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tv   FOX and Friends Saturday  FOX News  July 19, 2014 3:00am-7:01am PDT

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saturday, july 19th. i'm elisabeth hasselbeck. a fox news alert. brand new video out this morning of the rocket launcher used to shoot down the malaysian plane right out of the sky over ukraine, killing all 289 people on board. but who is responsible? those breaking details next. >> and violence in gaza city escalating overnight. >> okay. [beep] >> whoa whoa whoa. >> very latest on the ground advancing. murder rookie cop. laid to rest last night. this story far from over. one gang has put a hit out
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on the police. the whole force. by the way, according to all stats, morning are better with friends. >> well, here we go again. elizabeth and i we're back here' we privileged to be with tucker. >> grateful you are here on a saturday at 3:00 in the morning. >> three breaking stories a lot to do with violence. >> start off with a fox news alert for you this morning. we are learning more about the only american on board the doomed malaysian airline flight mh-17. 19-year-old quinn chance man was born in new jersey but moved to the netherlands when he was a years old. quinn was studying international business in amsterdam. he was heading to malaysia for vacation with his family. quinn's grandfather ronald talks about hearing the
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tragic news. >> you just hope that none of the children or grandchildren go before you and now it has happened. >> wow, you really feel that meanwhile, moments ago, malaysian officials holding a press conference saying pro-russian separatists are blocking their investigators from entering the crash site. it's predicted but still inexcusable. >> elizabeth plan joins us live from washington this morning with the very latest with what is happening in the region. elizabeth, what you can tell us. >> good morning. you are right. those reports getting backed up by other media sources. investigators on the scene reportedly involved in a pretense jawch with armed separatists taken control of the crash site which we all know spans for miles. investigators for the organization for security and cooperation in europe say a unit of heavily armed rebels blocked their team for an hour on friday.
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eventually the inspectors just had to leave. as they were leaving, warning shots were fired, perhaps in an attempt to intimidate. the team said they would be back today. malaysian officials are furious. >> we are deeply concerned that a crash site has not been properly secured, integrity of the site has been compromised. indication proper evidence has not been preserved. >> inspectors back up claim. human remains are beginning to deteriorate. back to you guys. >> thanks a lot, elizabeth. new video this morning just in of the actual rocket launcher, it's called an sa-11 used to bring down that malaysian airways flight. apparently that rocket launcher came from russia into the ukraine. fox news confirms these images. you can see there are two rockets missing.
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look at that two rockets missing, also some reports that there was a cargo jet in the area and it just flat out missed so the sa-11 rocket launcher has some open silos there that shows they could have sent it out. it's moving in the wrong direction. it's in and around the area which it was rumored to be. because of, this we are confirming it with the daily mail that was originally put out that this is indeeds authentic. >> 298 lives lost. slaughtered mid-air as -- rocket launcher brought over othe border apparently weeks ago some would say. and, you know, not only this. nato, there was a warning brought to the floor that these sort of machines and training was occurring three weeks ago this conversation was brought forward at nato. this is something that oliver north says this undoubtedly hasp russian
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handprints. rugs blood all over it. >> that missile that was fired, whether it was one or two from that transporter erector launcher, that device requires years of training. very likely that russians were actually involved in the launch of that missile that brought down that measurable airliner. the training manual that russians have for proficiency, two years of training to become a a noncommissioned officer to operate that system on the buk system with sa-11, sa-2 omore training. years, not weeks. >> this is not an rpg or stinger. this is a very high tech piece of military hardware with a range of 72 miles in the air. far beyond the range of any civilian aircraft. and it would require the complicity of a government, of a big military to get this thing into a war zone
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and operate it that leaves only one suspect now basically confirmed, russia. russia had a happened in this. >> admiral kirby confirmed this at the doj briefing. he said this is one of the most sophisticated pieces of machinery used. highly doubted that without russian support that this could be launched the way it was on top of which it would take our troops here probably six months of thorough training six months at a minimum to get it going. why so careful when it comes to connecting the dots? >> we will continue to make clear that that as russia a, you know, engages in efforts that are supporting the separatists, that we have the pat capacity to increase
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the cost imposed on them. we don't see a u.s. military role beyond what we have been already doing in working with our nato partners and some of the baltic states, giving them reassurance as that we are prepared to do whatever is required. >> as you look around the president started picking up the phone started talking to some european leaders hoping to get them as aggravated as we are. 289 people dead. 80 okids on board including 3 infants. you think a phone call to angela merkel would anger. we agreed to continue to find efforts to find a diplomatic solution to the crisis. vice president biden polish president would be more deliberate. immediately call in the separatists to lay down their weapons. okay, fine. in terms of cammeron over in the uk we are going to make concrete steps needed to deescalate the situation.
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that's hardly the outrage we needed and for the president, i was just hoping to see. i don't have any problem with his words but his tone where is the outrage that he shows towards republicans that opposes stimulus package or obamacare or his candidacy. instead you have got a guy that was so laid back yesterday that it was relatively disconcert ising. >> or dinner with beyonce that invokes nor passion in him. >> here is the real problem with n. my view is the president's. continue to increase the pressure on russia. one thing you don't want to do as president of the united states say you are going to do something and don't do them. draw lines in the sand and allow them to be crossed without consequence. we are not going to do anything. our nato partners get their energy, their cheap energy from russia through ukraine in the form of natural gas. period. the last thing they want is a conflict with russia and they are not going to start one. >> does his word matter anymore at this point? does anyone believe him. >> that's what depressing
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and dangerous. >> personal relationships, use those phones, begin the process of allowing our natural gas tore their main source and not russian natural gas. >> the press conference he gave today about the shootdown of the plane was quite puzzling. he gave less information than his own u.n. ambassador had given at the u.n. he was very vague. he proposed no measures what so ever of any pornsz. he kept saying, you know, there ought to be a real investigation. well, he is a president of the strongest country on earth. why isn't he insisting on something happening or organizing something happening? >> why does his own ambassador have stronger word than he does. first to blink when it comes to a staring contest with putin. >> natural gas. >> here is the program i know it can't can't happen
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overnight. here is the infrastructure. here is the five year plan and seven year plan. >> why aren't they export the stuff help us, and europe, and help punish russia for what they did. why? who knows why? >> i'm not really sure. i know gabriel is here to tell us what is going on with the rest of the world. >> good morning, guys. there is a lot of news we are going to get to right away. first of all a fox news alert. while you were sleeping explosions rocking gaza for a third day of the israeli military moves deeper into the country. our own fox news reporters right in the middle of the action. >> okay. [beep] >> oh, who who who who. -- woe woe woe woe. >> jesus christ. today was one of the bloodiest by the way. >> the goal of this mission to dismantle hamas. rocket launchers and underground tunnels. brand new idf video showing those tunnels being destroyed. as the israeli military moves forward calls for the
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complete decimation of hamas grey louder that would mean extended operation. this the is death toll grows. killing 20 terrorists while gaza health officials say 25 palestinians have been killed. thousands of people pay their respects to new jersey police officer killed in the line of duty. law enforcement from around the country dressed in uniform joining family and friends in jersey city for 23-year-old melvin santiago's funeral. rookie cop gunned down while responding to a robbery call with his partner. 27-year-old ex-con lawrence campbell waited for officers to arrive to purposely shoot at them after killing santiago other officers returned fire and killed campbell. police in jersey city facing threats from the know notorious street gang the blodz. we have brand new information about those threats coming n about 15 manipulates. meantime massive wildfires in washington state forced hundreds out of their home. the carlton complex fire burning more than
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2600 miles. evacuations are underway at this hour in two towns. all this while people in the town returning to nothing but ash. as the fire destroyed 100 homes. >> we have watched the whole town burning. it looked like the whole town was on fire at night because it was just -- all you could see was just fire everywhere. >> well, fortunately no injuries have been reported there. and, from california to texas, people taking to the streets to protest illegals crossing the border. >> my family saw the opportunities here. and lives, jobs, families, friends to come and live in this beautiful country of ours. and i'm here to protect it. >> today, hundreds of rallies planned across the country. this is part of a two day protest against immigration reform and amnesty for illegal immigrant children. president obama has asked congress for $3.7 billion to deal with the border crisis.
