tv The Evening Edit FOX Business August 16, 2019 6:00pm-7:00pm EDT
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for greenland. david: even if he gets it, it may turn out to be an albatross. that does it for "bulls and bears." we'll see you back here next time. reporter: new york city's medical examiner ruling jeffrey epstein's death a suicide refuting many stir theories. two democratic congress women on the so-called squad were supposed to visit israel. but rashida tlaib refusing to visit israel. to the hong kong protests. hundreds of thousands may take to the streets as chain ad holds military exercises literally just miles away.
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president trump holding a security meeting in bedminster, new jersey. could the president end the 18-year war with the taliban? the city of portland, oregon bracing for violence with antifa and a far-right group hold rallies. city leaders planning a major law enforcement presence including the fbi. i'm ashley webster, "the evening edit" starts right now. ash. ashley.ashley: joining me, robe. does this put an end to all those spirit theories now?
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>> in a word, unlikely. conspiracy theories have been swirling since jeffrey epstein was found dead on august 10. the autopsy finding fueling more speculation about the cause of his death. we are talking about a high-profile prisoner who be once counted president trump and president clinton as friends. there has been speculation epstein was strangled after reportedly the up indicated several bones in epstein's neck had been broken, also consistent with being strangled. new york city's chief medical examiner released a statement literally underscoring the findings. cause of death, hang. manner, suicide.
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he was found dead in his new york city jail cell. he previously attempted suicide while in custody july 29. the guards on duty are accused of falsifying log entries. prosecutors charged he recruit and paid girls to give him massages that became sexual in nature. attorney general william barr said the criminal investigation into any possible co-conspirators will continue. robert, thank you so much. joining me to break it down is dr. debbie of the nyu legume medical center. to robert gray's point there, there was speculation because there were a number of bones
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broken in the neck, cluck the hyoid bone where the adams apple is. that bone being broken you see so many times in strangling homicides. based on what we know, is this the final say or can this be challenged? >> it seems we need more details. it was a classic hanging. you do see a fracture. the weight of the person's body be the distance they fall is supposed to cause a spine fracture, not a hyoid fracture. once the spine breaks the hyoid is supposed toss pierce the spinal cord. but if people don't know how to
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do it which happens sometimes with the death penalty, and somebody trying to commit suicide, you may not see that spine fracture and you may have other signs of damage and you may zernt alley strangle yourself. if there is a strangulation, the trachea that carries air between your mouth and lung, it might get crushed, some of the blood vessels might get crushed. you are dying because you are not getting oxygen to your brain. the fracture of the hyoid bone looks like strangulation, but not knowing if there is a fracture in the spine or other blood vessel injury it's hard to tell which way it leans. ashley: apparently the medical examiner needed further information before determining the official cause of death. what kind of additional information? you have the body in front of
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you and you have the injuries. what further information information would the m.e. need? >> it depends. sometimes they will check blood tests or urine tests. to see if they are under the influence of drugs. sometimes they will see gross injuries to the organs and tissues. but they may want to see pictures, really document whatever they see before they change or alter the body. >> finally, doctor, can you be 100% certain. the medical cam examiner knows what he's doing. can you be 100% certain this was indeed suicide? >> that's hard in any scenario. especially when you have something like a hyoid bone fracture. it makes it difficult to say for certain, though they can say it
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probably was a suicide. ashley: the investigation into why jeffrey epstein was left in a cell for up to three hours while guards reportedly slept and filled in the log even though they didn't do the checks. the m.e.'s ruling today, it was a suicide. congress woman rash rrp saying - congresswoman rashida tlaib says she is not going to israel even after israel granted her the right to come see her family. >> let me tell you. if for some reason i wouldn't have won the election these markets would have crashed. all money managers might seem the same,
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the sanctions are not good for them. they are not happy. we'll see how it turns out but it's in good hands. the united states has the hottest economy anywhere in the world. ashley: but not according to many in the mainstream media. "the washington post" saying president trump is fretting over a possible downturn. donald lufkin and bill mcgurn. thank you for being here. donald one said in your notes to me that donald trump is something of a victim of his own success. explain. >> what i mean by that, the economy has done so unexpectedly well since he was elected. we almost can't remember 2 1/2 years ago to wait was like before he was elected.
