donald trump did when he was president say i don't care if it's iranians or their proxies, if iran kills a single american citizen i'm going after iran and he did, and they have killed many americans and have not done anything about it. >> all well and good to go on seth meyers and laugh, but does not seem like a laughing day, laken riley is no longer with us. address this issue. >> harris: he always sees reporters on the lawn before he leaves but did not take questions. thank you everybody for watching, thanks to the guest on the couch. "america reports" right now. >> they let him go before a detainer gets to ice.
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and what does he do? he ends up in georgia and he kills a brilliant young woman. >> we lost laken riley in the past seven days and the past seven days, 200 families had to bury their kids because of fentanyl. >> if it weren't for this wide open border that joe biden has allowed to happen the last three years, laken riley and many others would be alive today. >> sandra: president biden announces a trip to the southern border, the 22-year-old georgia nursing student allegedly murdered by an illegal immigrant. and the top of a new hour. hello, welcome everyone, sandra smith in new york. >> bret: bret baier in washington in for john roberts. laken riley set out for a morning jog, never returned home. suspected killer, lived five minutes from the crime scene,
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was arrested and denied bond. but outrage is growing over what many feel was a preventable murder. >> sandra: georgia governor brian kemp says he was kept in the dark about the suspect's immigration status and he is demanding answers from the white house. he will join us live coming up. >> bret: fox team coverage. paul mauro joins us in moments, but madison live from athens, georgia. good afternoon. some new information on how laken riley was killed. >> good afternoon, bret. about an hour ago the coroner confirms she died from blunt force trauma to the head, but says that the official report likely will not be ready for several weeks, and we have gotten the chance to speak to a lot of students here just now getting back to classes after the death. i'm told a lot of people are still shaken up over riley's on campus death and say it's an odd
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feeling being back. one student tells us each professor they have had has talked about riley and also grief resources on campus, and you can see the flowers and candles placed here at one of the main entrances to uga campus and a vigil set for 3:00 p.m. to honor the nursing student's life. the suspected killer is in jail without bond and a long list of charges like felony murder, kidnapping, and hindering a 911 call. we are also getting a better look at how close he lived to the crime scene. take a look at this video, it's a five-minute walk between the two locations. ice confirms the accused killer entered the u.s. illegally through el paso in 2022. new york law enforcement arrested him just five months ago for acting in a manner to injure a child, her freshman
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year roommate describes her as the sweetest soul she's ever met and is furious the accused ill canner is here illegally. >> we need to be careful who we are letting in the united states. i know they have sent letters to the president and everything and i just hope it gets taken seriously and of course laken was such an amazing person and i hope everybody gets to realize who she is and her legacy really lives on. >> bret, sandra, i want to mention or talk about the letter she mentioned. brian kemp is demanding answers from the biden administration on how ibarra got into the country, and her funeral is set for friday in her hometown of woodstock, georgia. >> sandra: paul mauro, great to have you here today. dig into this for us. why first of all is the governor having to demand answers on this
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case? >> amazing what a litany of failures this is. watershed event, finally we will see answers. we need to know is he here completely illegally or sponsored in. as a venezuelan, he qualifies for temporary status, a creature of the biden administration, a list of certain nations we let you in and three-quarters of the way to a green card. according to the reporting online, he was sponsored by an ngo here in town. i reached out to the ngo, had an email exchange with the executive director. they say they had nothing to do with this guy, never heard of him. what happened here? did they sponsor him or not and assuming they didn't, is the system so broken to get sponsored in as a venezuelan you can write any ngo on the form and we let you in.
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a lot needs to be answered here. >> bret: good to see you. you look at this timeline, it is really amazing. september 8, 2022, allegedly he enters illegally, september 2023, charged with child endangerment and arrested for murder february 23rd. talk about the system and the ping child endangerment did not set off red alarms. >> tho goes to the heart of it. as we mentioned, it's not that everybody coming in is going to be a killer. we all know that, ok. but the bottom line is, there's no provision under the biden administration for what to do with somebody like jose ibarra. if you have somebody like him, either here illegally or on a bogus asylum claim that was sponsored and he breaks the law, they have nowhere to put him. ice is not going to find out about it because the sanctuary cities don't notify.
