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tv   The Kelly File  FOX News  January 13, 2014 9:00pm-10:01pm PST

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galoot. when writing to the factor. thanks for watching tonight. miss megyn is next. i am bill o'reilly and remember the spin stops right here, we're definitely looking out for you. i'm megyn kelly, live in new york city. some administration officials are going off after what justice officials are calling a quota system. plus, two top journeys drop a bo boem bombshell about a hit list, wait until you see the top two democrats on it. we're going home, we're going to cut them loose. fallout after an interview with the real life hero from the box office smash, "lone survivor." reaction from dakota myer.
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and welcome to "the kelly file," developing, the world's most dangerous terrorist, scoring two big wins from behind the defenses of guantanamo bay. after they reverse course, deciding contrary to its own earlier findings that this man is no longer too dangerous to release. at the very same time we learned that the master mind of 911 is spearing propaganda. her brother was a pilot killed in the 9/11 attacks. she will speak to this nonsense
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in a moment. first, janet napolitano joins us on this gift to osama bin laden's suspected bodyguard jud judge, who says he has now been cleared for eventual transfer, he is eligible for transfer subject to inhumane conditions. what say you. >> the law is pretty clear, the constitution guarantees a fair process called due process to everybody affected by the government. the supreme court has ruled five times since 9/11 that the constitution applies since guantanamo bay. that means if the president wants to ensure they are there until time of trial, if they don't have enough evidence they have to let them go. we need to know what the evidence is, the context of doing this in secret and then
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reverse in secret smells of a political deal rather than a judicial decision. >> it is separate and apart from the nature of the proceedings, judge, in the first part you know there is a war going on, in war, generally we capture or kill. why isn't this guy just thanking his lucky stars that he was not killed and enjoy gitmo. that is what the critics argue, when you are actually trying to win a war, the goal is to win. >> the emotionless side agrees with you, i have been to gitmo, in terms of the constitution the supreme court has said these people, even that person right there who probably is exactly what the government says he is is entitled to the same protections as we are. if the government can't try him and prove what they say he did, they have to let him go. now, they can follow him,
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re-arrest him -- let me finish. >> we have a 30% recidivism rate, meaning we go back out and try to kill them again. suddenly he is going to say you know what? i love america, i'm not going to try to kill americans anymore. >> i doubt he is ever going to change his mind. we have a constitution that means what it says and the supreme court prepared to enforce it. now, why the government chose him and why it chose to let him go after it said it had enough evidence to charge and convict him -- >> that they were never going to release him, oh, never mind, off you go. >> we have a right to know, and because the same constitution that guarantees him a trial guarantees transparency in the obama administration, and they are blocking the transparent -- >> thank you for page two, there is an issue about the master
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mind of 9/11, khalid mohammed. deborah burlinggame joins me, this is incredible, some health care worker in england got a 27-page letter, handwritten from the master mind of 9/11 talking about his repentance, and this is allowed? >> it is absolutely not allowed. the lawyers in this case, his defense attorneys, according to "the guardian" tom petter inter this. >> you can't write a letter, isn't it a crime? >> it is a violation of the protective order that was set by -- in 2004 by judge join hensgreen in the d.c. circuit, prohibiting contraband from being allowed into the -- into
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the cells of these detainees, the lawyers have to sign extensive agreements. these are access agreements saying what they will abide by, in order to have access to their clients. somebody must have smuggled is this letter from this kid in, when he was in north carolina college. and then they smuggled, first, they translated and typed, re-typed according to "the guardian" and smuggled these 27 pages out. that is a gross violation of the protective order that was filed in 2004. it was that protective order by the way which was negotiated with the original habeas attorneys. >> how does one of the world's worst, worst living terrorists get to communicate in a 27-page propaganda piece railing on christianity, again, talking about how he as allegedly repented, as the home health