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that's our new normal. we are all selfish greedy people of, and we say what have you done for me later. take the great and make it better. that's getting harder and harder to do. ashley: may be. but the commission humming large especially when you compare it to the rest of the world. what is horrible for them, to go into a recession, six months after. >> he was elected to make america great again and part of that is to make our economy of great again. i do think that we are missing a big part of the debate right now. when he's running it will be against someone whether it's joe biden, cam la harris or liz president warren. he'll be able to say do you want this? do you want free healthcare for illegal immigrants, for example. the democrats' favorite word
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seems to be "trillion." print money. ashley: print away. the u.s. is in a unique situation. central banks everywhere are printing money. it's a race for the bottom on interest rates. but the only game in town appears to be the united states. >> one of the problems in the world and trump tweets by the every day. i know it seems like interest rates are low. but they should be lower. every central bank in the the world is too tight. the fed made a terrible mistake raising rates and stopping quuvment e. prematurely. -- quuvment e. prematurey. trump's biggest mistake was
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hiring' powell. every time he tweets against powell it's an act of humility. ashley: he doesn't let us forget every day with a tweet. other big reason is china. the world economy suffering because of these tariffs and the unknown, and if he can get this done. if he can't, it will be a huge victory. >> the economies in europe and everywhere else are struggling, including china. markets hate uncertainty. so you see the gyrations when the president makes a comment that it looks closer to a deal or doesn't look closer to a deal. if you can arrange that, it would be a big boost of confidence. ashley: what will happen if a
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democrat gets elected next year? what happens to the market? >> it depends on who the democrat is. if it's a slow and steady like joe biden. but if it's the eat the rich elizabeth warren. i have two words for you if that happens. sell everything. ashley: i agree, and other people have said it. joe biden is still ahead in the polls. but i get the feeling those behind him are starting to eat away into that lead when he's looking vulnerable. >> he hasn't done that well in the debates. in the first debate he looked out of it. he's an older candidate. i thought at the very beginning i those looked kind of vigorous. and i am not a person that
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believes gaffes always hurt you. it kind of humanize you. but recently he was talking about being vice president and meeting with survivors in the parkland shooting. that makes him look out of it. it's a vigorous thing to campaign for the nomination. he'll face a lot of challenges in the debate. he hasn't answered with hugh moral. he'll say pass the for much, old man. he should have said with some humor. you have got to take it from me as long as i have got some fight in me. it's a long way to the nomination and people are having their doubts whether he's up to the fight. ashley: the far left eat the rich, a fire brand. does the country have the stomach to appoint a free healthcare to illegal
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immigrants, free college, free everything? >> in the democrat party, if you look at joe biden, he has the lead. if you add up bernie votes and kamala harris' votes and elizabeth warren, votes they are above him. he doesn't seem to be gaining support. but sometimes he gains in his lead because bernie sanders was a closer number two when it started. ashley: are we going to get a recession? and when is the big question. >> you had to ask me when. you were just asking are you, i would say yes. i do not think we are going to get a recession before the election. i note yield curve is inverted but everything else looks good.
