tv Greta Van Susteren FOX News March 5, 2013 10:00pm-11:00pm PST
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email marketing from constant contact reaches people in a place they're checking every day -- their inbox. and it gives you the tools to create custom emails that drive business. it's just one of the ways constant contact can help you grow your small business. sign up for your free trial today at constantcontact.com/try. >> and welcome back to "hannity" and as you just heard in the previous segment the debate on gun control already started while it's extremely controversial issue, and it's about to get even more controversial because a brand new ad released by the center for urban renewal and education is linking certain gun control proposals to jump crow laws. according to the president star parker, the video is
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intend tay remind people that a time once existed when african-americans were unable to defend themselves because of certain anti-gun measures. this ad is called "never again" and is already sparking a great deal of controversy. take a look. >> ♪ ♪ >> that's a very powerful statement, we will no doubt continue to cover this important debate in the days and weeks ahead right here on this program. that is all the time we have left this evening. as always, thank you for being with us. let not your heart be troubled. greta is standing by to go on the record. greta take it away.
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thanks for being with us. >> tonight, politics and pain. who will the sequester hurt most? >> in order for obama to win this sequester argument, there has to be pain. >> eventually, a lot of people are going to feel some pain. >> the american people have to experience pain in their daily lives. >> because the pain will be real. >> they want to inflict the most pain possible on the most people possible rather than going after the wasteful washington spending. the plan is to see to it that the suffering is because of the republicans. >> president obama reminds me of the little boy who cried wolf. >> and the president's reluctance to cut spending. we've been caught in the battle of having cliffs, deadlines this is no way to run a government. >> the president is focused on solution not assigning blame. >> the white house says the
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first move to the sequester is to allow thousands of illegal immigrants jailed in america go free. >> the agency released these low-risk noncriminal detainees under a less expensive form of monitoring to ensure detention levels stayed within ice's overall budget. >> this idea of supervised release is laughable. these are all people who are multiple border crossers, they could never stop them crossing an international border, how on earth are they going to provide supervised release. >> i frankly think this is outrageous and i can't believe they can't find the kind of savings they need out of that department short of letting criminals go free. >> and texas governor rick perry also blasting ice over the release over illegal immigrants. he calls it a federally sponsored jail break. governor perry joins us, good evening, governor. >> hi, greta, good evening. >> greta: do you want to tell me what federally sponsored
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jail break means? >> well, when you start turning people out not coordinating with the local government at all. we've got fusion centers and the joint operations centers along the border with federal, state and hlocal law enforcement and we've been working together throughout the years and now it's silence out of our federal counterparts. michael mccall, the chairman of the house homeland security committee has tried to get this information as well. and there is no information forth coming from the dhs about who these people are, what kind of crimes they committed, where they're turned out and that's troubling not only for the law enforcement, but for the citizens across this country. so, i don't know how you would describe it as anything other than a federally sponsored jail break. >> well, if this is such an urgent crisis, what i don't get is that someone who has the authority like a house committee, a-- now with the majority of republicans if you know, if they want to find out.