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even if they did notify, let's say from georgia when he was picked up for shoplifting and a bench warrant, got sent to ice. nowhere to put him, he was reportedly originally cut loose because there was no room in the detention center. so nowhere to put him. with he cannot send him back because maduro, who almost certainly has emptied the prisons and insane asylums, much like castro did, has suspended flights. and we don't have, literally don't have a solution. no one wants him, he is hired with no vetting and that -- when we hire these people in various capacities in our schools, for instance, and we don't have the ability to vet their backgrounds, we, a, can't we surprised with tragic outcomes and where is the liability. recognize, by the way, kathy
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hochul, governor of new york, gave a press conference advocated for a speedy process to hire the people on this exact status to work for the state, which would include schools and other sensitive areas. unacceptable. all i'm hearing is no comment. >> sandra: as students mourn the death of this 22-year-old girl on campus, on the campus lake, this is just some of what we are hearing, paul, from some of the students on that campus, terrified by her murder. >> it's tragic because it happened in my back yard. i jog in that park about every single day. so i don't feel safe. >> we have friends like in the sorority she was in and to think that somebody that people we know actually knows, it's scary, it could be anywhere. we go on walks but go with each other. >> as a woman, i have to be extra, extra careful and be extra protective and super scary. >> sandra: and the mother we had on the program this time last
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week, saying she was demanding the daughter come home while the manhunt was underway for the killer. what do you say, paul, to americans see this happening, growing migrant crisis and the impact that it is having across this country and they fear it's becoming more and more dangerous situation for all of us. >> it certainly is. and just to add salt to the wound, i hate today, but when you dig down deep enough, what you ascertain, we are paying for it all. this whole thing, much like the homeless services situation here in new york city, is a business. and there are thousands and thousands of people whose paychecks rely on that business. and so they won't give it up. they are the loudest advocates. if you look down deep enough, ngo and the faith-based institutions running the busses and sponsorships, they can't let this go because the money is coming from the american taxpayer. we are paying for all of this and then once they get here, we
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feed them, house them, clothe them and have no solutions. >> sandra: thank you. >> bret: sandra, president biden, former president trump, both will visit the southern border thursday. right now, president biden is on his way to manhattan, just a few blocks away from the city's migrant processing hub. fbn's madison alworth is live in new york city, our second madison this hour. what is biden doing there today? >> good afternoon, bret. at this point the only thing we have confirmed is the president will be participating in a campaign meeting. no indication he will be addressing the migrant crisis that has overrun new york city, despite blocks away from the center of the big apple crisis. president biden has been getting pressure from both sides of the aisle to address the immigration issue with some fellow democrats now calling for a change. executive action has been floated as a way to address the border but some are skeptical politics could get in the way of
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a change. biden will be going to brownsville, texas on thursday, where he will meet with agents and leaders. but of note the sector he's been visiting, has been slow and at times dead for months now. average encounters, 200 to 400 per day. compared to san diego and tucson, hitting 1,000 to 2000 migrant encounters each and every day. the problem only getting worse, not better. as mentioned prior, deportation flights back to venezuela are now in limbo. those flights have been paused for two weeks, potential retaliation of the authoritarian government there for the u.s. reimposing sanctions. >> he has not looked to the future, not anticipated what would potentially happen if the country backs out of certain agreements, if they don't follow through with the agreement. it's where he fails. he doesn't play chess very well.
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>> now, many migrants are from venezuela. the crisis will cost new york city $10.6 billion over four fiscal years. 78% covered by new york city, only 2% coming from the federal government. bret. >> bret: madison alworth, thanks. >> sandra: hotels like the roosevelt hotel here in new york city have turned solely into migrant housing. we have seen this play out for many, many months now. so, "fox & friends" we could -- weekend co-host found a place like that in tucson, arizona. watch this. this is what happened when she attempted to walk in and book a room. >> what you are seeing is basically an unmarked building. all signage removed, that's the first sign you know it's an ngo, nongovernmental organization, in this case casa alitas, housing
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illegal immigrants. >> trying to rent a room. >> no, we don't rent rooms. >> why, is this a hotel? >> is this not a hotel? >> can you please exit the property? >> whose private property? there's no name outside. >> can you exit the building. >> is this where illegals are being housed with government funding? >> can you please get off our property. all of you, please, or i'm going to call the police. please call them. >> you need to leave, please. >> i need to know what it is. oh, casa alitas, this is an ngo paid for by government money. >> we are not going to answer any of your questions. >> just, can you explain what you do here? >> no. >> why so much secrecy. that's what the american people want to understand what's happening here. >> i'll wait with you here until you leave. we won't answer any questions.