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ash rrp have a great weekend, both of you. a pickup truck drove into a crowd of i.c.e. protesters outside a rhode island detention center. five of those protesters went to the hospital. the driver is at detentions officer. he has been placed on leave. race car legend dale earnhardt, jrs and his wife, daughter and two pilots walked away from a plane crash. it had a hard landing, bounces twice on the runway and explode into flames. the ntsb on the scene. the border patrol is experiencing stoutages of their
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computer. cpb officers are working to process passengers as quickly as possible while the maintaining the highest level of security. she is 103 years old. but she isn't slowing down. she broke a record for being the oldest person to tandem skydive. the previous world record was held by a 100-year-old. three generations of family were supporting her as she broke the world record. >> it's kind of overwhelming. i really am not nervous. ashley: a little bit of fun on the campaign trail. andrew yang dancing to the cuban
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shuffle in south carolina. all these candidates trying to prove they are a member of the ordinary folk. the candidate is currently polling that 3% according to the latest fox news poll. the president meeting with top advisors. can a peace deal be made with the taliban and can the troops tom come home in a mission that lasted 1 state years. rashida tlaib refusing to visit israel. president trump what they said is disgraceful. i can't imagine why israel would let them in. but if they want to let them in, they can. but i can't imagine why they would doet it. by consolidating your credit card debt
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ashley: congresswoman rashida tlaib turning down an offer from israel to visit her grandmother. israel originally band her and ilhan omar from entering the country this weekend. reporter: representative rashida tlaib says she'll not visit israel after being grants a human tear yarnl visa. she applied for this special visa after her original visa was denied. she had to sign a letter saying she wouldn't promote a boycott
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against israel. her family said they understood, but were disappointed in herb decision. >> they don't want are to come. they know she is coming to see with her own eyes the occupation on the people. reporter: many democrats in washington were pointing the finger at president trump saying he influenced the decision of benjamin netanyahu. ashley: live early in the morning in jerusalem. for reaction to this, let's get to the founder of the islamic forum for democracy, zuhdi jasser. you believe strategically this is a mistake by israel. make the case.
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>> there is none of the arguments i disagree with. the bds movement is oppressive. her agenda was disingenuous. all the right reasons, but at the end of the day, i want to see the bds movement die. if you want to see that movement die, you don't give them the platform of victimization. israel has a law against allowing activists into their country because of what they bring with them. her move to see her grandmother which might have been a political ploy. but even when she did the reresponsibilitied to the global palestinian movement instead of being rational. her trip wasn't valid. if we want to see the bds
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movement die, it needs the sunlight disinfectant. they can't in this country say we don't want anti-muslim speakers but saying we should be allowed to go into israel. that hypocritical. ashley: didn't president trump deny the even of the extreme right-wing law maker in israel? >> i disagree with that. in america we don't have hate speech laws to begin with like the europeans do. i think you defeat it with good ideas and you defeat the bds movement by exposing it. if they had the ability to be
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there, you would show the israeli media'. ashley: congresswoman tlaib made a big deal about meeting with her grandmother, saying it may be the last time she'll have an opportunity to see her. and she turns around, succumbing to the pressure the palestinians and ditches her grandmother. >> i almost rethought my position. maybe some of us who thought they were going to learn about the situation were being duped and it turns out this is political ploy. when they see an opportunity like her grandma, she'll it's. then say i didn't mean that. there is a lot of disingenuousness. omar campaigned in minnesota. now it turns out they presented legislation and they are
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attending a trip or tried to in israel which is basically all about the bds movement. ashley: when i first heard this news i thought it was a mistake giving them more of a platform than they deserve. but when you look at what these two congress women have said said, you want people to with divest their investments with us. why would you want these two people in your country. now i kind of agree with israel. >> i think you are right. i'm getting there, too. you look at the agenda for two or three days. the movement has no end point other than the economic destruction of israel. if they are representing their constituents, which is why many
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people on the right said let them go, let them learn. they want to view it as a platform supported by the islamists. so at the end of the day, 70 congress people visited israel. they got a good trip. it was balanced. this trip was not about balance. this trip i think israel did the right thing. ashley: zuhdi jasser, thank you for joining us, we appreciate your thoughts on that story. coming up touting his border agenda while slamming the democrats for what he calls supporting open borders. north korea at it again. this is the sixth test in the last month. what does that mean for the nuclear talks between president