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demand someone come from ice and tell them. they don't show up, you subpoena them. and exchange of letters and exchange of insults, but when is congress that wants to learn something, simply going to demand it? >> good question. and i think, you know, michael mccall is one of the most knowledgeable about border security and the issues dealing with law enforcement that we have, a texan, someone who i greatly admire. when he makes those types of inquiries and the president of the united states, through his secretary of homeland security basically flip him off, i don't get that. i think it shows such a lack of respect, not only for congress, but a lack of respect for the state and again, whether it's medicaid expansion or whether it's just law enforcement issue, the administration does not trust the states and that's a huge probl problem. >> greta: well, who has custody of these people who are suspected of being illegal
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immigrants? ask the federal government and are they there pursuant to some sort of judicial process? if they are, i would think it would be a judge that lets the person go and it would be upon application by ice or by someone? >> these are ice detention centers and you're absolutely correct. i don't know how you just turn people out upon the street without some type of judicial intervention. so, again, a lot of questions here, but the most important one is that we don't know who these people are, greta. that we make the request. we've asked ice and all the way up to dhs. now, we did get a response back from secretary napolitano and she gave us kind of the carpet bombing approach, if you will, that there's going to be huge discombobulation and lots of problems that we've heard and saw all of that and the fact of the matter is a lot of that's just been hyped up. but when you start talking about turning loose individuals who could be quite
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criminal in their nature, that's a big problem and this administration needs to be thoughtful about how you deal with the sequester issue and cutting and prioritizing, we do it in the states every day. this seems to be a plan to try to scare as many americans as we can, to try to put as much pain on to people, whether they're individuals who are furloughed from some fairly important jobs. i think this president's got a political agenda that he's driving, not one that's looking to solve problems in this country. >> well, john morton is the head of ice. he is a former federal prosecutor, not known to be soft on crime. this is not a guy who is soft on crime. sort of let people go. obviously, there's something going on. some sort of a communication problem, some sort of finances problem, but it's deeply disturbing to the american people as two people fight over it and we don't get the
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straight story. >> absolutely. it's a big problem for people out trying to make ends meet and they're seeing washington with an out of control spending habit and they're the ones that are paying the price for it not to mention people who are highly concerned about their family's safety when they see these stories about individuals who are detained and when you're talking about people who are detained, you're talking about individuals who have some criminal element to them. >> all right, now, let me turn the question to you. you mentioned medicaid expansion and you had said i think as long ago as july you're not going to accept the expansion of medicaid, and governor rick scott of florida has changed his mind and governor chris christie i don't know if he's changed his mind, but accepting that medicaid. why do you think those two governors are doing it and why aren't you? >> well, we looked at this rather intently. the legislature just offer the course of the last 24 hours in texas and the republican
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caucus overwhelmingly support the position of not expanding medicaid. it is a broken system. we have asked the federal government for years to allow us the flexibility to be able to put these programs into place, but the fact is, it's a broken system. it's going to cost trillions of dollars to implement this program. but texans are not going to be black mailed into expanding a program, but that the federal government is telling us they're giving us all of this free money. greta. they can't keep criminals in jail today, much less be able to have extra money to pass out to these states. so the idea that money is going to be available for expanded medicaid is a pipe dream. >> greta: all right, are you saying that governor rick scott has a pipe dream, and governor chris christie has a pipe dream, both republicans have changed their mind? i mean, why do you think that? and let me add that your former deputy controller hamilton described expansion as smart, affordable and fair and this was just about a
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month ago. so your former state comptroller thinks it's a good idea. >> a lot of people might think it's a good idea, but we've looked at the facts and this is just hard, cold facts. we know what it's going to cost and this is the same administration that said that obamacare would not cost the american people one dime more. we know now over the next ten years it's going to be over 8 trillion dollars worth of costs to the states and the federal government and that's money we don't have, greta. we're kidding ourselves if we think that we have that money available. >> greta: is it, you think that these other governors are accepting it because for the first, i think, three years, the federal government says we're going to pay all, you know, we're going to pay all, but i think it's in the next year, all of a sudden, suddenly the states begin having to pick up the freight. is that what you're worried about, not the first couple years, but have to start picking up the freight? >> what i worry about is a federal government making promises that it can't live up to, and again, i go back to,
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we're in a period of time here where we're turning out criminals out on to our streets because we don't have the money to keep them in. yet, somehow or another, this money is going to magically show up. it's not, greta. this money is either printed, which devalues the dollars that we have in our pocket or it's borrowed from countries like china. either one of those i think are bad, a bad result. >> greta: so, why do you think, i'm so confused. why do you think that governor rick scott changed his mind? >> i don't know, you'd have to ask rick. he seems to think that he's going to get some flexibility out of the federal government, which i-- you know, again, you're going to have to ask him about that. we're already able to do that which brings up -- if you give a waiver to one state, why couldn't another state be able to do that without going and asking mother may i, to the federal government? if this one size fits all or you have to come to beg us for your money back is one of the things that's always been a great consternation to governors as we deal with the
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federal government. we know best how to run our state. that's the beauty of the 10th amendment and washington is-- >> so then, absolutely no expansion in texas, you're not going to change your mind? >> i don't see any way in the world that we're going to take this proposition the federal government, medicaid program is broken. now, if the federal government wants to sit down and talk to us, and i've offered up options over the course of the years, block granting back to the states to allow us to come up with solutions like health savings accounts, responsibility programs, co-pays, all of those, we could put substantially more people under health care, but this administration and this bureaucratic method of hhs in washington d.c. is going to allow that to happen. >> greta: governor-- >> i doubt it. >> greta: governor, always nice to see you, thank you, sir.