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but so far congressional leaders appear to be at an impasse. those are your evidence lines. a lot to be thinking about this morning and watching. >> are that's right. you are also going to be back with us to discuss fighter pilot and intel officer. we lie on your expertise. >> thanks for having me. >> thanks leah. >> still ahead our militants control the jet liner crash in ukraine. how far are we going to get any answers? is this giving putin time to get his story straight? fox news military analyst lt. colonel bill cowan joins us next. >> then, caught on camera, the frightening moment a man forces his way into a couple's home, attacking them but they didn't give up without a fight. take a look at this. a closer look at the wild video just ahead.
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separatists shoot down military transport planes or they claim shoot down fighter jets without sophisticated equipment and sophisticated training? and that is coming from russia. >> president obama yesterday acknowledging that russia may have supplied the missile responsible for taking down that malaysian passenger jet and calling for an international investigation. but what is really being done to stand up to president putin and is it enough? >> and is time ticking on this whole incident. fox news military analysts lt. bill cowan. does it matter that much the investigation that it seems the russian separatists are preventing investigators from getting in? we seem to know a lot already. >> i'm not sure that it matters, brian. it's probably too late to have a comprehensive and thorough investigation anyway since the debris
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field has been so violated by people picking stuff up and doing things. we he know what brought this aircraft down. we don't need to study that any longer. we may want to pick up the remains we can of people who were killed. really i would say for all practical purposes, the purpose, need for investigation is probably gone. now we need to focus on what do we do about the people who shot this airplane down and those who supported them? >> bill, this took place in europe. over 100 european citizens just died. and yet european leaders seem weirdly passive in the face of all of this. why? >> tucker, i think they are looking for leadership somewhere. none of them are strong enough among their own partners to exert that kind of leadership. as we all knowed in the past they would have looked to the united states and said okay, bots, okay, coach, what do we do now? this president, this united states is not really giving them a will the of confidence that we're going to do anything. and, therefore, why should they do anything? none of them want to end up standing alone and being the only one to confront russia and pay some penalty for it. >> no one is talking about
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rolling ukraine tanks into ukraine and backing them up. what are concrete things we can do to show things have changed? it's not wednesday. it is now saturday. and there is 293 people dead. >> look, brian, i think we ought to all recognize, everybody, not just ukraine, everybody recognize russia poses a significant threat to the world, to the west and more specifically to the united states under putin and whoever he decides will be his successor. we should immediately go back and be talking to the polls and the check republic about this defense shield that this president closed down as a a project was going to put up a missile defense which ostensibly was going to be in case the iranians. the reality was in case russia decided to use some of their existing. let's tell the russians we are back in the missile defense shield game and tell them now. >> or arms to the ukrainian government. they have proving they can fight if they are given them weapons. we have not given them weapons. they have asked to. maybe now we do.
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>> absolutely, brian. we need to level the playing field. we don't want to go to war over there we don't want the ukrainians to go to war. they have a legitimate right to defend. instrumental in getting new go. into power. we should be standing there alongside them. don't need to escalate the kind of weapons out there so we're looking with more confrontation with russia. level the playing field. give the ukrainians the weapons they need to defend their territory. >> lt. colonel bill cowan a great american if there ever one was. >> up saturday for us and for you. >> a rookie cop gunned down on the job and remembered today but this story is far from over. one gang now has put a hit out on all the police. >> and they let their lawn go brown to conservative water. now they are facing a fine of up to 500 bucks. is this fair? we'll report. and you can decide. put the sprinkler on. [ male announcer ] hands were made for playing.
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quick headlines now. new overnight news to share with you. a multibus crash in germany. leaving 9 people dead. more than 40 others hurt. investigators believe a mini bus rear ended a larger one hopped a divider and hit a third one. casey kasem's body now missing. more than a month after his publicly drawn out death. kasem's daughter says his body is no longer at the funeral home where it was legally supposed to stay. kasem's wife claims he is not missing. carrie kasem's lawyer calling this pure insanity. i for one agree. on another note, here is elizabeth.
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>> well, just a week after the murder of a a rookie officer, brand new details emerging about the threat facing new jersey cops from the blood gang. according to a memo from the jersey city police department. quote, bloods within jersey city have requested assistance to shoot police officer. in addition, the bloods will attack and shoot jersey city emts because they know the police officers will respond immediately. so, what is behind this threat and is it part of a growing trend? joining us now is former homicide detective and fox news contributor rod wheeler. good morning, sir. >> good morning. >> rod, you know, when you hear that. it sounds more like a terrorist threat. >> well, that's exactly what that is. elizabeth. it is a terrorist threat. i mean, look. we have all known for years that organizations and gangs such as the bloods is nothing but a terrorist organization. they terrorize our communities. and let me just go back a quick second here, elizabeth, to the funeral of
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the police officer yesterday, because i want to mention. this this is so important. you know, i watch that funeral by way of the internet one thing i noticed there were police officers at that funeral from all across the country. every race, every nationality. they all had on a badge and they wear that badge for one reason and one reason only, elizabeth. and that is to protect all of our comiewntsz. no matter who we are. i really applaud them for what they do and for what we have done over the years. we don't need organizations such as the bloods coming into our communities, no matter where we are in the united states and literally terrorizing the people who live in these communities. >> you know, when you hear what the jersey city public safety director says. they actually pushed aside the idea that that threat that a ringleader -- the idea that the bloods are organized group that gets people from city to city is
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ridiculous. everybody has been taken out of context. rod, is there a context where any statement, any threat like that belongs? >> absolutely. i read that by the public safety director. i will tell you i thought it was a mistake for him to say that i will tell you. this this is so important for the viewers to understanding. the bloods have been around for a long time. they are organized in certain cities. now, i don't know how organized they are or may not be in jersey city, but i can tell you if you go out to the west coast. the bloods are very organize od. so, when i heard this threat come across the wire, and then this group in jersey city is asking for more assistance from other bloods, we have to take that seriously, elizabeth. we do take it seriously. one thing we won't do in this nation, we won't run. we are going to protect our communities as law enforcement officers because we are sworn to do that. i can tell you that the bloods and any other organization that makes threats like that will be dealt with very strongly and face to face by the police. >> strong statement there. i want to ask you about the fallout moving back a couple
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steps. the new reporter who quit after giving controversial quotes about black children without fathers. this is what sean bergen had to say on the kelly file about it. disconnected the dots between fatherless children in black communities and violence that we're seeing now. do you think he made a misstep in asserting that and saying that on his contest. >> there was one thing that reporter did say. he said we don't want to talk about these issues. is he exactly right. the fact that he mentioned, you know, that african-american children or young men come from fatherless homes. that is a fact. and that is the truth overall. however, i must say. this what he should have said is that this is just one of the causes one of the variables that can lead to these type of situations. it's not the only variable. this is something reporter
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indicated elizabeth we need to talk about. we don't like to talk about those initials this country. we need to talk about them. they are only going to get worse if we don't. >> sure. unrest and something needs to be done. >> that's right. >> thank you for being with us. >> sure, thank you. >> up next, while the world burns, the white house continues to gut our military. less ships in the water and fighter jets in the sky. can we still defend ourselves? lt. colonel steve russell is going to join us on that. and then caught on camera. the frightening moment a man forces his way into a couple's home attacking them but they didn't give up without a fight, a closer look at this video much just ahead. it's simple physics... a body at rest tends to stay at rest... while a body in motion tends to stay in motion. staying active can actually ease arthritis symptoms.
