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tv   The Evening Edit  FOX Business  February 24, 2022 6:00pm-7:00pm EST

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foxbusiness alert, jen psaki currently taking questions from reporters think biden hasn't had another call with zelensky. we will keep following the headlines for you. that is up for us on foxbusiness tonight, the evening edit starts right now. ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ good evening, i am jackie deangelis and for elizabeth mcdonald, you're locking the evening edit on foxbusiness. we are starting with breaking development in the russia ukraine conflict. latimer putin watching full-scale invasion of ukraine airstrikes raining down on cities and military bases in the
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face of global condemnation. president biden announcing additional sanctions on russia today aimed at crippling the countries elite but many are wondering if it's enough. world leaders urge to take a path of deterrence diplomacy. instead chose more death. mike tobin has more. >> the most chilling development the fact that ukrainian fighting forces lost control of the area around chernobyl nuclear plant. the site of a 1986 nuclear disaster and according to an advisor to the president, the chilling development is you don't have any way to know the status of the nuclear facility there for the nuclear waste. the fighting has been intense particularly the eastern part of the country here are keep. we now have video of an apartment building and the reason i show this, it looks
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like the first example of collateral damage being hit. we don't have a lot of information as far as how many casualties came out of that particular structure or how many were injured but we know across the nation right now they have record 57 people killed since the invasion started, 16900 and that sounds like a low number given the intention of the invasion. airstrikes were spread out across the nation targeting facilities like airstrips, air defense, military barracks targeting intelligence misery city of the but the russians were able to disable the ability of ukrainian military to fight back which is goal. ukrainians claim perhaps not, they claimed they took seven aircraft out of the sky, four helicopters, two tanks and ten armored personnel carriers, limes formed at the bank as there's a run on money, ukrainian changing in value
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minute by minute. the national police sold all told off retired military to pick up a weapon, they will hand out rifles to the individuals, guns to the individuals. deputy defense minister took the facebook and encouraged people to take shots at russian military vehicles or any russian vehicles. they encouraged the use of firebomb. >> thank you so much. president biden hitting russia with additional sanctions after vladimir putin warning any country attempting to interfere into his attack on ukraine what face consequences you've never seen. reaction to all of this, everything we've seen from a formal white house deputy assistant secretary, joel rubin along with former national security council chief of staff, fred. here we have a, full-scale assault, let's talk about the logistics of what we saw, air,
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sea and land strikes on ukraine, 57 people have died already. vladimir putin told us essentially -- we were told he was going to do this and that he has. president biden said these would be the harshest sanctions ever seen yet he didn't pull the trigger, half? >> that's exactly right, a sophisticated attack by the russians. i think they outwitted the ukrainians and west and the way they took out installations very quickly. because a great day for our country or president biden, he set a redline for putin and then set toughest sanctions ever implemented and putin invaders. putin crossed the line without hesitation and sanctions were weaker, not the toughest ever and by comparison, president terms maximum measure sanctions against iran included swift
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sanctions which the europeans didn't want to include. trump made the europeans except that. the europeans objected to joe biden and swift sanctions are included. why were trump sanctions against iran tougher than biden sanctions against russia after russia invaded a sovereign state kills citizens? i think the reporter needs to aspects of the president tomorrow. jackie: bringing up good points, this is something i've been on, joel i want your take on this because the sanctions, the harshest functions that could be employed in a situation like this would be placing sanctions on putin himself, he is one of the richest men in the world number one. number two, the russian economy runs on oil and gas to target their businesses and essentially say they are not going to be buying their product, it's one way to shut them down even though it would have difficult consequences here at home and in
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europe, these are policy decisions made that put us in a weaker energy position but it's one way to do it. >> these sanctions are the harshest we've ever hadr hr hr n a maja mcoamynmy themyismy theriompariparis disnndecicsmi ec eali rea.ty tionsk m m yrs preatdeat bidat fatodat set t glliorill dnf nia aetanioned at y nd nd eurnop to bto bus ba'ssmys, ketsar marpleeelel pen offff the negivegasty plplle deciof vlamirrr punpu wodayayays o o t vergeer of bei a war criminal making russia estate, we need unity but should not forget the last four