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>> thanks, greta. god speed. >> greta: thank you. and there's breaking news out of venezuela tonight, a short time ago the word came down the man who once called president bush 43 the devil and said the podium in the u.n. where president bush just spoke reeked evof sulfur is dead. the polarizing president and a president who cozied up with iran and cuba led his country for 14 years. and the reporter is live in venezuela with the latest. tell me what was the reaction around the country when the news broke that chavez was dead, sir? >> sent people flocking to the streets, men, women and children all weeping in the center of the city to the center of the city and people scurrying off to their homes and store fronts closing. a mix of things, everything is shutting down really early. >> greta: was chavez popular? >> i think, i think popular is
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an understatement. peop people-- you listen to the people on the street and chavez will live on, chavez will live on. we were shocked, i've never seen with an american president in my lifetime. >> greta: all right, in 30 days there's going to -- according to the constitution of venezuela there will be another election. who is going be to be -- who is the lead on that? >> well, before, before he left for cuba to receive his last cancer treatment, chavez asked the venezuelan people to ask for the vice-president and former foreign minister. analysts suspect enrique, or a governor is going to head up the opposition ticket. >> greta: what's the sentiment among the people in venezuela if you could sort of generallylize towards the united states? >> i think it's a mixed bag, really. i think that chavez played a
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harsh rhetoric for his 14 years in power and the u.s. as the imperialist nation and really tried to shift the power away from it, but at the same time, now, the united states buys more crude oil from venezuela than any other country in the world. and a lot of people realize this, too. so you get both polar opposite. it was always a love-hate relationship. chavez said he didn't it need us -- didn't want us, but in the end kind of needed us. >> greta: andrew, thank you. >> sure. >> greta: so would chavez's death change relations between the two countries and should you care? former u.n. ambassador john bolton joins us, sir. >> good evening. >> greta: first of all, why should americans care whether chavez is alive or dead? >> i think it makes a big difference, it certainly makes a difference to the people of venezuela or can. but from the u.s. point of view this has enormous potential implications because a venezuela that moves away from chavez's foreign policy means venezuela that's less welcoming to iran and its
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efforts to avoid international sanctions and use venezuela's uranium reserves for its nuclear program, venezuela less friendly to russia, less friendly to castro's cuba, less friendly to left-wing regimes around the hemisphere and campaigns and other aspects. this is a potentially huge change. i would have to say within venezuela after is a years of chavez and decades of quote, unquote democracy nothing to right home about. civil institutions, constitutional government. civil society in venezuela are very frail indeed. >> all right, you know the heir apparent, the man who defected. >> the former foreign minist minister, he's a basically a thug in my view, i don't really-- >> how do you really feel about him. >> i think he fit in with chavez, the government that they ran, the populace government that spread the wealth around and suppressed the opposition.