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care worker asked him to do. >> first, he didn't say he repented for 9/11, he just simply says he repents every day. i guarantee you, this is a man going to court wearing camouflage army warrior fatigues. he is no longer part of the jihad and can't kill the infidels, and this 25-year-old from nottingham, new england, this is a very smart guy, communicating with his fellow jihadis all over the world. this is a gold mine of propaganda coming from the rock star of 9/11 right out of his jail cell. that is how stupid the infidiff are in letting this get in the way. i have to say, shame on you, an active duty marine, you are a disgrace to your uniform for participating in this, and trying to make this man look
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like a sympathetic man in need of spiritual communicate from this clueless guy in england who lost 67 of his british nationals in 9/11. this is dangerous, this energizes the jihadis who read this and hear this. they're not hearing a conversation about theology, they're saying keep going, the west is a despicable place. by the way, he outs himself as a pedophile. he says the united states is so corrupt, the sexual atmosphere is so bad any normal unmarried man is going to be sexually aroused by pretty young children. so it is not all good news coming out of this letter for jihad and their reputation. >> we are supposed to be tightly corralling people like osama bin
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laden's driver. and instead we have one about to get a get out jail free card, probably he doesn't care so much about american safety as we do. and number two, you have ksm and a pen pal. >> it is ridiculous, and may i for a moment respond to what judge napolitano said. i never thought i would have the opportunity to correct a judge on live conviction television. he doesn't know what he is talking about. the supreme court in 2004 in the hamdi decision, said that the authorization of use of military force, these people can be kept until the end of hostilities without any charges whatsoever, as long as they have due process. that is what this guy has been getting all of these years. the fact that they have decided to clear him for release, and your viewers need to know, that doesn't mean they have exonerated him. that means that they have under
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pressure from this administration made a political decision to empty guantanamo. this man was deemed dangerous. he was deemed as one of the worst of the worst, one of the strongest jihadists, the recidivism rate is accelerating. they go back to jihad much faster. and two of the groups in the libyan factors, the al-qaeda-connected groups were connected by a guy from baghraim, until the arab spring. >> and the terrorist was released from gitmo, same program. >> that is an al-qaeda-connected group. >> we're going to continue, you have to shine a light on this. what is next? who is going to walk next?
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who is going to get a pen pal next so they can spew terrorist propaganda while we're sitting home having our dinner. what do you think about it? i mean, listen, everybody is very focused on chris christie. and the bridge, and that is a story. but we're talking about terrorist propaganda from one of if not the worst living terrorist in the country, being sent out to some kid over in england, in 27 pages, who are the lawyers who assisted with this. what will be done about this, and who else is about to get a get out of free jail card from gitmo, what do you think? send me a tweet @megakelly, and send me a comment. we are not done with that. still ahead, a new government mandate for our schools, the department of justice saying that race should be considered when punishing a child and that completely neutral policies enforced in a
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neutral way that have no ill motives behind them can nonetheless be discriminatoordi. we report, you decide. plus, a man charged with killing a young graduate student was out of jail in three months. plus, the powerful movie "lone survivor" is becoming an enormous hit at the box office and is now being questioned by some media outlets as a propaganda tool for the military. medal of honor recipient dakota myer is live right after this break. ♪ [ male announcer ] to truck guys, the truck is everything. and when you put them in charge of making an unbeable truck, good things happen.
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[ female announcer ] stay strong, stay active with boost. nouri mal . here is a clip from the new movie, "lone survivor." the film just had a big weekend. in fact, one theater in texas ended up cancelling several other hit films, "wolf of wall
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street," including others, but now some are starting to criticize the movie as pro-war propaganda. and we talk to dakota myer, who is a marine corps veteran, one of only three living recipients of the incredible honor. great to see you, sergeant, we hear of some pushback. >> megyn, whenever i keep hearing propaganda. i guess you can call it whatever you want to. but understand that that propaganda, whatever they're calling propaganda is the reality for point 4% of the nation that has gone over there for the past 12 years, fighting these wars so we can be independent and free. so that is the reality, that propaganda, you can call it whatever you want. it is not propaganda.