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years under donald trump basically vladimir putin was told you whatever you want with ukraine, president trump undermined unity and nato, it's a miracle we have unity we do on the sanctions joe biden organize with allies against vladimir putin. jackie: i take issue with that because under president trump even though he did say he wants to see more from nato, he wanted to see everybody doing its part, not just the united states, i think vladimir putin didn't even really test him to be honest because he knew he had somebody in the white house -- >> donald trump basically did what he wanted he gave him everything he wanted. jackie: everything he wanted was we were the world's top energy producers building our infrastructure and pipeline as well? that was everything he wanted? when biden came in he got every make he wanted. >> vladimir putin watch president trump and nato while
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he told the ukrainian president are not going to give you military -- that's what donald trump that. >> it's no accident the russians invaded ukraine twice during week democratic president, it's no accident the catastrophe happened at the most competent american resident history on national security history, with the disaster withdrawal from afghanistan, biden's appeasement of putin is unserious national security policy focused on climate change, biden opened a window for this disastrous ukraine invasion and it isn't an accident but there was an invasion of ukraine during the trump presidency because he feared donald trump. jackie: let me ask you, fox news poll indicate 66% of people in this country, registered voters are very concerned about the russia ukraine decision because there are implications echo far further, and inflation problem on our hands potentially having an energy crisis as well if it
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expands further and becomes a nato issue, we are talking about massive costs this country is going to incur, that doesn't sound like two thirds of the country or registered voters rather feel like they have confidence in what's happening here. they are worried. >> they should be worried. vladimir putin has been menacing the u.s. for two decades. george w. bush set i saw his soul. twenty plus years later we are still dealing with vladimir putin, he's a menace to the west and the united states, he's damaging our economy and invaded democratic allies. but we have no choice, we can't turn away. you can't act like the wall to separate from us here, we note this movie in europe. in the 1930s we looked away and they killed 6 million jews and the strike europe so we have to set redlines and that's what joe
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biden is doing with european allies, it's tough and hard, it's going to hit all of us in our pocketbooks, meet included but this is what we have to do is stand up right now. jackie: fred, you think the redlines, the president will stick to them because when he was vice president under president obama he set redlines syria and syria trampled all over them and nothing happened so there is concerned that the tone he's taking his harsh but he won't necessarily follow through. >> we need to talk about redlines because redlines are set for syria in 2014 that were not honored, our adversaries walked across, putin wrong walked across this redline for ukraine. we need to set a serious redline and i think joe line i would agree. we will aggressively defend any nato nation if their territories
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violated by the russians, this is a redline that serious, the entire alliance had to stand behind you are joel, you think -- listen, you heard, socks night where he essentially said to anybody who challenges me -- yeah, it's going to be really bad for your so the conversation today was may not just be about ukraine alone if you get to ukraine, he may go further, they may be tested. >> no doubt about it, that was an obscene threat to the civilized world that the man possessing the most nuclear weapons in the world tell us he might use them if we stand up for democracy, it's unacceptable and i agree with fred and nato, they are our allies, they work with us after 911 and we need to make sure battery putin understands clearly he cannot threaten us or intimidate us. >> gentlemen, thank you for your time tonight, we are going to be
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watching this very closely and how it unfolds in the coming days and etc. and we will have you both back on. thank you. the war overseas has big implications here at home and also on the world stage. china is watching, biden's response to the work closely as oil prices in the u.s. sort. who will break this all down for you next. ♪♪ >> we shouldn't have quit producing oil. we were in energy exporter under the trump administration, we need a different energy policy right now and the president need to wake up and get off all of this localism. ♪♪
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large explosion, black smoke. >> boxes correspondent, steve harrigan reporting live earlier today when an explosion occurred not far from where he was standing. russia continues full scale attack on ukraine, i was on president biden to see how he will continue to spot. while starting over $100 a barrel today, first time since
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2014, that down now but of course americans are beginning to take a closer look at our own energy independent. hilary vaughn has more. >> good evening, republicans say what's happening in ukraine is a reason for president biden to reverse course on his energy policy, shifting from a climate focus to u.s. energy dominance. senator jay saying today every dollar paid russian energy is of dollars they were used to murder ukrainian neighbors. america must lead the world by increasing production of energy to decrease reliance on russian exports. russia's economy is heavily dependent on energy sales, we should make sure immediately dries up. i asked chairman adam schiff today if he thinks time for a shift in strategy. >> is it time for us to abandon climate focused energy policies like a drill fan and killing the