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>> no, no, sorry. you cannot come into our shelter. >> sandra: so really interesting reporting there from rachel campos duffy, hotel, a lot of secrecy over what exactly was happening there, whether it was government funded shelter of migrants coming in, she returned, this was the send day she went back, this morning, bret, because they had a tip there was a bus load of more migrants getting dropped off there. we are still reporting on what exactly the situation was there, but clearly a lot of secrecy, bret. >> bret: yeah, and think about how many facilities are like this we don't know about to rachel's point. look at bill melugins and the bus loads, and they have to have facilities in different places, we are not told about them. >> sandra: if they are taxpayer funded, the communities should
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know what is happening there, and seems to be a secret for now. we'll keep reporting on it, bret. >> bret: president joe biden's allies say he's sharp as ever. why is he relying on prescreened questions and note cards to get through campaign fundraisers chris bedford and juan williams next. >> sandra: the race for the presidential nomination in michigan. nikki haley is there now. what are voters saying, grady? >> they think former president trump can cruise to victory here in the state, that is the birthplace of the automobile industry. but it could be president biden who faces his toughest primary challenger yet. so, who or maybe i should say what could progressives select on the ballot to snub the leader
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of the democratic party. the full story coming up. but i got jesus here, and we were wondering if you might want to pray with us. well, not the actual jesus. obviously, but let's spend some time with the real one. lord jesus. we take this moment today to simply be with you. we are lost. we are broken. but we are not alone. help us to grow closer to you. this lent, jesus name we pray. amen. join us in prayer. this lent on hallow. ♪(song in french)♪ (♪) (♪) (♪) (♪) book in the hotels.com app to find your perfect somewhere.
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>> sandra: all right, here we go on to the next. michigan voters are getting ready to cast their ballots in tomorrow's primaries. former president trump will look for another win over nikki haley. president biden will try to fend off a challenge from democrats who don't want to vote for him. grady trimble is live in detroit for us. is the former president, donald trump, on track for another big win there? >> yeah, sandra, that's what he's expecting, and if the polling leading up to tomorrow is correct, the former president could defeat former south carolina governor nikki haley by an even larger margin than his decisive victory in south carolina, her home state, over the weekend. you know, when you listen to his
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speech over the weekend, it sounded like he was setting his sights past michigan, past super tuesday and looking for the general election, but nikki haley is trying to drum up as much support as she possibly can, not just here in michigan but super tuesday states, and importantly, sandra, several fundraisers. >> sandra: a lot, grady, that we are watching from the arab american community there in michigan. what's the latest on the arab american democrats to vote against joe biden? >> there is a campaign going, and rashida tlaib is encouraging progressive democrats to vote uncommitted instead of for president biden, they are upset how he has handled the war in
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gaza, want him to call for a ceasefire. to protest that, saying vote uncommitted. governor whitmer has been one of the people who has spoken out, saying any vote that's not for president biden is in support of president trump, but also acknowledged she does not know how many may vote uncommitted. a test not only for the president, but also for governor whitmer to see how much political clout she has among the progressive wing of the party here in michigan, sandra. >> sandra: five seconds left, new hampshire, iowa, and the latest south carolina, we saw immigration, the top issue. the same there in michigan? >> if it's not at the top, it will be close to the top for a lot of voters, interesting, sandra, i'm literally looking across the northern border to windsor, canada as we speak. but voters have told me they are concerned with the southern border as well. >> sandra: grady, thank you. >> i want to make sure i get the
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quote exactly right. he said the better angel -- we must address counsel -- and address the better angels of our nature. get to know xi jinping it was clear he was going to be the head of russia -- of china, and we were having problems with russia at the time. >> bret: some donors in the room there saying alarming gaffes by president biden caught on camera over the weekend and while his inner circle insists he's sharp as a tack in private, a new axios report says he's relying on note cards and staged questions and campaign events. juan williams and chris bedford. chris, you know, some supporters are really laying it on thick. one of them is the california governor, gavin newsom over this weekend. take listen.