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these are the stories of the men and women who are sacrificing and they have to come back and tell the story so that other people know, i think what marcus did -- >> marcus luttrell. >> it is great, he has to tell his story so people realize it. >> he gave an interview to an anchor on cnn, they had a contentious exchange. i'll play you part of it that is getting some headlines. >> i don't mean to disrespect in any way, but it seems senseless, all of these wonderful people killed for an op that went wrong. >> we were sent over there by this country, you're telling me that because we were over there doing what we were told to do by our country that it was senseless and that we died for nothing? >> no, that is not what i'm saying at all. >> that is what you just said. yeah, it went bad for us over there, but that was our job, that is what we did. >> your reaction, sergeant? >> you know, it is not
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senseless, the problem is, people don't understand what the mission is going over there. it is not like what it was back in world war ii, and it was a country, and somebody had to give, and that is how you decide the win of a war. we went there to stabilize the country to put them in a position to where they had an opportunity to go and secure the country and make a difference. we did that. we helped them form their government and helped to provide the security. the men and women are still over there sacrificing. i just got back from afghanistan over christmas, and i'm telling you the sacrifice is not for nothing. and i told the marines that came back, don't let people tell you it was for nothing, because it was. >> and i think jake tapper was trying to give voice to how some people look at that war and then give marcus luttrell the chance to respond to that. and it started a dialogue on that subject. another thing discussed right now sergeant, is what bob gates said, about how the president feels about how these wars,
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about how iraq is the so-called bad war and afghanistan is the so-called good war. and mr. gates, his interpretation of the president is not having been fully behind the war in afghanistan, and having being convinced that it may fail, here he is speaking over the weekend. >> by telling the troops you support them, it is another to work at making them believe that you believe as president that their sacrifice is worth it. that the cause is just. president bush did that with the troops when i was secretary. i did not see president obama do that. >> your thoughts on that. >> so my question is why is he just now saying that? you know, he was in a position to make a difference and make a stance and say something.
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why does he wait until now to say it when he is not in a position to do it? he was supposed to represent us and take care of us. why didn't he do it then. if he didn't believe that the power above us was doing it right, then why didn't he step down? >> i can't help but ask you about the al-qaeda flags flying over fallujah and iraq. >> let's say this, the iraq war, don't give up on iraq yet. i see that this is a test for them, but let's don't give up on them, don't count them out. i think what is happening is we're reporting on this, saying i told you so but i don't think we're there yet, let's sit back and watch, they may surprise you. >> dakota myer, recipient of the medal, we appreciate your service to this nation, sir. >> thank you so much. >> all the best to you. taking your thoughts on that, follow me @megynkelly.
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and did the feds drop the ball on the case with the young graduate student in text? plus, a dramatic report saying hillary clinton has a hit list. and secretary kerry is just one of the big democrats marked on that list. more on the story next. [ ship horn blows ] no, no, no! stop! humans. one day we're coming up with the theory of relativity, the next... not so much. but that's okay. you're covered with great ideas like optional better car replacement from liberty mutual insurance. total your car, and we give you the money to buy one a model year newer. learn about it at libertymutual.com. liberty mutual insurance. responsibility. what's your policy? olive garden's signature favorites weeknights are for favorites. now just $10. including everyone's favorite fettuccine alfredo and our classic lasagna. plus uimited soup or salad, and warm breadsticks. signature favorites nojust ten dollars,
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an eye-opening new report out now details the inner workers of hillary clinton's team, including the revelation that her staff ranked people in a hit list, including high profile democratic leaders and gave the most helpful to hillary a one, while some of the most treacherous earned a seven.
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columnist for the washington post, boy oh boy, among others they were not happy with john kerry, ted kennedy, and don't even mention claire mccaskill. >> it is like we stepped into a time warp of the '70s, you have hillary clinton channeling her richard nixon, targeting people, chris van hollen, who had not even endorsed barack obama, and he wonders why the heck am i on the list. the aides were gloating over the demise of the people on the list, gloating over your adve e
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adversearies -- >> let me ask you, voters are saying don't both parties do this? you worked in the bush white house. >> they're right that both parties do this. you have chris christie using his power of government to strong arm people who wouldn't endorse him. and look, barack obama did this. barack obama in 2010 said we're going to punish our enemies and reward our friends. and he actually tried to develop an enemies list, issue an executive order that required anyone applying for a federal contract to expose who they gave contributions to, and basically declare are you a friend of the obama white house? and this administration is more than willing to use the power of the government to punish its political enemies. we have a situation here where the current president of the united states and two leading candidates to succeed him are all engaged.
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>> and they talk about people like patrick leahy, they said there was a special clinton hell, after bill and hillary raised money for them. let me ask you, mark, your much more involved in the political world than most of our viewers ever will be. i mean, i would be ticked off too if i raised money for somebody and i ran for office and they endorsed my opponent. >> well, you know, that is life. there are two candidates out there, the same party, they were both pulling in the same direction, and people endorse who they believe will be the best candidate. >> how unusual is it for somebody to say yes i'm ticked. i will remember who did this to me. and let's make a list, because i don't remember without making a list. >> it is sort of unusual to have an excel spread sheet and a score of one to seven, with the
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list of people who did something to you. maybe nixon didn't have one in his day, but the big problem is not so much keeping the list of enemies, but using the power of the office when you come into the office to public people and to reward -- that is what christie seems to have done in new jersey, what obama has done using the power of government. and so if you're keeping an enemy's list, the implication is that once you come into power you are going to use it to punish people. and so that is what the danger is. the current president and two leading contenders for his replacement are engaged in this kind of activity. >> this is what people -- their stomachs turn when they think about politics and the elected leaders, however, we won't leave it on that note, but on this one, happy birthday. >> oh, thank you, megyn. >> a pleasure having you on the kelly file, thank you. and for the first time since president obama was elected the u.s. supreme court is deciding whether or not he has abused the power of his office.