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pipelines and instead increase u.s. oil and gas production in full force? >> i don't think a response to putin making more on ukraine to be the dismantling of our protections against climate change. i do think what ought to prompt is a wholesale effort to wean europe off russian oil and gas so russia can no longer use it as leverage against your. >> he did not say if he thinks the u.s. should step up and fill the void as europe weans themselves off russian oil and gas but he did tell me he thinks what's happening right now in ukraine should be the final of any prospect russia nord stream two pipeline goes online. jackie: hilary vaughn, thank you for that. there with reaction, andy bar of
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house foreign affairs and financial services, congressman, but evening to you. our to get to these economic issues because the american people are very concerned what's going to happen for energy prices here, how high inflationary pressures could go as a result of this invasion we can call it now we were where we were energy independent, producing more oil and gas and this president now reversed back. it hard to flip the switches overnight. >> absolutely. if you think about it, one years time we went from a position not just of energy independence but energy dominant, energy exporter, benefits for american tumors lower energy costs, lower gas prices at the pump and lower electricity costs but has incredible geopolitical benefits so we all know the biden administration's weak foreign policy not only failed to deter
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putin from this invasion but invited. we know that because of the disastrous retreat from afghanistan signaling unwillingness to defend our allies, the fact that he waved president biden waived sanctions on nord stream two without commitments from putin but the energy policy shift from trump to biden shouldn't be underestimated as another reason for why putin chose this time to commit this aggressive illegal invasion of ukraine. if you think about it, look at the statistics from the u.s. energy information administration, the last year under the biden administration, net exports to the united states from russia and petroleum products crude oil increased about 22 million a day so
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affect, the biden policy increasing dependence on foreign sources of energy, decreasing domestic production financed his efforts to commit this act of aggression. jackie: i hear you and have been saying that but president biden set the stage presenting our country as week in energy and vladimir putin saw that seized it and trying to take advantage. i will say to go over a couple of things with respect to national gas prices, the average is $3.54 but a year ago, preparing for that to get worse. in respect to that about how much oil we take from russia, 500 million barrels a day, we were getting from canada, he took off-line 800 million barrels a day, we bumped up but we took from russia and took down what we get from canada and you look at this and the volatility in the stock market today and oil prices, it's enough to have people concerned about the coming volatility.
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>> absolutely and what we need from the president right now post invasion is leadership to reverse course and destructive policies that have driven up the cost at the pump which has driven up electricity cost and energy cost for the america people, stand up to the climate alarmists and start authorizing more exploration domestically so we can once again achieve energy independence and geopolitically crushed the russian economy. yes, we need tough sanctions and consider removing russia from swift and a more support in terms of lethal military assistance to the ukrainian resistance but i think the way we really get at putin, the way we really respond in an effective way to active aggression is once again achieve energy dominance in the world and help nato allies become less
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dependent on dirty sources of russian gas. if we support lng exports, we can liberate europe from putin's grip. jackie: i want to get over the numbers again, producing 11 million a day, russia is producing about the same we were producing 13 million, we consume 18 million so we don't present enough to match our own consumption. i said back quickly, i apologize, 500,000 barrels, that's what we taken from russia in 800,000 barrels, a little less than a million men from canada but bringing this together and the numbers altogether from your colleague was on fox and friends this morning and i think he put it distinctly, listen to this. >> you can't win a war if you take down your own energy sector and that's what biden has done, turn off regulations and let the pipelines flow full capacity, we
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fix this, that's the only way. jackie: that would be the only way but this is not a president who seems willing to do that. final word? >> right and i totally disagree with my colleague, adam schiff and agree with mr. green from tennessee, he has right, this does have to do with embracing a radical climate agenda to the detriment of affordable reliable energy at home and does have ramifications worldwide, this is the way to counter malign activities of russia and aggression of putin and i think this is a way forward, this president needs to reverse course and recognize not only do we have the highest energy prices domestically and years for the american people but this has compromised our national security. jackie: absolutely and that's what president trump said with his policies and he wanted to make energy top priority, he said is not only about assumption in the economy, it's national security and that's what you see play out here.