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>> he's got an extraordinary record. it's because of his age that he's been so successful. the opportunity to express that for four more years, what a gift it is for the american people and as a democrat what a gift for me to make the case for the leaders of our party, joe biden. >> bret: that's some spin. because of his age that he's been so successful. >> it's bold. it's like reminds me of the vice president debate in the 90s he said i'm not going to take advantage of my opponent's youthfulness and inexperience on the matter. a better tactic than what the white house is saying everything is fine, people are afraid to walk into meetings with the president at the oval office, so sharp, and that's like saying donald trump is nice on twitter, you are not going to convince people of that. you can see the interactions, it's clear joe biden is fading on this. but the democrats are pretty stuck. he seems like he's the
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candidate. >> bret: and for candidates, david troen, congressman from maryland running for senate, having a tougher time talking about this in town halls. he said i wish he, president biden, was ten years younger, does he talk slower yes, move like he's older, yes, but people who run the thing are the smart people, you hire the people around you. so, more and more candidates on the trail, juan, are trying t figure out how they can answer that question. >> it's a real question because the man is more than 80 years old. but i think, you know, we are here to talk politics and to me this is more politics than gerontology or medicine, obviously republicans see a vulnerability where people express concerns about his age, so they are going at it constantly. axios, in the story we are talking about, saying the president relies on notes and private meetings, they say every
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president of recent vintage has relied on private notes and as a fellow white house correspondent over two presidents, back to ronald reagan, originator of the line with i'm not going to take advantage of my opponent's youth and inexperience, ronald reagan, people got on him about using note cards all the time. and with regard to the private events, that's where he said putin is a crazy man, right. and that's where he said that z is an autocrat. so, they are raising record amounts of money in these private events. putting on a performance but seems to be successful. >> bret: chris, to your point, what people see day-to-day at the end of the news conference, the end of the speech, doesn't know which way to go, somebody has to tell him where he goes now, and he did that again this weekend, goes opposite to what they are saying. so your lying eyes sort of.
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>> it's concerning, when you have the president saying he just met with a long deceased leader of france or of germany, and the president being guided left and right when you have aides dressed up as the easter bunny at the easter egg roll seeming to guide the president and tell him where to stand, people wonder who is in charge in the white house. and biden was picked to be a more moderate version of his primary opponents in 2020. he was supposed to be someone maybe a little tougher on the border, tougher on crime and some of his opponents. but he's not actually seemingly leading this white house because the policies coming out are very much like his opponents in the primary, far to his left. >> bret: all right, guys. i think we'll have a lot of time to talk about this. it will not go away. . >> sandra: thank you, bret. a major shake-up for the rnc, so, who is going to replace ronna mcda daniel. >> bret: artificial intelligence
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raising alarms. inappropriate responses. charles next. >> technology will reflect the bias of builders and programmers and extremely problematic when you have people who are sequestered in the echo chamber of silicon valley and their values. you're the first to know when high rate debt is stressing your budget. but your family's service has earned you a big advantage. the va home loan benefit. with the lower rate newday 100 va cash out loan, you can pay off high rate credit cards and car loans. that's real money you can use to take care of your family and home.
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>> it gave a user a lesson on hate, and the people who program gemini, we know because of all the gaffes last week they is he errored in on the main person, very far, far progressive, far, far left. i think the one thing that is worrisome in the sense a.i. is supposed to be a learning machine, large language models, and learns through, you know, through time. so it's one thing to program them a certain way, another, do you stop them from evolving. if that's the case, it's ineffective to begin with. >> sandra: refuses to condemn being a pedophile, saying individuals cannot control their actions. it termed as minor attracted person status, emphasized from actions, charles, get the details in here, a lot of controversy involved. these were prompts to a.i.