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and wait until you see what the justices said including the most far-left leaning justices at the hearing today next. plus, the olympic skating scandal that has ever talking. just ahead, see why the skater who fell twice is going to russia while the gal who beat [ male announcer ] this is jowoods' first day of work. and his new boss told him two ings -- cook what you love, and save your money. joe doesn't know it yet, t he'll work his way up from busser to waiter to chef before opening a restaurant specializing in fish and game om the great northwest. he'll stt investing early, he'll find some good people to help guide him, and he'll set money aside from his first day of work to his last, ich isn't rocket science. it's just common sense. from td ameritrade.
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from the world headquarters of fox news, it is "the kelly file" with megyn kelly. we have a kelly file investigation tonight into the controversy surrounding the immigration status of a man accused of murdering this young grad student on new year's eve. trace gallagher has more. >> megyn, police say the suspect rode his bike to a san antonio park on new year's eve, and when
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the young person was there, he killed her. lauren bump was a oved christian missionary. he was released from an alabama prison for robbing and severely beating a man back in 2007. bautista was flagged by immigrations and customs enforcement for an immigration hold. now, we contacted i. c. e., who wrote back and said that bautista had been referred to the customs officials in the past, it was determined he was a u.s. citizen, therefore they had no jurisdiction. that is what ice told us, but a source says that bautista got his citizenship between the
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robbery and the murder. we have not confirmed that because ice has not re-contacted us. now, the fbi clearly does background checks, and that aggravated robbery would have precluded him from being a citizen, we'll clear it up when ice gets back in touch with us. all right, we are looking at the u.s. supreme court whether they are debating on whether or not president obama is abusing at least one of his key presidential powers. it sparks a first of its kind debate on our constitution. more on what happened today, shannon? >> well, megyn, it was a hot bench, having covered the court you know exactly what that means, a lot of questions, a lot of back and forth, and today, plenty of skepticism on just how much the white house is stretching the boundaries of the powers. there is no question the president has the power to fill important positions when the
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senate is in recess. but today in an extended 90-minute argument the justices considered several issues, primarily whether the senate was in recess in 2012 when the president decided to put three critical nominees on the national labor relations board. no recess, so solicitorer general argued it was ambiguous, and vague, several of the justices seemed worried that what barelli was really arguing was because the president and senate were not seeing eye to eye, the president could use the clause. the justice saying you are making a very, very aggressive argument in favor of executive power and it has nothing to do with whether the senate is in session or not. the justices seemed to share it,
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justice steven briar, noting that several others have done similar appointments. but it does not make it way if the president is just trying to ward off standoffs. >> filing a brief in the case, kentucky republican senate minority leader mitch mcconnell, mr. leader, it is great to see you today. quite a thing to not only see justice scalia and alita coming down on president obama's side, but even some of the more liberal justices on the bench raising serious questions on whether or not the president has overreached in a real way here, your thoughts on what you saw. >> yeah, i would be surprised if the president doesn't lose. as shannon pointed out the president can make recess appointments.
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the question was, were we in recess? and we said we were not in recess, and the president said in effect, i get to decide when you're in recess. and one of the justices made that point today. i don't think they're going to be persuaded the president, the head of the executive branch gets to determine for the legislative branch when we're in session. we know when we were in recess, we were not in recess, he decided to declare us in recess and make the appointments anyway. >> the democrats came up with the idea of these pro forma sessions, and then when the republicans started to do it, they objected to it. there is hypocrisy so much in washington, but i want to ask you about this. this is one example of many that we have been talking about in the news lately of presidential overreach. and the question is whether beyond this case what is perceived by some as presidential overreach really can be resolved by the courts.