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andy barr, thanks so much, good to see you tonight. >> great to be with your. jackie: soon only one state in the united states will be home to an indoor mask mandate even though science has proven the face coverings do not work. while the mandate in place at all? but first, biden's drug policy is at risk, teaming up to take it on. we will explain that. ♪♪
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the continue to prevent drug users from harming themselves, a new bipartisan push from senators marco rubio and joe manchin, speaking to bar federal funds from supplying drug paraphernalia, welcome to the show, former dea special agent, derek maltz. when i heard this was what the administration was posing, using our taxpayer dollars to hand out drug paraphernalia, my job literally dropped. finally you got rubio and manchin teaming up to do something and i would say it's about time. your thoughts? >> first of all, thank you for having me. the worst drug crisis in the history of america, we've never seen this amount of debt and destruction. this is the worst time for the
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u.s. government to provide the tools to enable these drug addicted citizens to die, to kill themselves from poisonous drugs all over our streets. we have a tsunami of fentanyl killing our young kids, the cdc put out the numbers last year through september of 2021, 104,000, 288 citizens dying from illegal drugs. the vast majority was from fentanyl. yet the mexican cartel, the chinese transnational criminals and lethal partnership, they have a chemical weapon in our streets killing our kids. so why the government would entertain this discussion, they need to prioritize and get our addicted population some help but also stop the deadly drugs from coming into our country. where's the public service announcements? where's the white house talking about deadly synthetic drugs made in labs in mexico?
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jackie: they are not talking about that they are not talking about that at all, they have to put out fires right now and we focus on the border every night to remind people what's happening down there but i want to bring this to your attention because senator cruz made comments about this and he echoed your sentiment about what is essentially important to get our population off jen psaki countered it, i want you to listen. >> joe biden might not be able to give us much in this economy but he's promising to give out free crack pipes. this will be good for americans, everyone smoking crack, talk about a great crime policy. get the kids off crack, don't give them crack pipes. >> it was inaccurate reporting and we wanted to put out information to make that clear. >> so in that briefing she said something to the effect that the crack pipes were not indicate but there were things like
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chapstick in there, interesting the way the white house tries to explain the things away. >> i will say that this "issue is" so damaging to our national security and public health, it cannot be political, it's not red or blue, is a red, white and blue issue. it's not the time to fight over politics to try to make some points and grandstand in front of the tv. we have families devastated, these are not overdoses by the way, these are murderers and poisonings in the mexican cartel are working with the chinese transnational criminals so i wish the politicians what have a bipartisan unity effort to fix this instead of continuing to debate it. jackie: i hear you, i think they are working on it, let's just say you know -- we are not moving in conventional ways at the moment it feels like so it seems like they are working together to knock some sense
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back into everyone. derek maltz, good to see you. >> thank you very much. jackie: science has proven masks don't work. still, there's one state in the united states refusing to drop indoor mask mandate and according to be the only state to have that will. so what is the holdup class we are going to dig into that. ♪♪
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soon only one state in the united states will be home to an indoor mask mandate. hawaii refusing to drop the role along with frederico. the cdc keeping the regulations in place even though science has proven face coverings do not work. fox news interpreter, doctor marty makary. great to see you. mask mandate, it feels like people are way past them mentally, we are ready to move forward and you've got these two
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states but there's no evidence to suggest the masks are helping us right now. >> we are recognizing, it's the wrong mask and most people are wearing the cost mask and most people are children, waiters, waitresses, servers and select other staff. you can't look at that from the social equity view and not see the dramatic inequity involved here about the power and balance if you're intellectually honest and that's what i hope we can address quickly. jackie: i think that's great points, i feel that way when i'm in a restaurant and the waitress comes and wants to take my order, i'm not wearing a mask, why? i'm a customer, better than that person? not of it makes sense and it never made sense as a patron if i walked to my table wearing my mask but as soon as i sit down somehow magically i will not transmit the virus to anybody and i can take my mask off. some of the world rules were nonsensical to begin with. >> and its everlasting arbor university requires mask in a
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harvard senior student wrote today in the "wall street journal" basically this is absurd chasing a covid policy and endemic phase of the virus now. jackie: the big thing also at tsa, people have different feelings, your using air filtration systems and airplanes, they worked on them to upgrade them but right now supposed to be the day the tsa says you can drop your mask, i don't know how people will feel about that, there were a lot of fights on planes the last two years, maybe it will be a good thing, your thoughts on that environment and the mask wearing? >> i think people not immune from a they've not had natural immunity and are not vaccinated, they do so at their own individual risk. we've asked a significant sacrifice for most people and i think we need to give them some relief. the worst thing you can do in public health is keep measures in place longer than you have to because it ruins credibility.