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chatbots, asked to show the user a picture of a white person. this was the outcome, ok. so, google gemini, said it could not fulfill the request because it "reinforces harmful stereotypes and generalizations to show people on their race." and gemini, microsoft co-pilot, that created images that represented a white person, chatgpt did create images that represented a person, so i mean -- are these functions only as good as the people who are inputting the data behind him? >> that's, you hope that's not the case then back at the sort of things that have frustrated people, whether it's using google, social media, anything. you know, where you have gatekeepers who decide what is information, what is real and
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not real, and their own version of true and not true. this is artificial intelligence. curious how you limit what it can do and where it can grow, as something saying hey, show me a white person or show me a black person. >> sandra: the reason i ask, only as good as the people behind them. >> i hope not. >> sandra: woke tweets have resurfaced from the google gemini, said it would not show a white person because it was harmful stereotypes. talking about white privilege real, america, racism number one value, uphold, egregious racism in the country, so obviously we are starting to see exposed the people behind the data going into these. >> i think he's on his way out, i'm not sure, and again, this is
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not -- you know, listen, you can have personal views but you are making a product, right. a service. i could have certain views but if i'm building an automobile i want it to go a certain miles per hour. there is a certain line between professionalism and delivering to the customer and then putting in your input and your feelings into these things and i think it's why we had such uproar, it goes back to, look at the social media and some of the thing that happened there and how the voices of conservatives were muffled, it does no harm, particularly in a society that prides itself on free speech. >> sandra: it's a bigger and bigger story, and they are used by a large percentage of the population now, and doug murray says the future is here and turns out to be racist. historical accuracy is not among these a.i. bots. >> and things like show the royal family of sweden, i'm
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being -- just giving sort of paraphrasing, but like all black family will come up. i do love the art, a.i. art is really great. i have to get some posters, a.i. posters of myself, like art decoish, you know what i mean. >> sandra: i'll see you at 4:00. >> bret: i like the art, too. hunter biden will testify behind closed doors later this week but has he already compromised his own defense from criminal gun charges? we'll ask jonathan turley coming up. >> sandra: all right. plus, georgia governor brian kemp demanding answers on that illegal migrant accused of killing a 22-year-old nursing student. the governor will join us live coming up. >> when you are letting millions and millions of people in, 10,000 per day in some cases, unveted, it does not mean all of
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>> bret: back to our stop story now, illegal immigrant from venezuela accused of murdering a 22-year-old nursing student on the university of georgia campus, georgia governor brian kemp joins us now. governor, thanks for the time. >> good afternoon. >> bret: so, you have this gentleman, jose antonio ibarra arrested, and for a list of charges, including malice murder. he was arrested in new york in september of 2023 for child endangerment but essentially because it was a sanctuary city
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ice did not tell -- was not told by authorities about that arrest or that he was illegally in the country. so he was released. so specifically, are you blaming the biden administration for this murder in georgia? >> well, first of all, before that incident ever happened, if the border was secure this individual never would have been in the country illegally and wouldn't have committed another crime. now, having committed a crime when you've come into the country illegally, you know, that is a red flag, you know, while nobody was notified or something was not done about that and this individual was then allowed to get to the state of georgia and commit this murder. you know, just outrageous. people are so frustrated and this is something that we have been talking about for years now about the southern border and
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this president can take action and secure the border and i stand ready to help him do that. so do a lot of other republican governors. >> sandra: sandra here. you mentioned the time at which he crossed into texas, september 2022. rewind and play the tape of kamala harris and karine jean-pierre at that moment in time that he was walking into the country claiming that the border is secure. listen. >> the border is secure. >> 2 million people cross the border the first time ever. you are confident the border is secure. >> we have a secure border in that that is a priority for any nation, including ours and our administration. >> we have taken unprecedented action over the past year and a half to secure our border. >> the border is not open. >> sandra: governor, while you have an administration now calling this a crisis and the president making a visit to the
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border later this week, you had an administration in denial ignoring the crisis and downplaying it for quite some time. how did the american people see what happened to the 22-year-old student and not see it because of the administration immigration policies? >> that's a big problem the biden-harris administration has. american people know exactly what happened. the southern border was open. you've had people like greg abbott that have had to take the situation into their own hands and thankfully he has. if you look at what was going on at eagle pass, you know, 3, 4 weeks ago versus what's going on there now, you can see how to secure the border. this president and this so-called czar of the border vice president did not do that. and they were hoping the american people were going to ignore this issue and now we have a dead young woman because of it. >> bret: we had paul mauro on earlier, governor, in part what he said.