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>> well, the courts are not a quick remedy. i mean, this was done two years ago and we're just now finally before the supreme court. but the president, as you point out, sort of routinely decided which parts of the various laws he wanted to comply with. look at obama care. his view is, if it is sort of inconvenient he can say never mind. that is not the way most of us read the statute. and immigration, he also had a rather expansive view of what the immigration law is. it seems the president is busy at work trying to acquire power he doesn't have. and it really began when he lost the house in 2010. >> well, let me ask you about that. we had constitutional lawyers come on the show and say okay, when that happens, the president or others are out of control in terms of overreach. you, as a lawmaker, have two options, and the main one used
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historically is try to impeach him. is that ever considered as opposed to running to the courts and trying to get them to do it? the other is to try to de-fund the president's legislation, which of course, you guys have tried before. >> yeah, de-funding is a less dramatic way. and they basically enable the president to do all of these things. it is very difficult through the funding mechanism to stop him -- >> here is my last question, you came out with a piece in politico, and you're talking about how you know, the senate used to be more bipartisan in things that got through, and they're failing because they had no bipartisan support or no republican supported it, as a matter of fact. now, tonight you're getting pushback citing a quote from you in 2010 in which you talked about how you, the republicans worked very hard to keep your
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fingerprints off certainly proposal proposals because you thought the only way the american people would know there was a great debate going on was if it was not bipartisan. when you hang the bipartisan tag on it, the difference is that the issues have been worked out. your thoughts on that, people are going to use that against you saying you don't want deals down and that is why the president had to do things like this, to get the deals done. >> the reason i said this, the form, the 27-page takeover for the american people of health care, was something i didn't think deserved. it didn't get it in the end, not because of the form it took, but because we were opposing it for opposition's sake. they wanted to obamacare the country, and not many republicans were interested in supporting that. >> great to see you here on the program. all right, coming up, a new
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government mandate creating controversy in the classroom. telling them to take skin color into consideration before punishing the student. [ male announcer ] this is the story of the little room over the pizza place on chestnut street the modest first floor bedroom in tallinn, estonia and the southbound bus barreli down i-95. ♪ this magic moment it is the story of where every great idea begins. and of those who believed they had thpower to do more. dell is honored
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♪ this magic moment as a i'm still not going toall the pmake it to mars,o visit. but thanks to hotwire's incredibly low travel prices, i can afford to cross more things off my list. this year alone, we went to the top of the statue of liberty... and still saved enough to go to texas-- to a real dude ranch! hotwire checks the competition's rates every day... so they can guarantee their low prices. so we got our 4-star hotels for half price. next up, hollywood! ♪ h-o-t-w-i-r-e ♪ hotwire.com book with our app for an additional... $25.00 off your next hotel. a new government directive for our nation's schools is already getting a failing grade by some for suggesting that punishment should be based on race, trace gallagher live in
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the news room. trace? >> so megyn, the department of justice are now asking schools to get rid of these zero tolerance policies because they believe they are being applied to minority students. black students are three times more likely than white students to be suspended. here is attorney general eric holder. >> alarming numbers of young people are suspended. they are expelled or even arrested for relatively minor transgressions like school uniform violations, school yard fights or showing what is called disrespect by laughing in class. >> and the reason those arrests are up, by the way, is because, he says there are more campus police on campus. now, civil rights groups call it the school to prison pipeline. but critics say what about students, including minority students who want to learn and are not being disruptive.
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they say forcing teachers and principals to forget about behavior and focusing on race could lead to classroom chaos. listen. >> if you know longer allow a principal to make the decision to meet policy based on behavior because the federal government thinks it is based on group, then that takes away power from the principal and will lead to i think, less discipline and probably more trouble in those schools. >> yeah, the guidelines by the way are asking teachers and principals to administer the punishment and not campus police. these are not mandatory guidelines, but they are highly recommended from the doj. >> all right, thank you, the editorial director at "the daily beast." you have law enforcement now, basically, the doj weighing in on how we're supposed to be punishing students.