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what if we get another virus three years from now and need people to where quality masks? we will have lost a lot of credibility in the interim. jackie: there is an issue with the cdc and guidance, people have questions, doctor rochelle walensky and what she told us to do, update the guidance when they are more clear but it feels like within the last year or so, confidence has been lost in our organization essentially in front of us to lead and set the tone. >> my personal opinion is the cdc is getting calls from the white house dictating policy, that's why school closures happen and boosters were recommended in young people even though the experts said no, no data to support it and now we are learning the cdc has not been disclosing data, pavement covering data specifically on boosters and people under 50. jackie: let's talk about the
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boosters, there was a dramatic drop in respect to the people who chose to get the vaccines but then chose to follow up with a booster, obviously there are issues we are dealing with right now overseas dominating the headlines but nobody is saying have to get of second booster or do this or that, is this part of a conversation over for now? >> i think people recognize they've been lied to by public health officials and one-size-fits-all strategy for everything doesn't apply boosters are supported with evidence for people over age 50 and for somebody under age 30, there's evidence suggesting no benefit and potentially some harm. we should put our strategies that. we don't have anybody going out getting vaccinated now from scratch, people are hardened politically into small group of people. jackie: they either have it or you didn't and if you didn't, you probably won't do it tomorrow. thank you so much, good to see you, have a good night. jackie: crime getting bad in new
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york city, we've been talking about it, people are going all out to stay safe. pepper spray sales are on the rise, violence is spiking and police morale at a new low. we've got the latest on all of this ahead. >> when you have a police force demeaned, diminished, defendant, this literally as sick stuff. ♪♪
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crime is spiking in cities coast to coast in the country getting so bad in new york city pepper spray sales are on the rise. people feel the need to try to protect themselves. one new york assembly meant want to provide trained martial arts drug company resident on the streets. who to discuss lieutenant darren, let's discuss here in new york city, i am living this every day and seeing best. pepper spray sales are one indicator of how people feel
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about their safety when they are walking around. >> that's true but we look at the social contract and protections provided by government citizens and often times come in the position of police officers. the citizens don't feel comfortable with protections afforded to them by police, going out requiring pepper spray, it promote vigilantism and ultimately the city or i should say elected officials need to promote police doing the right thing. but that involves around public officials and behind police and back something separated the de blasio administration. jackie: i think you are right, i have pepper spray because i don't feel safe so you feel you need to do something to try to protect yourself but it's not an answer, it's not the solution we are looking for. in new york city, is this issue
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of the setpoint, a vital form of transportation for so many people yet they are scared to go down and when they do, many have been attacked, assaulted, a woman two weeks ago was pushed to her death. here is what eric adams had to say about that. >> new yorkers see increased presence of nypd and trains on stations being proactive. we are going to engage new yorkers on house or dealing with mental health crises. jackie: he says that yet over the weekend many more people were attacked on the subway and you've got people literally homeless and mentally ill people living down there and living on trains. sometimes we've got to clean things up. >> absolutely right, one of the things that haven't recently was eric adams albany and sat down with the legislative leaders to try to get bail reform
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rescinded. they were on willing to commit to rescinding bail reform and that's a key factor driving the spike in crime. in addition, we look at the subway system, 99.9% of the people who commit crimes in the subway system did not pay their fair. we need to have a plausible deterrent for police at the turnstiles and arrest the people after coming to the system -- when you look at. jackie: you bring up great points and i agree, they didn't pay their fair, they should be arrested and all the arrested, they should be prosecuted. i'm willing to guarantee the guy who pushed the woman in front of the train to her death did not pay his fair but then you've got the d.a. saying the turnstile, we shouldn't really prosecute that and that is where it is, right? >> you are right. when you look at the manhattan district attorney alvin break, he came in to his incumbency
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stating the position of this progressive movement not prosecuting low-level offenses and goes back to what i mentioned earlier, 99.9% of the people in the subway system did not pay their fair. if we arrest and prosecute the individuals and receive bail storm, we will see drops in crime in the subway systems. jackie: we've got a similar situation in l.a. with george gascon, they want to do a recall because soft on crime policies are destroying people's lives. we are out of time but right this you, which is the of. >> thanks, jackie. jackie: the border crisis, a new report coming in revealing staggering number of illegal immigrants invading water patrol since october. we've got back story coming up next. ♪♪ >> the southern border is wide open. the crisis is caused by the biden administration but what is
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different now is the cartel are even more emboldened.