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it's just $4.95 per online u.s. equity trade. ashley: president trump meeting with his top officials in bedminster, new jersey about the taliban negotiations. let's bring in bob scales. but i want to begin with afghanistan first. it's a quagmire. i was looking at your notes. remember britain was in afghanistan for 10 years. we have been there for 18 years. it's a difficult issue to make a deal with the taliban that you
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believe they are acting in good faith on. i wonder what the objective is. >> the objective is to keep isis and al qaeda from going back to their training camps. you recall osama bin laden used afghanistan as a training cam prior to 9/11. i have been to afghanistan several times. it's a failed state. they have been corrupt for 2,300 years. there is not a lot the united states has been able to achieve to overcome that. the united states has a pretty sketchy record when it comes to pulling out of wars. vietnam comes to mind. iraq in 2011 was a low point in our military commitments in the middle east. i guess the chris the president is getting from his military is
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steady on, this is an economy of forced theater. we are not in this for the sake of the afghans. we are tonight for our own national security objectives. don't throw the baby out with the bath water and don't trust the gallon taliban as you suggest. ashley: i believe there was a suggestion 5,000 troops are coming back, leaving a force between 9,000 and 10,000 troops. do we have to face the fact that in order to carry out the objectives you need, we'll need a significant force for a time to come. 1,000 troops out of 14 million is a drop in the bucket. the mission is to keep the right troops there. the mission is counter-terrorism, elite forces
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support by air power and helicopters to chase down and take out terrorist groups before they have a chance to reestablish a presence to in afghanistan and i think that's a noble objective. ashley: north korea lawing of two more missiles, rejecting talks with south korea. they have had six missile tests in recent weeks. is this north korea saying remember us? it's one thing to get back with president trump to get back to proper negotiations. >> well, yes and yes. this was not the usual tantrum missile kim has flown in the past. this one is a little different. this was a true missile test. my sources tell me that it's very mobile, a solid fuel missile.
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it's a knockoff of the russian missile that's designed to spoof america and nato anti-aircraft missile systems. to fly above patriot and below thaad. this technology along with their attempt to build a submarine launch is pretty frightening. ash require' frightening. but can we get some sort of deal with kim jong-un? it's like trying to get a deal with the taliban. it's difficult to nail them down and have them do what they say they are going to do. >> this is a little different. i spent 40 years serving in korea. this is different. we are at a place right now for the first time in 70 years, the united states holds all the card in its dealing with north korea.
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north korean conventional forces are bankrupt. state controlled food supply has fallen apart. they have the gross national product of is ston -- of astone. in this case time is on our side. ashley: isn't china pulling all the strings on north korea? maybe north korea playing up is a distraction for the u.s. and hong kong is a distraction for beijing. >> times have changed in the last decade or so. the chinese used to think they held the upper hand in meetings with north korea. they not they could control
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north korea as a hedge against the united states. but in the last two or three years, our boy kim poked a finger in our eyes and china's eyes. that loving relationship described as close as teeth are to gums, that relationship is beginning to wane and china's relationship with north korea is entirely different than it was in the 70s and 80s. ashley: great stuff. terrific input, i really appreciate it. we have sad news to report. actor peter fonda best known for his role in "easy rider" which echo wrote and produced. he's the southern of henry fonda and brother of jane fonda. deadh dead at the age of 79.
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at his rally in new hampshire calling out democrats in the battle post border. is the president right in the way he describes the situation at the border and the threat it posed to this country? >> i think he's absolutely right, ashley. we versu -- we have an onslaughf people coming across the border and the violence they are fleeing is following them. the hard working people that want to get to the hear it in today and flee violence, the bad guys are in tow with them. ashley: when you have presidential candidates offering healthcare to illegal immigrants, this is the whole
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recipe that prompts these people to make this dangerous journey, thinking if they can just get here, it will be shan hang han . >> we have to pass laws not to entice them. ash rrp would you say the number of border apprehensions are down? that's the latest news we are getting. >> i think mexico and guatemala are doing a great job. i hope the rest of the northern triangle comes on board. sometimes it dips in the summer. we went from 120,000 to 80,000. but we are still on track for over a million people to enter
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that border. but the mexican and guatemalans are doing a great job. ashley: dhs just opened a short-term migrant facility in texas. will that help? many critics say the conditions are terrible. they blame the president for that. >> i think it will help. there was no question there was overcrowding in the facilities. but i think because of several things the population has gone down. i have been in those facilities, and i would say this. they are markedly better than what our military is probably sleeping in tonight. ashley: thank you for joining us and thank you for the job you are doing.