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in general, there are those who say you're not doing anything wrong. it is just the numbers are coming out wrong. >> and they also say, we don't want government, meaning law enforcement to get involved. but here is the problem, megyn, the teachers have no authority to discipline students anymore. i represented a young woman recently who was thrown out of the department of education because she made the 12-year-old stand on the chalk board today. she is no longer a teacher, she has a master's in education and can't teach in the city school district because they said it was excessive punishment. so if you can't punish a child that minimally, what are you going to do? you call the authorities. and unfortunately, the numbers are what the numbers are. i face that in criminal court every day. the numbers of minorities in criminal court in brooklyn and manhattan, it is disproportionate to our population. that is life. >> it sounds like you didn't do
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a very good job of defending that teacher. >> there was nothing i could do, i do the best i can. the union couldn't help her either, it is a great point. >> here is what eric holder is saying, even though it may be in some of the school districts that minorities are causing more problems, kicking them out of class only exacerbates the problem. >> there is a number of sort of overlapping issues here, i actually partially agree with eric holder for the first time in my adult life. he is right about the zero tolerance policies, they're terrible policies. this is something that liberals and conservatives have agreed on for decades now, i don't like the fact it is being attacked from a federal level. let's be honest, race is being brought in because it allows the federal government to get involved. they cannot get involved in local issues. the los angeles school district
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is cracking down on this stuff and that is the way it should be. local school districts can do this. but how do you get the feds involved? >> right, i agree with the premise. i do not typically agree with the zero tolerance policies in schools. i think you get into the situations you see -- stories on fox. i think some of the reasons you outline for why you like it, this is a policy that limits what teachers can do for disciplining. they have no leeway or discretion, that being said, i don't like the federal government being involved. >> then the kids know they cannot be suspended. >> they have the power. they're handcuffing the educators, basically telling them don't throw them out of school, you can't discipline them. what do you do with the one or two kids who are disrupting? >> they may be in after school detention, what kind of punishment or threat -- >> they're trying to narrow down
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the debate, i think there are points you need to discuss with the zero tolerance. >> all right, stand by, we have another hot topic, what do you think about the doj involved in this leave us a comment on the kelly file, next? the skating scandal. why is the girl who fell twice, not once, but twice in the big competition going to the olympics on our behalf. and not the one who beat her. plus, hannity at the top of the hour. most importantly, you have a most importantly, you have a situation those litt things still get you. cialis tadalafil for daily use helps you be ready anytime the moment is right. cialis is also the only daily ed tablet helpsapproved to treattime the msymptoms of bph, like needing to go freently. tell yr doctor about all your medical conditions and medicines, and ask if your heart is healthenough for sex. do not take cialis if youtake , as it may cause an unsafe drop in blood pressure. do not drinklcohol in excess. side effects may include headac, upset stomach, delayed baache or muscle ache.
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the road to sochi is off to a rocky the road to sochi is off for
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a rocky start. the skater fell twice at the championships and ended up off the medal podium. however, she's going to the olympics. the selection committee decided to bump the other skater. this hasn't happened since they sent kerrigan over quan. what do you make of it? >> if this one, what's the one's name, ashley? if she brings the gold back, i'm okay with it. >> the figure skating officials, u.s. figure skating officials clearly want us to win.
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they want us to wichblt how do we know better than they do? >> correct. they look at the totality of the individual's work. and everybody has a bad day, seriously. so she had a bad night. that doesn't mean she's not the best to represent the united states. hopefully she learned a lot from falling twice. she got it out of her system, and that's not going to happen. >> well, but you have to play devil's advocate. that's her most recent performance. she was under pressure, and she didn't bring it. >> she didn't do well. she didn't get on the podium and the other did. the other woman was very nice about the thing. she said she respected the decision, though she was seething on the inside. she voiced her disappointment. they did this, and apparently this wagner woman is quite famous. i don't know a ton about figure skating. they said they wanted this woman
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in there because everyone knows who she is, except the me. >> except the four people sitting here tonight. >> i think it would be a little ignorant to say that did not play a role in the advertising for the american team. they lost lindsey vonn, the big skier who was supposed to be like the captain of our team. she's out with an injury. now this woman doesn't qualify, they need a face for the olympics. >> and now the pressure on poor ashley is greater than it normally would have been because of segments like this. so we apologize. follow me on twitter at megyn kelly. so you can have a getaway from what you know. so you can be surprised by what you n't. get o times the points on travel and dining at restaurants from chase sapphire preferred. so you can taste something that wakes up your soul. chase sapphire preferred. so you can.
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set your dvr, because tomorrow night, marcus set your dvr because tomorrow night, marcus la trel on whom lone survivor is based joins me here. hope to see you. goodnight. a new vo, dick morris is he with reaction to the hillary hit list. more trouble for new jersey governor chris christie. first there was bridge gate. now he's facing a probe over sandy relief funds. we'll have the ongoing story of alex rodriguez. >> at times he would ask me to

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