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i don't think that chavez's moment can hold together over the long-term. the opposition though facing the election in 30 days that they're under enormous strain to try and hold together behind enrique who was the candidate in the last election, and not clear how they will do, but in the long-term, i think like the castros of cuba, with chavez gone, it's only a matter of time before his movement collapses. >> greta: and called president obama a clown, called president bush 43 a devil. >> okay, well bush 43 once called him castro without brains so i think the better of that one. >> greta: an equal opportunity there at least, slinging words about each other. i'm curious, what, you know, what real difference does it make, the big picture who we want in our hemisphere and who we don't. do americans feel in any it particular way, gas prices go up or down and any way the american people should feel it? >> i think they should feel it. the overall change it could
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bring in the hemisphere. used it to finance left wingers around the hemisphere, bolivia, argentina and supported the narco terrorists in colombia and left wingers all over the place and that's a destabilizing impact, politically and economically in the hemisphere. i think in terms of venezuela's oil reserves, he basically stripped the venezuelan state oil company of its assets. he didn't reinvest, their production goes down and distributing bread and why the correspondent said he was popular. if you give money away that can make you popular. but venezuela has lost under 15 years of chavez by not having the reinvestment and a more responsible government could increase oil production that could benefit them and benefit us. >> greta: and if-- ments i think it's an open question and maybe he got back in just in time to die in venezuela and maybe he actually did die earlier today or maybe before that, but
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that's part of the problem with this government. this has been -- this has been what they call in latin america, a strong ruler. not a democrat by any stretch of the imagination. >> greta: ambassador, thank you, sir. and tonight, former president jimmy carter releasing a statement about hugo chavez that many americans may not agree with. saying in part president chavez will be remembered for bold assertion of autonomy for hat continue american government and communication skills and personal connection with supporters in his country and abroad to whom he gave hope and empowerment. okay, now it's your turn. should a former u.s. president be praising a foreign leader who made his disdain for america so very clear? go to gretawire.com and tell us what you think about what president carter should have said about chavez. and straight ahead, the obama administration's own watch dog suggesting thousands and thousands of ways to cut costs. but is president obama ignoring them? oust oversight chair darrell
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issa is here to tell what his committee found next. and looking for men and women, and why are federal agency posting help wanted ads at the same time they're posting furloughs. get ready for this a royal slip of the tongue. did kate middleton tell the whole world a secret about the baby. baby. gotcha ! got you ! you cannot escape the rebel forces ! ahhh. got you !
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>> committee chair darrell issa is slamming president obama. according to a new oversight report the president has ignored thousands and thousands of recommendations from his own watch dogs saving federal agencies 67 billion dollars a year, that would cover almost 80% of the sequestration cut. and congressman issa joins us, nice to see you, sir. >> thanks for having me on. and thanks for covering this growing problem. >> greta: growing? i'll say it's exploding. >> it's growing, but put it into perspective, about 26 billion dollars under bush at a similar time and henry waxman, chairman waxman did. this is not the only administration not to listen to their ig's and to lose opportunities to save vasts amounts of money, but it's growing. >> greta: let's explain to the viewer, ig is inspector
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general and they do individual analysis of the departments, right. >> they're criminal investors and primarily look the at waste and fraud from a criminal standpoint, but of course along the way they find lots of money and that's really what they do. about 12,000 men and women, about a 2 billion dollar budget throughout all of government, but they are the nonpartisans that are working for you within government. >> greta: they've identified 67 billion dollars at least pretty easily of waste? >> these are the ones that have not been responded to. the fact is some of them go back three, four years, over a thousand days with a big chunk of the 1700 different ones and it's a crying shame. one of the testimony-- >> crying shame? it's worse than that. one of the things, it's so outrageous, night after night after night, 67 billion dollars and we're fighting over 82 billion dollars in the sequestration. if anyone made any efforts to get the 67 billion dollars, you know, we wouldn't be fighting over 82, whatever the difference is, 13, 15 billion.
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>> exactly. if you took a third of this and said we're going to get rid of that, what starts to happen, of course, is everything that you really treasure that somebody is telling you would be cut wouldn't have to be cut. the government still has to go on a diet, but this 67 billion is known. when we look at our other ig's, inspector generals and their reports, we're looking at about 7% of the budget that falls in this category which means there's about another 210 million per year of this kind. >> greta: give me an idea of an idea of waste that's not being attended to by the obama administration. >> probably one of them that would hit home, pell grants and in fact, student loans, there's a number of known con games going on and it kind of goes like this. you're on some sort of a, what we used to think of correspondence, but now, a distance learning and they're taking advantage of the law where you can put all of this money in tuition and kickback,
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if you will, a huge portion of it for living expenses. meaning, you take a distance learning course, but they start paying for your housing. on top of that, there are organizations that realize that they can put a whole bunch of people for a few terms into this distance learning and take half of thousands of dollars and it ends up being hundreds of thousands or millions of dollars these organizations that are doing this, this is not the university, but in fact, organizations taking advantage of it, have been recognized and there's been no action to create the ability to catch them and stop them early. and this is the kind of thing that gives, you know, distance education or pell grants the bad reputation. >> and hurts the students that need the loans. >> and you've got a letter, you received a letter from the sheriff paul babeu, who is our next guest. he wants you to investigate about the -- he wants to investigate ice releasing those who they were holding. your thoughts. are you going to do that? >> we will.