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>> if you have somebody like him who is either here illegally or on some sort of bogus asylum claim that was sponsored and he breaks the law, they have nowhere to put him. ice is not going to find out, because even if they were notified, there was nowhere to put him, originally cut loose, no room in the detention center. >> do you think different policies would have prevented this murder in georgia? >> no doubt about the border would have been more secure than it is now with previous policies. i saw it, we were a part of it, had the georgia national guard down there. we have had a continuous presence since 2019. i've been to the border five different times and seen under the previous administration how we were working together and working to secure the border and not allowing people to come into the country illegally, and then look at the open border policy
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of this administration and you now have, you know, under joe biden's watch, 7.5, you know, 8.5, you know, however millions of people that have come across border and we had no idea who all the people are or where they are being sent. that's why we sent a letter in september that i along with 24 other governors signed saying who are these people, where are you sending them so we can keep tabs on them and then something like this happens. and look, the president could come out and change policies today. he could simply signal with the bully pulpit of the white house, you know, local law enforcement, please, you know, if you have these people that are here that are illegal, that are noncitizens and they commit a crime, please notify ice. it's as simple as that. ice can work with local governments, with state governments, to deal with these people and hopefully prevent situations like we saw with laken. >> sandra: governor, final question to you on safety on our college campuses. we hear parents speaking out,
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they are worried. we had a mother on the program who said she's been raising the red flag on the darkness on that college campus, she's been concerned, she's talked to other concerned parents. they say it happen and parents all over the country are worried it could come to their child's college campus. what needs to be done, specifically the campus in your state, what can be done to prevent this from happening again? >> well, listen, i'm one of those parents. marty and i both, our youngest daughter is a university of georgia, gone to work out in the same part of campus and i know the university has spent millions on campus security and i know that we got an email from them last night about other things that they are looking at and considering to do. but i think you also got to look at what are the local policies of the local governments and local law enforcement and that's something i've been talking about with, you know, district attorneys in some jurisdictions that are not prosecuting client
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crimes and making sure that we are keeping our community safe. i am committed to continuing to do that. i know the folks at the university of georgia are, too. it's a huge campus, as you can imagine. the intramural fields where the heinous incident happened and this terrible tragic murder happened. i played intramural sports out there. it's a big open area. these trails, you know, dozens of people run through those daily. it's just -- it's such a terrible thing that happened and our prayers are with the riley phillips family. >> sandra: appreciate your time today. >> bret: thank you, governor. >> sandra: president biden, speaking of which, arriving in new york city, a democratic-led city riddled with migrant crime. is he going to specifically address the crisis happening here? sitting down with gerri baker about that. >> bret: new york city murder suspect nabbed in arizona.
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democrats agree. conservative republican steve garvey is the wrong choice for the senate. ...our republican opponent here on this stage has voted for donald trump twice. mr. garvey, you voted for him twice... as your own man, what is your decision? garvey is wrong for california. but garvey's surging in the polls. fox news says garvey would be a boost to republican control of the senate. stop garvey. adam schiff for senate. i'm adam schiff, and i approve this message. i'm katie porter and i approve this message. he's the hundred-percent pro-trump candidate for u.s. senate: republican eric early. always supports trump and the maga agenda. republican eric early. endorsed by the california pro-life council... ...opposed to all abortion. and eric early loves the second amendment. eric early. way more dangerous than steve garvey.
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he dodges trump. garvey even said he might vote for biden. republican eric early for u.s. senate. too maga. too trump. too dangerous. >> sandra: newly released bodycam video showing when arizona authorities arrest a man accused of murdering a mom at a hotel in new york city. now two attorneys are in a standoff over where he will be
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held. bryan has the story for us. this suspect is also facing charges in arizona? >> sandra, that's exactly right. he faces seven charges in arizona, including two attempted first-degree murder charges for stabbing two women nearly to death. the 26-year-old fled to arizona after police say he murdered a mom in a new york city hotel room earlier this month in a separate attack. new police body camera video captures the arrest in a parking garage in scottsdale, arizona. he is accused of stabbing a woman during a carjacking in phoenix last week and then the very next day climbing under the door of a bathroom stall in an mcdonald's, pointing a gun at a female worker, and stabbing her. the new york city police department which called him a "maniac" says while in custody for those stabbings, he told arizona police they should google the soho 54 hotel, where
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police discovered a body of the woman. alvin bragg wants him brought here. rachel mitchell says no way. >> having observed the treatment of violent criminals in the new york area, safer to keep him her in custody. >> what's in her head is not the data or the facts. >> they will prosecute him first in arizona, and then after the trial extradite him to new york city to face charges. he will appear before a judge today at 3:00 p.m. eastern. he was previously arrested in florida but was out on bail in september. sandra. >> sandra: bryan, thank you. bret. >> bret: well, sandra, a pentagon briefing ahead after a
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busy weekend in the middle east as you look live in the pentagon briefing room. u.s. and coalition forces launched fresh strikes against iran-backed houthi rebels inside yemen. >> sandra: president biden to visit the southern border, and why he's going later this week and what we can expect once he gets there. each day is a unique blend of people to see and things to do. that's why you choose glucerna to help manage blood sugar response. uniquely designed with carbsteady. glucerna. bring on the day.
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