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more senior officials of the russian government. we have a range of tools at our disposal, including sanctions that would target certain sectors of the russian economy we have consistently tried to tailor these sanctions that would have an impact on russia. on their economy, on their institutions. >> well, the president seems to threaten vladimir putin almost on a monthly basis with sanctions among other less specific things. >> but in the wake of russia's possible involvement with the malaysian air crash, are those threats really the best we have? joining us now is retired lt. colonel steve russell. a 21 year army veteran and one of the soldiers responsible with the capture of saddam hussein. an honor to have you here, sir. is this the time to be dwindling down our resources in the military? >> no, it's not. we live in an extraordinarily dangerous world. and we're cutting units that had capability defend off
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any number of scenarios as we get them it takes a time to bring them back. >> 600 captains we know about the pink slips that went out to soldiers in afghanistan while they are still fighting a war. other people say listen we are not going to be fighting two wars afghanistan and iraq. we should be going down in the number of units that are full time and not reserve. >> it's been nearly 75 years or longer since we have had any kind of policy that said we could not fight two wars simultaneously. it's very very dangerous that secretary hagel has announced this to the world that we no longer intend to do. so it shows our competitors and tin pot dictators that we don't have the capacity to do more than one thing. it's very very dangerous we what we're setting up right now. >> what do you suppose the motivation is? the white house seems completely unconcerned by spending when it is on food stamps or bringing in illegal aliens into the country.
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when it comes to military spending too expensive. why is it too expensive to them than say food stamp spending. >> only discretionary portion of the pie that they feel they could go to. zero out the entire defense budget and it wouldn't equal annual deficits with what we have seen in this administration. the fact of the matter is, they think obama phones are more important than the defense of our country. >> and speaking of capacity here when it comes to this missile launch and the downing of the in legs train and 298 lives slaughtered mid-air. do the separatists in your estimation do they have the capacity to launch without the assistance of russia? >> i think that the russians wanted them to have an air defense cacket and they provided these wednesday. also the ability to use them. i think it's very unusual that the separatists and these small towns and villages, even mid size cities would have the capacity to do. this the russians beirut in
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airs defense capability. i do believe their hands are all over this. >> colonel, when you look at the situation like that. no one is talking about putting troops on the ground. we might as well go fight russia because we are bulking up our military. you are the not talking about that today. where would you like to see the money go? where would you like to see the investment go within the pentagon that would make sense to a guy like you? >> well, the first thing we need to do is we need to really look at our defense authorizations, do we want to continue the cuts, the units that haven't folded yet? maybe we ought to reconsider that. the heavy forces that we have and the ability, if we need them, if we cut them it takes a long time to train people to be able to do that. and international restrictions we can do. how about restrict russian air travel and airlines. put a 30 day moratorium on russian air travel in the countries of the g-7 or nato countries. we can put the hurt on these people if we have
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leadership. if there is a cost? yes. is there a cost if we do nothing? it could be something that would you don't even want to fathom. >> do you think it could help the ukrainian fighting force do a better job against the russian separatists right away? >> intelligence would be key and i'm sure that we are already cooperating with them in that. you also have adjacent nato allies that i'm sure are doing. this and it is important that we provide those resources so that they can target some of these things. it's a dangerous situation. >> are we in a proactive state when it comes to our president's -- >> -- i think right now we just see an incapacity to lead in every crisis that we see from the middle east, to africa, to asia, to europe, we have the ability and we have fantastic people in our government on both sides of the aisle to be able to do this, but the president is not showing the required leadership and he is he
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weakening our nation. setting you us up for great dangers in the future. >> yeah, not so much this generation, they have already proven themselves. but what we do now sets us up as vulnerable or invulnerable for the next five years. for the next 10 years, for the next 15 years. colonel russell thanks so much for joining us this morning. now to headlines with lee. >> a thanks, guys, lots to get to this morning. new top secret clinton era documents president clinton questioned the cia's intelligence following a new report on two embassy bombings. the "new york times" article said it would be proof to find bin laden had a hand in the 1988 african embassy attacks that killed 12 americans. a federal grand jury indicted bin laden in the terror plot in but in a memo to then security advisor sandy berger clinton said if this article is right, the krier sure overstated its case to me. what are the facts? clinton's aide's response is still classified. and check this out.
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a robber shows up at a home asking for work and then bursts in with a gun. the whole thing was caught on camera, stake a look;s at homeowner fights back and goes for the firearm. girlfriend tries to help throwing would be robber but then she gets thrown across the room. the homeowner sphops him with a pair of bolt cut ires. >> we don't want to stay here tonight. we have children here. the videotape doesn't lie, does it? shear a a stranger in my home with a pistol in my face. >> well, that gunman is still on the loose. and they let their lawn go brown to help conservative water. now a california couple being punished by the city facing a fine of up to 500 buck 's. the city warning mike and laura that this have 60 days to green up their lawn or pay up. this despite a state order to use less water. >> initially i was embarrassed. i thought our lawn is
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standing out and this is the effect that happens when you reduce water use that things turn brown. >> well, coming up at 9:45 they join us live to talk about their battle with the city. check this out. did you see it? a fireball lighting up the sky. people in north carolina to virginia all the way north to here in new york city reported it turns out that it was a meteor. the american meteor society taking data from reports to create a likely trajectory near serrie, virginia. those are your headlines. back to you guys. >> well, thanks so much. >> we have an american meteor society? >> you are right. i should have went to rehearsal. >> hear anything guys? nothing. let's go home. >> as we wait to get mission from american meteor society. forget about meteors any snow and hail today? >> would janice know? >> if anybody would know.
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>> that was an excellent stretch by the way. magic of tv land leah and i moved really quickly. amoizing how that happened. >> you are on skates. >> take a look at your weather across the nation. happy saturday, everyone. look at the temperatures. isn't that beautiful for two and a half weeks into july? 50s and 60's for a lot of us folks. 60 in chicago. 68 in new york. we do have tropical moisture streaming into chicago. a wet day across the southeast. up towards the ohio river valley. northeast i think you are going to have a great weekend which is excellent news. we will see some of that moisture move in midweek. look at some the rainfall totals in some cases four to six inches across the southeast. they need the rain but too much rain in a short period of time is not a good situation from a lot of rain to know rain across the northwest where they are dealing with close to two dozen wildfires. that's going to continue
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unfortunately. we are watching the carlton complex fire which is hardly any containment and it's going to remain. it really have is a tale of two extremes. a lot of moisture across the southeast and really where they need it the most across the southwest. >> studio is huge. we only have one mark for news and weather. can can you get some tape and make another mark for yourself? >> i can try to do that. >> making the most. >> arts and crafts period. >> nice to see you. >> nice to see you which i should have said to you. i apologize. 18 minutes now before the top of the hour. still ahead on this show. about to get regulated. latest overreach coming out of washington that could wreck your summer fun. >> then a man missing for six years is found. he is alive, it turns out. where has he been all this time? we have brand new details next. >> we have two angles to that story.