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coming up next. the city of portland bracing for potential violence as opposing groups plan dueling protests. >> i'm concerned about the antifa versus right-wing protests happening tomorrow. it has the potential to be a powder keg. oh, here we go. i know i can't play an instrument, but this... this is my forte. obviously, for auto insurance, we've got the wheel route. obviously. retirement, we're going with a long-term play. makes sense. pet insurance, wait, let me guess... flea flicker. yes! how'd you know? studying my playbook? yeah, actually. ♪ ♪
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we have breaking news, customs and border production reporting their computer systems are now back up saying there's no indication the disruptions were malicious in nature at least at this time. they announced they were experiencing temporary outages. affecting travelers nationwide. people were trapped in airports. apparently the situation has been resolved. >> the demonstrations are leaving in the recent shootings. there are extreme elements broadcasting their device for bloodshed on top about, police seem to be out of breaking point. >> that is very concerning. how's conservative journalist warning about those protests scheduled for this weekend. the anti- fascism at the far
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right group, they were attacked in just a few months ago, viciously attacked. joining me now is gubernatorial candidate john cox. thank you for draining us. this kind of thing makes me so mad. as a conservative journalist, he was severely beaten. what made me so mad, they wear masks over their faces and the police didn't seem to do anything and needed neither did the mayor of the city. it makes me mad. >> that's why this demonstration is happening in portland. the demonstrators, the extremists on both sides know the authorities there won't get involved. readership is needed at this time. the portland mayor is no just like gavin newsom here in california for kind of encouraging this because they
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have made, they've demonized any effort at the border to secure the border. they have joint along with a lot of the presidential candidates calling the president are racist with no foundation whatsoever. the leadership, they make this wild accusation, it gives oxygen to these groups. portland has problem with homelessness, housing affordability just like we have in california. i think a lot of times these politicians want to distract from those problems and they like this stuff because it's creating headlines and distracts from the problems they can't seem to solve. >> i think it's frustrating, if you say you are a trumpet supporter, that immediately brands you with all of these tags. your racist, sexist, all of
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these things. it's almost like if you dare to speak some of the things the president says, the group comes out of the word work in a taxi viciously which goes against everything the country stands for. >> real fascism is using your authority to cut off arguments. when you call somebody are racist, that's what that does. just don't have any more arguments. we've got to stop the arguing. we've got to start talking about solutions. there's a lot of people in this country who are having a real tough time affording a lifestyle, regional lifestyle. it's true here in california and a lot of these political leaders seem to want to bring this angry name-calling and frankly, it ends in violence. we've seen that with these demonstrations and we've also seen that with these shootings
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which are reprehensible. i would hope our political leaders would try to take down the temperature and actually get people to work together. >> you really think that's going to happen? certainly on the democrat side, half of what they are saying is donald trump is a racist. he is a horrible person who needs to be kicked out of the white house. that's just be willing the anger of the people out there and god forbid you say something in support of the president. you think they will change their rhetoric is what i'm saying? i don't. >> it's sad but what has to happen is the real people of this country, people who are working and struggling everyday, they need to basically make their voice heard themselves and say enough of this nonsense and name-calling. enough of the anger on both sides, let's start having a dialogue about how we will solve some of these problems.
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>> get the state and country affordable again. >> that would be a wonderful thing. thank you for joining us. thank you everybody for watching. lou dobbs coming up right here. >> good evening, everybody. i am filling in for lou dobbs. a possible cyber attack hitting, causing major outages and delays at major airports throughout the country. a computer outage affecting u.s. customs and border protection airports at places such as lax, new york's jfk, chicago international, dallas atlanta, many more airports across the nation slowing down the processing of thousands of passengers. th d
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