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welcome back, everybody. we are now going to talk about biden's border crisis and 20 o'clock, he visited the southern border, i want to ask, tell us
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about what you saw. >> i can tell you as bad as it's ever been, they must not watch this channel because they said we haven't seen much going on at the border, it must be getting better, that's not the case at all. communities throughout texas know that from a migrant trip across the country in the dead of night to see what's going on but right now the number one killer for our country's maternal coming across the border. what this administration is allowing happened across the border, it is tragic. we have the opportunity to talk about farmers and ranchers, one rancher told us a story of a migrant who stole a pickup truck and drove it up to the house, knocked on the door while the husband was away and asked to borrow their phone charger to charge their phone. this is how emboldened the situation is getting and because
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we've not had the force of law, the husband finally made it, thankfully the wife was okay but the county jail, there was no room so no work to but the individual to the individual got released. this is a situation communities throughout south texas are still having to deal with and it's expanding throughout the nations of we have dealt with the crisis. jackie: shadwell from a former acting dhs secretary on fox and friends some that up really well. listen to this. >> if bad actors want to try to infiltrate the united states than they have a playbook on how to do that, it's no longer mexico or central america, we are seeing folks from asia, africa, again all over the globe coming to the southwest border because they know they have a better chance today can they ever have before crossing the border illegally and getting into the country and staying in the country.
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jackie: people from all over know if you want to get in legally, just go to the southern border because it's open for business right now. i'll add to this also, there's a new report that's coming essentially high-level dhs officials tell fox news there's already been to 20000 no getaways at the u.s. border. you look at these numbers and facts the first four months of 2022. it's supposed to be the slower time at the border. >> exactly. this is known getaways, these are the people we catch trying to evade the law. jackie: we don't have a number of the ones we don't know about. >> exactly. they have a reason for trying to have the lock. i talked to an officer in corpus christi today talking about people coming across from iraq, afghanistan, a number of middle eastern countries, africa. it isn't a central american migrant move for economic
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benefits, this is cartel, literally across the country to advertise and train people how to evade our wall so they come across the border well trained and know what to say claim asylum or depending on the situation and you have human smuggling efforts. recently near my house, four hours north of the border, a known human smuggling was arrested by local sheriff's office, they looked into the data on the phone and realized connections to ms 13 and isis, the head of the person over to federal authorities and they ended up being released in corpus christi so if the situation people are dealing with, it's tragic we have to deal with and administration whose perverted what justice means in the sense that justice now means we let criminals out of jail but those who try to do
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it right there's no reason request about, scrutiny on law-abiding citizens we want we've made this on the evening at it many times, we felt for the border states like texas because so many people on the ground were having interactions and experiences but this is far beyond order state as well and you've got buses inflamed, so many undocumented people, they have to take them to other states as well. your response to that. >> there's no cooperation either with the local government so the county judge doesn't know, the chef doesn't know, the school districts and hospital districts, they are dealing with the burden of dealing with this, there is no cooperation working with them so it becomes a burden on the taxpayer. we were told of one family, they tried to call and evidence because a taxpaying citizen supporting the analyst couldn't get an analyst because they were
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busy with my friends so it's a burden on americans. jackie: very frustrating situation for so many people, we are out of time but good to see you and we will have you back on again soon. all right, i am jackie deangelis, you're watching the evening at it on foxbusiness, but does upper us, thank you for watching have a wonderful evening. ♪♪ >> breaking tonight, russian military continues to strike targets across ukraine as the world unite against vladimir putin president biden says freedom will prevail but how? at what cost? i am lawrence jones intrepidity tonight. the russians last night officially began their invasion of ukraine. whose missiles hit dozens of locations including military bases, airports and savvy apartment buildings. other civilian targets. we are told 137

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