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some quick headlines for you. border patrol agents bus 23 criminals trying to smuggle drugs and illegal aliens into the u.s. $1 million worth of marijuana was found at a check point near tucson. found a total of 12 illegals locked in trunks. and a connecticut man missing for six years is now back home with his family. 60-year-old cruise found wandering around long island in new york. officer picked him up and found he was missing since 2008. his family says not surprisingly he has schizophrenia. elizabeth? >> thanks, tucker. the panama canal will be celebrating 100 years since it opened next month. and our next guest has a
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front row seat to events leading up to the canal's transfer from the townhouse pan matchett bob mcmillen is a former chairman of the panama canal mission and author of global passage. good morning, sir. it's great to have you here. >> great to be here particularly everything else going on in the world. >> it's a unique time in the world, essentially a dangerous one. this is history-making of course. you actually have a piece of the canal in your hand. can you tell us about this? >> well, why don't you just take it for a minute. >> okay. i. >> now you can say you actually felt a piece of panama in your hands. >> remarkable. >> what happened is we were -- to get the canal ready for the transfer, whether you like the transfer or not, it was the law, and so we were widening the gal ladder cut. rocks had to be blasted out to widen the cut. most of it was put on barges and taken out into the ocean and dropped where it was maybe two or 3,000 feet depth. i took a few home. i gave a rock like this to a friend.
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and you know there has been controversy about the canal. in other words, transferring it to panama and so forth. my friend said, bob, i knew you would figure out a way not to give that canal to panama. you are taking it out one piece at a time. >> keeping it -- i mean, aside from being remarkably beautiful, it's significant. what is the impact really for both the u.s. and panama with the transfer? >> well, first of all, panama was well trained. they were ready to take over the canal. we had a law whether you liked the law or not, the treaty required us to transfer the canal. the challenge we had was to make sure it was in perfect condition when we transferred it. and so there were a lot of steps taken including the cut widening, new locomotives to pull the ships through the locks. hydraulic system to open up the gates for the locks. and so it worked. and panama has done really a pretty good job.
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they have had some glitches and the expansion program. but we had glitches when we were building it back in the early 1900s. >> history in the making. possibly history in the taking. is this a borrow or a keep for me? >> you know what? you can keep that. >> if anybody else wants to hold it they can say they actually have held a piece of panama because i was on the show today. >> i will tell you what, i will give you this back, it has been an honor to hold it and touch a piece of history right here. author of global passage. everyone should check that out. thank you for being here this morning. >> good to be here. >> the boardwalk is about to get regulated? latest overreach coming out of washington that could wreck on your summer fun. and then a troubling trend regarding president obama. his leadership, and his fundraising during times of crisis. we are going to explore this. you better believe it coming up.
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♪ xfinity presents the people's hotlist where you choose this summer's top 100 shows and movies. and all you have to do is watch with xfinity on demand. now through july 23rd. vote! they are about as american as you get in an ocean city, maryland, they are a main stay and a money maker at the popular summer spot. new, new state regulations could mean the end for arcades on the boardwalk. they say they can't afford the higher fees and paperwork associated with massive new regulations instituted by the state of maryland. larry berne stein owns capital music a company that sells electronic games on the boardwalk. he joins us this morning from washington. thanks for coming on this morning. >> thank you. >> you have had this business for a long time.
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i think your dad started it. and now you find yourself under fire from the the state of maryland, which is regulating arcades. what kind of regulations? >> well, they are trying to regulate every machine that either gives away a prize or offers free play which covers just about every game there is they want to register each and every operator, each afternoon every machine. make us reported every machine. have a certificate for every machine. it's a huge a paperwork that frankly small operators like myself really can't aford to do. and starting july 2016, there will be fees associated with this. >> almost unbelievable. this in a state where one of the largest jails in the state was run by the inmates. a state with a proven inability to do anything efficiently at all is now regulating arcade games? was there abuse going on?
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>> they are trying to. we have been president of the maryland music operator's association. we have been working on this or fighting it now for two and a half years. we show up at every month's meeting for the lottery. and we don't really know why they are trying to do this. it's a solution in search ever a problem. think it's just bureaucrats that have no idea what they are dealing with and really don't care. just are looking for a way to expand what they do every day. expand their power base. just to be totally clear. they are trying to put this under the rubric of gambling machines. these aren't gambling machines, right? these include the claw that comes down and picks up the stuffed animals, right? is that one of the machines now being regulated? >> absolutely. and even the general assembly said that these machines are legal, per se legal as long as they are giving out small prizes. there is no reason for the
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lottery to even deal with those machines. we have no idea why they -- we have seen this brew you craft particular overreach that we're facing. >> well, because it increases the power of corrupt bureaucrats with lifetime jobs and benefits that you and i can only dream of. that's why. it makes them more powerful and us less powerful, right? >> yeah. it might be pretty cushy to get a job there i don't know. >> unbelievable. larry, good luck. i hope you fight these guys all the way to the end. i sure appreciate you coming on here this morning. thank you. >> i appreciate the chance, thank you. >> while russia flexes its military might. the white house continues to gut our military. fewer ships in the water and fighter jets in the skies can we still defend ourselves on more than one front? jack keane joins us live. then, is it the next irs scandal? the justice department in hot water this morning. we have the details, the the accusations top of the hour. stay tuned. huh, fifteen minutes could save
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add brand new belongings from nationwide insurance... ...and we'll replace destroyed or stolen items with brand-new versions. we put members first. join the nation. ♪ nationwide is on your side ♪ good morning, it is saturday, july 19th, i'm elisabeth hasselbeck. a fox news alert. brand new video out this morning of the rocket launcher used to shoot the malaysian plane out of the sky over you, killing all 298 people on board. but who is responsible? the breaking details on that next. >> and now to other breaking news. just moments ago an israeli citizen killed by hamas rocket fire. this as the violence in gaza intensifies. >> okay. [beep] >> oh, whoa whoa whoa whoa. >> the war continues this morning. we will have the latest from the front lines. >> yeah, they are blowing up a lot of tunnels, and first irs targeted the president's
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political opponents. now, new allegations this morning that the doj went after conservative businesses. and so first thing allegation. meanwhile, according to everybody elizabeth talks to and that's by the way elizabeth's hair. >> that is. that's just my hair. >> share the shot with me. >> that's my hair. >> look at that camera. say it. >> now we are sharing: mornings are better with friends. >> believe her. >> it's time for "fox & friends." >> okay. good thing we did not hear that on television, tucker. >> i meant it in a nice way. >> you cannot. that will be taken in the wrong way. >> sorry. that was so great. i loved that. >> who knew this saturday could be so much fun. >> all i want is one shot to get my tease and elizabeth has to steal my camera. i'm tired of it. [ laughter ] >> okay. that's fine. hey,. >> good morning. >> thanks, listen, we very a lot to discuss today. and we're also going to play