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now, when i say we. i serve on judiciary and they announced they're going to do it and homeland security. our investigators are going to work with them. that's the nature of my committee. we're the principal investigation of oversight committee and we have the committees, particularly two to deal with the the sub issues and overseeing justice and homeland security and work with them. >> greta: can i tell you how you get this answer? did you call john, come up here and tell us why you released them and he says i don't want to. and you slap a subpoena on him he and he shows up and you can have the answer in 24 hours or have letters back and forth and hearings and days and weeks and never get the answer. it's your choice. >> greta, as you know, we'll go all the way through contempt to get the discovery and witnesses. >> greta: i bet you could get this information tomorrow. >> i believe we'll have it within 30 days. >> greta: all right. >> and greta, understand this is important, but it's yet another example of where the
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president is trying to use sequestration as a political tool and this is yet another use of that tool. you know that. >> greta: all i know is that this is a problem and we don't have the answers and everyone's going to try to go out of his way to make it so complicated to answer a simple question. >> i don't expect it it to be complicated i expect to be what i told you to be the result. the question is why is someone using public safety at risk to support a political agenda that somehow they didn't have the money? >> always nice to see you, sir. >> thank you, greta. >> greta: and coming up here, paul babeu as we just said. we're going to talk to him about his letter and also, did kate middleton let the cat out of the bag. what did she let out about the baby. baby. and i know cong hey, our salads.
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>> here is sheriff paul babeu says you're in trouble, big trouble. he says the release of illegal immigrants is a danger to public safety and now the sheriff is demanding a public inquiry. the sheriff joins us, nice to see you, sir. >> good to see you, greta, thanks for having me on. >> greta: so you wrote this letter to the congress and you want an investigation. what are you looking for? >> well, we're not getting answers. i've asked ice officials here in arizona all the way up to janet napolitano, demanding
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who were these people that she released. he we broke this story last week, nobody said a word about it. ice had concealed this under secrecy and we said, wait a minute, hundreds of criminal illegals have been released in my county without advising me as a sheriff or any police chief. they said, first they denied it and then they said a couple hundred were released and 3303 were released, but they were nonviolent low risk detainees and i knew otherwise. i asked, tell me who these people are, what charges they were held on and what is their criminal history and where are they? and they have refused to tell me as a sheriff any information whatsoever. and then we find out that wasn't-- >> well, go ahead, i'm sorry, sir. >> it wasn't 303. they'd lied about that. it was 2000 plus and they were on to implement their plan to release another 3,000 until all of this attention was focused on them and they
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stopped. they were halted in their tracks to release 3000 additional criminals to the streets. >> greta: all this is like fundamentally, i think, a little bit nuts. first of all, you know, you're the sheriff and you ought to know who is being released if someone is in detention, ought to know who they are, what they're detained for, if there's a crime. that information. i'm with you on that. then you've got the fact that you have to go to congress to try to get in information from ice's oversight on ice and take you 30 days instead of bringing up the head of ice and saying, you know, what's the problem. who are these people? so it's a little bit of -- it's a little disheartening to the american people to watch you can't get answers to try to find out if a mistake has been made or political made or something sinister has been done. >> exactly. and here, this is supposed be to be the most transparent federal government and it's far from that. and it's continual coverup of this information and these are the same people, remember, we all have different opinions about the 11 million plus
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illegals that are in our country and all of us have agreed, including janet napolitano, president obama, that we target, identify, imprison the 34,000 most violent criminals of this 11 million that's this group. so now she can't have it both ways and say these criminals aren't so bad. the criminals they've just released to the street and now finding out that they have very serious crimes in their past. >> greta: we don't know what they have because they won't release the information. that's what i don't understand. and the head of ice, a former federal prosecutor, those are not people who are typically soft on crime. i'm curious, did he give a statement to you saying why they didn't have to tell you why nr hthey're being released. >> and i've seen it and governor perry, it's part of the course here.
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we've seen it with fast and furious and we've seen it with benghazi and now the release of thousands of criminals, nobody knows and nobody's accountable in this government and pointing different directions at anybody else and who is running this government and whatever happened to leaders taking ownership and responsibility and at least trying to make it right if they didn't know? >> it's so baffling and take it one step further for you. we have two parties that both have control of had a house behind me, the democrats in the senate and the republicans in the house, they all have subpoena power and could all get you that answer right away and doesn't happen. sheriff, i'm taking the last word on that, thank you, sir. >> thank you, greta. thanks for having me on. >> greta: now to another side effect of the sequester furloughs, listen to this, at the same time government agencies are sending out furlough notices, many are also posting help wanted ads.