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street basketball. >> yes, we are. >> we sure are later in the hour. a a lot to bring you later on in the hour. bring you a fox news alert this morning. we are learning more about the american, the only american off the doomed malaysian airlines flight. 19-year-old quinn was born in new jersey but moved to the nethers lands when he was 5 years old. he was heading to malaysia for vacation with his family. quinn's grandfather ronald talks about hearing about the tragic news. >> i don't understand it it's so useless. so senseless what happened. >> very lively. and of course now at the moment the whole family is in mourning. >> well, moments ago malaysian officials as we move on here, malaysian officials holding off a press conference saying pro-russian separatists blocking investigators from entering the crash site. what are are they afraid to
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be discovered? they are also piling up the passports, organizing the whole thing. you have got to wonder where the black boxes are are at this hour. >> firing shots in the air. our own elizabeth plan is live for us from washington this morning with the very latest on this breaking story. elizabeth? >> good morning, guys. inspectors are saying that time is of the essence. but much of the site, like we all know, remains blocked by those russian separatists. starting to deteriorate. turns out that they really need to get to that crash site. on friday, the first group of international investigators reportedly met with armed separatists. they have taken control of the scene which spans for miles. investigators from the organization for security and cooperation in europe say a unit of heavily armed rebels blocked their team for an hour on friday. eventually the inspectors just had to leave as. as they were leaving, warning shots were fired. perhaps in an attempt to intimidate. the team said they would be back on saturday. malaysian officials say they are furious at the reports. >> stop such interference would be a betrayal of the
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lives that we lost. the lives were taken by violence. now violence -- final respects. this cannot continue. >> world leaders, including president obama is just yesterday have called for unfettered access to the crash site to allow for a full and credible investigation. despite the desire to move forward for the families, we're still seeing a lot of finger pointing, ukrainian authorities have accuse the rebels of shooting down a plane in a quote terrorist act. they released a recording in a claim intercepted phone call and russian intelligence agent discussing how they hit a jet. the rebels though allege europe cranian forces were responsible so really still a lot of finger pointing despite the fact that there were almost 300 people that are laid to rest in that field there. elizabeth, tucker, brian, back to you guys. >> thanks a lot, elizabeth. so you just heard elizabeth suggest there is not much question left about who did this and where the hardware came from. but to prove it conclusively, fox now has
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video of the actual rocket launcher used to bring down that plane, called sa 11. came from russia. russian made. fox has confirmed these images. can you see there are two missing rockets. one of these things has six rockets in it. reach altitude of 72,000 feet. extremely sophisticated piece of hardware and it's russian. >> two of those missiles were missing from that actual launcher in some of the photos there despite resounding evidence of russia's role in. this our president is refusing to directly confront putin. instead, he is pretty much took a passive weak stance on this. meanwhile his ambassador samantha power she brought the heat instead. >> >> that was different video. you know what we are going to do is give back to back. here -- samantha powers spoke in the morning in the
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u.n. >> she did. >> little bit later the president speaks at 11:45 yesterday. at which time i'm not sure what your opinion is, if it was coordinated or not. almost a good cop, bad cop. samantha powers seemed to bring a lot more passion. the president was more measured. listen. >> >> we don't see a u.s. military role beyond what we have already been doing in working with our nato partners and some of the baltic states, giving them reassurances that we are prepared to do whatever is required. >> this war can be ended. russia can end this war. russia must end this war. >> that is is a little bit of a tone. now, the president did vom firm words in a statement. that was an answer to a question. he called it a wakeup call for europe, which by the way, they should have been woken up already and this should snap everybody's head-to-attention. i think those are great words that the president put in his remarks yesterday. but the way in which it was
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delivered as compared to when someone goes against his jobs bill or his stimulus package, if he brought some of that natural passion that we saw against mitt romney and john mccain on the world stage. >> you want your president delivering the second strongest message when it comes to a crisis like this behind his ambassador? >> here is what you don't want. you don't want the president making hollow threats and saying don't mess with america and then allowing them to mess with america. drawing lines in the sand and allows them to cross the line. it shows weakness. weakness aggression. that's the scary are the pa. samantha powers says russia can stop. this look, russia has no interest in stopping. this russia has actual interest in ukraine. >> i think they are embarrassed. i don't think anybody but a separatist wanted to take out a passenger jet. i think they are embarrassed on this. on some they have lost control of those separatists. >> i totally agree. i thought the ukrainian
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government prior to the last couple of days when they shot down those steps was making legitimate progress in crew -- ukraine. >> you are right problem with sending arms to various parts around the world you lose control sometimes what they do with them. >> of course you do. >> president did call for a cease-fire. some are calling for a cease fundraiser. on his schedule he is headed to hollywood to do just that fund raise. take a look at this. this is his fundraising history that seems to coordinate, unfortunately, with many disasters across the globe. >> now we know the fundraisers are on the docket. and then tragedy takes place. like benghazi, 9/11. 2012. in march 18, 2014, to this year we know crimea invasi wentn and took it and never let it go. the dnc had a major fund raiser they asked him to go. >> 20th of march, 2014. there was a fundraiser in miami. when sanctions violated there in ukraine. and then april 2nd, they
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fort hood massacre there. continues fundraising in chicago. >> that's the wrong year if it's the fort hood situation. >> memorial forgive me. >> v.a. scandal. we know that was going on and that was raging. still went into the fundraiser on his things to do list. when the isis seemed to take over northern iraq and jeopardize the whole iraq war, he still went to a fundraiser in boston. >> and then most appalling of all, this month, july, 2014, all the drama on the southern border, this collapse of our border, basically, four texas fundraisers two days doesn't go to the border. you know what? some ways unfair. you can throw a dart at a calendar and hit obama fundraiser. he has raised more than any president in american history. that's achievement. he blew up the campaign finance system. he didn't take public funding in the campaign. he raised money that's what he is good at. >> that's where he is he comfortable. i'm not sure dnc is crying
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poverty. after the rnc left in tatters after the 2008 election. a fox news alert comes your way as we go to gaza. the violence escalating just moments ago we understand. the israeli defense forces reporting one israeli citizen killed by hamas rockets and they fired into southern israel. david lee miller joins us right now from a land that's far too familiar with this violence as is david. hey, david. >> hi, brian, we are in southern israel again this morning. and now this conflict is seeing the first israeli civilian to be killed. it happened a few hours ago. in the israeli city of damona. what's notable about that israel operates a nuclear facility. this is a civil yap who was killed just outside that city. also today, militants operating from central gaza were several in infiltrating the border, apparently using a tunnel.
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at least four israeli soldiers were wounded. one of the militants reported dead in a squirmish. this is still a developing story. moments ago, we were at the very site where the incursion took place. israeli soldiers are in gaza. trying to locate and destroy tunnels not far from the border. there are a number of israeli soldiers lying in wait. just a short time ago. a number of militants apparently crossed the border. using a tunnel. and this is a secure zone? okay. thank you. this t. is a secure zone and i was saying, the situation remains tense. the fear is there could be, could be additional infiltrations, this now as soldiers lie in wait. a number of militants have been killed. the fear is some of them got away and are successfully now in israel looking to commit some type of kidnapping or possibly catastrophic attack.
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we now know at least one of those militants was killed a number of others were successful in returning to gaza. the entire area was in a complete lockdown. people told not to leave their homes. the militants left behind a number of weapons as they fled among them rocket propelled grenades. lastly brian, the death toll today continues to mount we have israeli civilian who was killed. also an israeli soldier who was killed since the incursion took place now we understand that as many as 300 palestinians have been killed in this conflict. many of them women and children. diplomacy seems stalled. the violence escalating. brian? >> all right. david lee, thank you so much also the israeli forces evidently unearthed about 22 tunnels already so as they try to get close and closer to getting arid of meanwhile
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coming up straight ahead. >> while russia flexes its military might the white house continues to gut our own military can we still defend ourselves. four star general jack keane is here live. it saves lives. many get in a panic with having to perform cpr themselves. do you know the dos and the don'ts? we will share them with you ahead. [ male announcer ] this is the age of knowing what you're made of. why let erectile dysfunction get in your way? talk to your doctor about viagra. ask if your heart is healthy enough for sex. do not take viagra if you take nitrates for chest pain; it may cause an unsafe drop in blood pressure. side effects include headache, flushing, upset stomach, and abnormal vision. to avoid long-term injury, seek immediate medical help
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for a full 24 hours. and breo helps reduce symptom flare-ups that last several days and require oral steroids, antibiotics, or hospital stay. breo is not for asthma. breo contains a type of medicine that increases risk of death in people with asthma. it is not known if this risk is increased in copd. breo won't replace rescue inhalers for sudden copd symptoms and should not be used more than once a day. breo may increase your risk of pneumonia, thrush, osteoporosis, and some eye problems. tell your doctor if you have a heart condition or high blood pressure before taking breo. ask your doctor about b-r-e-o for copd. first prescription free at mybreo.com president obama spoke out yesterday about the malaysian plane tragedy. about 11:45 eastern time amen. he addressed russia's
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possible role in assisting the separatist rebels who were responsible. >> i made clear to president putin that our preferred path is to resolve this diplomatically. but that means that he and the russian government have to make a strategic decision. we will continue to make clear that as russia, um, you know, engages in efforts that are supporting, the separatists, that we have the capacity to increase the cost that we impose on them. >> so the president made those remarks yesterday, but are economic sanctions really enough, and especially the sanctions we are talking about as we cut back our own military and make that quite public? joining us now with his thoughts, fox news military analyst general jack keane. general, i know you are on record. i watch on the channel. you already said you were disappointed with the tone of the remarks. what about the content? >> that's what i said. tone and substance.
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i mean, i think it's a wakeup call for us and the whole world is watching what's taking place here. the fact of the matter is, this is putin's responsibility. we should hold him accountable. he has directed this covert proxy war in ukraine. it is his officer's military, intelligence officers, and special operations forces who are leading the war. he is providing the equipment, the technology, the sa 11s we saw. >> right. >> in your film clip, arms, ammunition. this is all about putin. we have to hold this thug finally accountable. we did not do it in crimea we must do it here. not enough to call for a cease-fire. what we should be calling for is stop the war and pull his people out of ukraine. and we should put some cards on the table in terms of action to help do that. >> general, what are the tones? what does it sound like? do you want to hear the president of the united states say vladimir putin you are directly responsible
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for what is happening in ukraine? that's a sovereign nation, that you had no business melting in their affairs with? do you want to hear those remarks at this point? >> absolutely. we have all the data to prove our case that putin is directing and supporting this war. this is being run out of moscow. >> right. >> that's harsh reality of it. >> you also believe he has lost control of the separatists to a degree. you don't think they are calling him up to find out what to do, do you? >> his leaders are directing the war. his leaders. russian leaders are running that war in ukraine. they are talking to his leaders in russia. make no mistake about it that's what that transmission you heard that was reported on fox, that the ukrainian government has released. but, the other thing is is, is we should put some cards on the table. the ukrainians have asked for military assistance. we should certainly provide them with the arms, ammunitions that they need.
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now, finally, as opposed to international russian businessmen being sanctioned. it's time for the europeans in the united states to sanction the major sectors, start with finance and banking. no business with the united states. hopefully the europeans would follow. that would get their attention. the energy sector as well. >> and you would like to see maybe a change of course when it comes tore scaling back our military. because that would send another message to china, russia, and everybody else. say we are not going anywhere. general keene, thanks so much for getting up on a saturday in these he very tense times. >> good talking to you, brian as always. >> 10 minutes before the bottom of the hour. they committed the crime but now tens of thousands of felons may get out of of jail early. that story next. then, it saved lives but many people panicked when faced with having to presm cpr. an er nurse has the tips that could save a life today. [ female announcer ] it's simple physics...
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for a body in motion.
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now time for news by the numbers. pick up your numbers at home. 46,000. that's how many drug convicts may be out early. this thanks to cost cutting sentence changes move the obama administration has embraced. next 1300. facebook has more daily users than the nation's 1300 newspapers combined. and that's not all. people stay connected to facebook 10 times longer than to any given news site. let's list all the things that don't get done because we are on facebook. finally two years, that's how long marine veteran james minten had to be wait to be reunited with military dog boo.
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>> thanks, brian. if you were to be faced with a situation where had you to perform cpr, tell the truth, would you know what to do? 70% of americans say they feel helpless when faced with cardiac arrest emergency. so, joining us with some dos and don'ts of cpr is er nurse practitioner and founder of mid level.com. >> thanks for having us, elizabeth. >> that's a startling statistic that 70% of people would freeze and not know what to do. >> i see it all the tile in the emergency department. i'm involved in cpr. people call 911 which is the first step. panic. not sure what to do. maybe they have forgotten their skills. review some of those skills today. cpr starting with the baby. >> little babies and infants. dos and don'ts. >> first thing you always want to do is call 911. >> okay. >> the second step is remember a, b, c. this is something that is engrained into our heads in medicines call school, nursing school. airway, breathing, and circulation. >> first, open up the airway
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by tilting back the baby's head just slightly and want to give two rescue breaths. put your mouth over the baby's mouth. 1, 2. and you will see the chest rise and fall. >> you should see it rise? >> if it doesn't rise, you might want to tilt the airway back a little bit. allow the air to go into the lungs. >> then you will move on to compressions for small babies want to use 2 to 3 fingers push hard and fast. >> where do you push? >> right in the middle of the sternum. exactly. the good rule of thumb is give 100 compressions a minute. about the same tune as the disk toe tune. staying alive. aaa. >> do you ever stop come preparations? >> you do not. want to do the 30 come preparations, two breaths. 30 compressions and two breaths. keep that going. what about adults, adults call 911 and start chest compressions go. toheel of your hand in the
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sternum. interlace fingers go hard and fast. do 100 pressure as minute don't forget disco song. >> if you are buy yourself do you not breathe into the mouth. >> american heart association says now we are only doing compression. studies have shown that compressions only is just as effective as doing breathing plus compressions. people are too hesitant to do cpr with the breathing. only doing hands with adults. >> interesting there. what is this device? >> this is a new device called the cpr rescue, what it does is guides you through this process if you are the kind of person who panics in case of emergency. all you have to do is find the device. first thing, you turn the device on. >> call 911. >> call 911. prr. push the button again to turn -- place the device in the middle of the chest. push hard, push fast. >> so you just literally
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step-by-step with this device. >> it's going to tell you exactly what to do. >> this is about 79.50 and where you can you get it. >> buy it online from the cpr rescue remember sight and also get a wall mount as well, costs $122. great for places like gyms and schools so people have it easily accessible. all you have to do is remember to press the red button. >> this would take that 70% of americans who probably feel so uncertain and actually give give it the the ability to save a life. >> thank you for being with us. >> thanks for having me. >> life safer you are, work in the e are. coming up, missile that took down malaysian jet liner how did this happen? are are we safe at 30,000 feet anymore? leah gabriel, our own pulling double duty for us this morning. she is here live to explain all of that for you. then, first the irs targeted the president's political
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returned fire and killed campbell. is the justice department the next irs in the doj program called operation choke point under fire for allegedly pressuring banks to deny services to businesses for political reasons. the doj is accused of only targeting high risk industries that line up against the administration's political leanings. new video released shows the actual missile launcher the sa 11 used to bring down malaysian air flight 17 -- >> so complex government officials say the separatists must have had help. technical complexity of the sa 11 unlikely the could have operated the system without assistance from knowledgeable personnel. thus, we cannot rule out technical assistance from russian personnel in operating the systems how exactly does this missile system work?