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that's right, they are hiring. just in the last two days federal agencies posted 623 jobs ads, ranging from federal air marshal making $180,000 a year. lifeguard making $11 an hour and why all the hiring now? and chief political correspondent byron is joining me. >> they're always hiring. they have 2.2 million civilian employees at any given time they're hiring a number of people. people move in and people move out. republicans have tried for years to try to cut the size of the federal work force by attrition. that is when people retire, they leave, get a job somewhere else, they're not replaced and these are reasonably small cuts maybe four people who live only replace three of them. bring the size of the federal government down. instead, the size of the federal government went up by 13% in 2008, 2009, 2010, the worst years of the economic
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down turn and went up by about 250,000 people levelling off some now, but the federal government's obviously still hiring whether it's a sequester or not. >> i don't think there's a single person here in washington that doesn't know one, two, three, four, five people who work at the federal government and complain they have nothing to do all day and surfing the web. do you know somebody live that. in the last five days i had a conversation with someone like that. >> republicans have been sending letters to the administration daily saying what about this, what about that, you're spending x amount on this and all of these programs that duplicate each other. senator tom coburn the republican has a section on his be website, sequester this and writing about the programs that duplicate each other. the republican aren't terribly organized, but trying to show each day the amount of waste going on at the same time the federal government is complaining about sequester. >> greta: the point of hiring people and people not working not just a democratic
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administration problem, it's going on in washington forever. we have a story my so-called favorite of lawyers in the sec downloading porn in their work time and american people are paying, not exactly one administration's problem. >> and this is a continuing problem. in 2011 when they were having the debt ceiling fight that actually led to the agreement that created the sequester. i did a story looking through all of the federal joblessness at the time and one agency was look-- looking at the job listings, one was looking for a general advisor in iraq, $155,000. and while we're furloughing people and telling people to stay home we're hiring more. >> and there are people who retire, there are people who leave. obviously, some of those jobs have to be filled. some of them are very important, but that's the way to do the downsizing, without having to furlough people or to cut their pay. >> greta: byron, thank you. >> thank you. >> greta: coming up, new
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i just fed the recommended amount... and they both loved the taste. after a few months max's "special powers" returned... and i got my hero back. purina cat chow healthy weight. after a few months max's "special powers" returned... >> tonight, new information about benghazi almost six months after the terror attack on the u.s. consulate. we have not heard from any survivors, but secretary of state john kerry said he has. and here is what he told fox news correspondent james rosen who is travelling with the new secretary in the middle east. >> why have we not heard from any of the benghazi survivors? >> well, i can't tell you the answer to that. i could tell you that i have visited with one of the survivors at the bethesda hospital.