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well, we are grateful to have former fighter pilot and intelligence operation officers in the u.s. military, leah gabriel joining us here to explain. thanks for coming on. >> thanks for having me. >> how complex is this system? >> it's a pretty complex system. it is for modern warfare, this is a system that was designed to shoot down airplanes like when i flew the f-15, the f-16. designed to go after planes some of them can pull up to 10 gs. essentially it basically locks on to a target on the ground using radar and then it sends a signal as the missile is flying through the air that radar is updating the missile and the missile actually has its own radar as well where it is trying to acquire the target and then once it does it becomes active and basically attacks the target. >> if the missile does so much. does it make it easier for the operator? >> you know, i think the operator definitely has to have a good bit of training on his own. so, and especially to be able to appropriately target an airplane. >> because i heard there was a cargo plane in the area at the same time. >> right. now, i mean, when you are
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looking at the radar scope, you need to be a well-trained operator to be able to figure out what you are looking at. but, in the u.s. military, if we are going to fire off a missile, we are going to have information coming in from a lot of different sources. it's what we call a decision matrix for solving the rules of engagement equation that we have osolve in order to ever fire a missile. the big question here is, was there any sort of command and control element? was there anybody who was kind of giving information to that operator to determine what kind of plane are we actually firing at right now? how long would it take someone to learn thousand use the actual radar and detection system. >> that depends on what kind of training they already have. if it's somebody completely untrained to use the type of system like you and i is going it take a lot longer than someone perhaps serving in the russian military at some point and has some sort of background in it. it really depends on the person. it's a complex thing and i think the real question here is, you know, the training that you need to be able to determine what you are actually firing at.
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>> i read the war head, explosives detected ton united states aircraft to riddle it with shrapnel. this plenty never had a chance, did it? >> anyone who is in a commercial airliner i would say probably did not have have a chance against. this again, this something that i trained against the sa-11. upgraded version of the sa-6. what i was trained to do in my cockpit is there is information coming in that tells me if a radar is painting me. information telling me if a radar is actually tracking me i'm going to try to break that radar lock. there is defensive maneuvers can i do. can i do last ditch maneuvers to try to defeat the missile itself. they didn't have any of that information in a commercial airliner. >> would they have known or seen it. >> they probably would have never seen it probably looked like a telephone pole coming at them. three times the speed of sound probably never saw it coming. >> launch to explosion? how much time are we talking? >> probably less than a minute. and what you might see is you might see the launch and
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you might see the con trails as, depending on the environmentals, you might see the contrails if the missile is pulling g's to intercept and hit you. most likely they never saw it happen. a lot of commercial airline pilots are former airline pilots. but still just to be able to detect that you are not going to be expecting it you don't have the information in your cockpit that you are being painted by aired ravment it's probably never see it coming. >> and lastly, i know the israelis out that all their passenger jets with that antimissile technology, do you think if that was -- going after an israeli jet, would that antimissile technology been able to push that away? >> that's a tough question and i would have to know more about their systems. from what i have read, i understand that their technology is actually for infrared counter measures. actually heat seeking missiles that those are designed to protect against. if that's the case, probably not. they probably wouldn't have had an indication. >> now, lee a you are doing double duty for us today. do you change outfits or are
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are you just going to wear the same thing. >> i'm going to do the wonder woman and sit around and come up with some sort of a cape. >> doing the news as well as being an expert. >> thanks for having me. >> that was great. >> lea gabriel see you in just bait. >> where is janice dean she has the weather for us. she is outside. >> beautiful day in new york city. a little cloudy, that's okay. the temperatures are glorious for this time of year. let's take a look at the temperatures across the country today. a lot of 50s and 60's. we -- i think for the most part we enjoyed the cooler air across the central u.s., right? am i right? 68 right now in minneapolis. a 7 in chicago. it is a warm 91 in phoenix. 700 in atlanta. in terms of severe weather, we don't have a big threat today, but we do have some flooding potential over the southeast and parts of the ohio river valley and then we also have that monsoonal moisture, showers and thunderstorms for parts of the four corners, however, the area that really needs to he seat rain is just not getting it the northwest where we have close to two dozen fires burning.
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and the fire weather index later on today, breezy conditions for some the regions where we all of those wildfires. that's going to be a danger and a concern. we will certainly monitor through the workweek. there is your first alert forecast across the northeast. interior section of the northeast, we're going to get the rain but along the coast, spectacular. so he we will continue to monitor all of the weather happenings back inside. brian, tucker, elizabeth, to you. >> oh, yeah. thank you, janice. >> janice putting up with yellow mist. rough day out. >> there july in midtown. well, come up. remember this story? a man nearly beat to death after trying to help a boy he hit with his car. one of the suspects only got six months in jail. justice detroit style. fair and balanced debate next. >> and it has interrupted since 1707. but now a new warning that this volcano is ready to blow. it told us. ♪
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six months in jail. the incident happened in april. 54-year-old stephan you u-tash. hit a boy. see how he was. when he got out to help, he was robbed and, as you see, beaten within inches of his life. now, the judge had some harsh words for the convict. >> >> someone to discipline you. someone to beat the hell out of you when you made a mistake. >> you got the idea you got his tone. is that really what the convict needed or more time in jail would have been the correct answer? you make the call at home, we will debate it right here. here to debate is heather hanson and defense attorney
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jonna spilbore. >> thanks so much. are you surprised by the sentence? >> oh, my god, this sin feweriating. not enough time for violent crime. some kid steal as love the bread. -- loaf of bread. beat the stuffing out of somebody and you get six months, all because you didn't have a violent father to beat the stuffing out of you, makes no sense. >> did the judge help the sentence by making those comments. >> we're talking about this because of the comments. the relate is, brian, these types of sentences are handed down every day especially in detroit where you have some violent homicides, so many violent crimes, this actually was one of the lesser crimes that this type of judge sees. so this sentence was actually appropriate. >> with the video doesn't that knock it home? not only comments but seeing the video, how many of these cases do you actually see the actual crime take place? >> it doesn't happen very often. that lends itself to the outrage that you see here and the fact that we are even talking about this. otherwise, this could be one of many, many cases the judges see.