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i don't know what the circumstances are of any requests to talk. >> president obama vowed that the perpetrators of those attacks would be brought to justice. as you know, any law enforcement or counterterrorism officer will tell you the longer passage of time after the given event, the less likely you'll bring the perpetrator to justice. it been six months, will we see justice brought to those perpetrators and isn't the passage of time making that more and more unlikely. >> james, i hope we will and i hope the president is committed to doing so. >> it's six months out. >> justice sometimes takes a while when you operate by high standards and when you need the levels of evidence that we do, but we are working at it and we will continue to work at it. >> greta: congressman jason chaffetz joins us, nice to see you. >> glad to be back. >> greta: i warned you during the break, i'm going to ask you. and let me pick up where james rosen did. why have we not-- >> the state department will not provide information for
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the people. >> greta: who they are? >> who they are, more than a dozen of them. some were interviewed in libya, some were interviewed in germany the night after the attack. do we know there have been people at bethesda hospital? secretary kerry visited those people and they won't tell us their names. >> greta: i tell you how to do it. you tell secretary john kerry to come up it capitol hill and ask him the names and tell him those are the names you'll ask. how about that one? >> amen, i'll ask that. >> greta: and the republicans run the house you're not the chairman of the committee. that's a good start. you get the names and once you get the names you don't have to have hearings, you can have depositions. and bring them up to capitol hill and the survivors, ask for depositions, right? >> we happened to find the father of the person who is still in the the hospital and without breaking any trust here, but being as open and transparent as i can, the father told me if you had called into the hospital previously you never would have found that person because they changed his name on the hospital records. >> greta: what you do, you
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keep bringing these people and putting them underoath. >> every day. >> greta: it isn't happening. >> it is. >> greta: who has been under oath? we've had the 8th tranche of documents coming from the state department. >> greta: but you don't know who the survivors are. >> whistleblowers and we get some good information. >> greta: if you know who are the whistleblowers, where are they, and why haven't you put them under oath, since last september. >> it's frustrating. i'm sure the white house wants this to go away. if they do give us the information. the account review board had done this information. and we sent them a letter to testify before congress and they turned it down. >> greta: you've got subpoena power. i don't understand. why are you afraid to get-- i don't know what did or didn't happen at benghazi, but if you don't ask them, you drop a subpoena on them and get them under oath by order. >> look, mr. pickering was very nice and kind to us we hope to have a discussion with
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him. as another precursor to laying the foundation to get this. this should not take this long. if the administration wanted to do this they could, but they're making us jump through the hoops. >> greta: let me tell you what charl cheryl akerson on twitter, turned documents over to the senate intel and said in twitter, said there were warnings from libya sent to washington in the days leading up to the attack that specifically warned of an imminent attack on the u.s. compound in benghazi. that cheryl at kinson cbs on her twitter account. doesn't that make you want to subpoena people? >> absolutely. i've seen part of these documents and i don't know what-- >> who is the chairman. >> chairman issa. >> greta: he was just here. i'm going to chat with him in the green room. no, we pound on this every single day. slowly, but surely, the documents keep trickling out from the state department.
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we work on this every day and not going to let go of this. >> greta: you've got to subpoena these names. you've got to subpoena these, and depose them and put them under oath or you're never going to get the answer. >> amen. i vote yea. i agree with you. i agree with you. >> greta: more than two years ago, the people of bp made a commitment to the gulf. and every day since, we've worked hard to keep it. today, the beaches and gulf are open for everyone to enjoy. we've shared what we've learned, so we can all produce energy more safely. bp's also committed to america. we support nearly two-hundred-fifty thousand jobs and invest more here than anywhere else. we're working to fuel america for generations to come.
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>> okay. everyone, it's time to hash it it out and first tonight a royal gaffe creating a big buzz. e news reporting kate middleton having a girl. royal slip of the tongue may indicate daughter. yes shall the wife of prince william may have spilled the beans on their baby's gender. someone in the crowd gave her a teddy bear and thank you i'll take that for my d-- and asked whether she would say daughter? kate said no we don't know. is the cat out of the royal bag? we'll find out in july. and when you carrying around-- l.a. times say what's in a name apple iphone was almost called teletime. >> and it sounded like a
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future version of telepod. and moby short for mobile and looks like iphone worked out pretty well for apple. and check out what is headed to israel. and 60 years after its first publication, playboy launches hebrew edition in israel. and articles about israeli writers and you can read playboy just for the article in hebrew. gentlemen, did you get that. headline, ap tweeting after stolen a yacht runs aground on a california beach following pizza and beer binge. before they grounded it in shallow water. beach goers in theed it was in trouble and called police to help the stranded sailors. in the end they landed in
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handcuffs. finally, fox news mike emanuel tweeting with an awkward run-in. my apologies for bumping into senator kelly ayotte at today's senate g.o.p. news conference. we got crammed in there like sardines, oops, awkward. our mike is a gentleman. he apologized via twitter. now it's your turn to hash it out with us. hashtag greta on your tweets and posts and follow me ott and posts and follow me ott greta wire. [ mom ] a new game? that'll save the day. so will bounty select-a-size. it's the smaller powerful sheet. look! one select-a-size sheet of bounty is 50% more absorbent than a full size sheet of the leading ordinary brand. use less, with bounty select-a-size. to get her oven baked taste straight from the microwave. like her oven roasted chicken baked in a rich, creamy alfredo sauce. she calls them her new comfort bakes. marie callender's. it's time to savor.
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