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>> johnna, do you worry that other people in detroit will be going, hey, worse comes to worse, i could do this again. rob, get the money, take my risk for the six months. >> right, i will tell the judge because i didn't have a daddy or a mommy that i should get a pass and that's why i should get a lenient sentence. this reminds me of the west side highway incident not that long ago right here where you had that mob mentality on the innocent victim? it reminds me of that again. 20 people pummeled this man. >> the other thing is you have a black/white issue here. >> the judge specifically said he doesn't care if they're red, black, white, or purple. >> but if it was reversed he certainly would have cared. >> if it was reversed we would have seen a lot more outrage and sentence diminished. prosecutors here have resentenced motion to take it back and to have a new sentence for both this guy and one of the others who was sentenced. >> good. six months. how do you justify this? seriously? how do you justify this? parent or no parent. the guy has brain damage. >> six months in jail.
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>> based in part in his age. 19 years old. an act in michigan that says if you are between 17 and 20 there is some leniency and the judge can use his discretion. >> one of the discretion is this young man can be rehabbed. is that so wrong. >> rehab? is that possible? again, it's a violent crime. if he can be rehabbed then there better be a tight leash on this guy after he gets out in jail in six months which will be four months because of good time credit. tight leash. >> i agree with jonah on that. the judge says if he he breaks his probation is he going to go to jail. remember, he also has a young daughter. again, the judge may have taken that into consideration as well. do you want him in jail? is that any better? there is no good answer here. judges have a difficult job. >> i want him where he can't pummel anybody again that's where i wanted. >> unfortunately the jails are so overcrowded. looking to expedite these sentences. >> absolutely. they have only some jails to put these people in. >> heather and jonna, thanks so much.
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no winners there coming up straight ahead, has president obama gone soft when it comes to russia allowing putin to flex his military. do you like the tone he has struck? and he is sharing -- he is shaking up the kentucky senate race as the most honest politician you will ever meet. gill, the team behind him looking to expose washington, one laugh at a time. police -- please come by. at legalzoom you can take care of virtually all your important legal matters in just minutes. now it's quicker and easier for you to start your business, protect your family,
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money cass dhom corrupt our political process. >> what's the solution? >> well, if you go to represent us. we don't just want to bring some awareness to this issue. we have a set of ideas a cob concrete plan to effect change. we can't stress enough. it is not a red issue. it's not a blue issue. it's an american issue. people are sick of our flitions getting in office and not doing anything for us.
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so, go on represent dot u.s. >> gill, you are not sick of it. >> this has worked out well for gill. a big pile of money stopping that good conversation. and i'm just like one of those phone booths where the money i know gill is going to get there grab grab grab grab. that's what this is all about. >> if elected what will you spend your time doing. >> i will do a little bit. a lot of campaign fundraising, you know, about 75% of my time is spent doing that the rest are of the time i might do a little goff, martiny lurching. i definitely will not be listening to the people of kentucky. i'm sorry, i don't care but. you donors, you complete me. >> are you concerned about getting votes that you might? >> oh, we can't unfortunately get gill on the ballot. but we are pleased to be bringing enough attention to this issue that both mcconnell and grimes, the candidates in kentucky will have to address it, hopefully. >> have they addressed your
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campaign, your parrot campaign specifically. >> or at least the idea of money and politics. >> have they said anything to you about you so far? >> so far they have been tight lipped and maybe they are worried about the competition. both of these candidates are taking over 7 5% of their funds from out-of-state right now. >> we are looking at a race that has so little to do with kentucky. i'm from kentucky. i would really like them to be listening to us. but it's just not happening. and it's true of kentucky. it's true of every senate race around the country right now. >> gill, you have met the senate candidates? kentucky. >> i have not. i'm here to say right now, for the right price, i will drop out of this campaign, i will throw my full support to whoever writes the bigger check. >> that actually happens, by the way. i have seen that. >> that's what happens? >> yes, it does. let's talk in the commercial break. gentlemen, thanks for joining us. good luck in your campaign. appreciate it? >> thank you. >> thank you. >> elizabeth? >> well, what a delightful cynical look at our political process. that's great. >> the votes are going to come in. >> and promise you won't
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vote for him and reaffirm our belief in the system. meanwhile, coming up straight ahead. we just have two hours left. do we have enough stuff to put in that two hours? >> oh, do we. the mainstream media portraying israel as the big bad wolf coming up. what you are not hearing. how hamas wages war on purpose. >> and governor mike huckabee he is here. i just saw elizabeth -- cue him on. >> i sure. will a fire tears through a home while a young deaf boy is sound asleep. who came to his rescue? man's best friend. he and his four-legged hero are going to join us live. >> you you did much better than me. yobut you may notds. know we're a family. 12 brands. more hotels than anyone else in the world. like days inn, where you can do everything under the sun. save up to 15 percent and earn bonus points when you book at wyndhamrewards.com
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packed passenger plane right out of the sky. the breaking details on who may have fired it and where it is now. we're following another fox news alert this morning. israeli casualty explosions rock the east. hamas is using innocent people is human shields. on the ground live with the very latest from the region. >> now you have a boy unable to hear, is sound asleep, flames tear through his house but that boy's best friend becomes a four legged hero. he joins us to explain how his dog saved his life. mornings are better with friends. it's time for "fox & friends." >> well, here we go. the halfway point of the saturday show, which is just four hours long. >> that it? >> absolutely. jerry lewis usually take as nap. >> this is a telethon and yet i'm agitating for a
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fifth hour because there is still more to say. >> great to saturday with both of you and all of you at home. a lot to bring you for are this half way point for us. no -- deadly plane crash of malaysian airlines flight mh-17. pro-russian separatists have taken over the crash site in ukraine. investigators trying to reach the wreckage say that they are being blocked from entering. they say the rebels have now contaminated the crash site and are even destroying some of the evidence malaysian officials are not happy about this. continue to stop such interference would be a betrayal of the lives that we lost. the lives were taken by violence. now violence final respect ares. this cannot continue. >> so the malaysian authorities are upset. the europe seems relatively docile even though 11 of those nations lost some of their citizens.
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authorities are now accuse the rebels of taken down the plane saying they believe the missiles came from russia just a few weeks before the the crash. ukrainian forces were responsible. the evidence seems to point at different directions. would he we now know the only american on board that flight. he is 19-year-old quinn, born in new jersey but moved to netherlands when he was 5. quinn's father talked to us about the tragic news. >> you just hope that none of your children will or the grandchildren will go before you and now it has happened. >> awful. quinn was studying international business in amsterdam. heading to malaysia for vacation with his family. here is one thing we know. very rare whether you have an incident like this with
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so much mystery around it to get so many conclusions so quickly. one of which is we were able to get the wire intercepts of the russian rebels. the separatists talking to each other, quickly being surprised and shocked that the jet they shot down was a passenger jet. now we have video evidence it seems of the actual missile leaving its launcher. >> and actually heading t russi this is the actual launcher traveling right there. and two missiles missing from that. >> yeah, it's a buk missile launcher with one missile missing heading towards cranston. exact launcher that was used and that's what it looked like before and then after. >> here is why this is significant. this is a highly sophisticated, very expensive, difficult-to-operate and extremely deadly piece of military hardware.
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this is not a stinger missile that fell into the wrong hands. this is something that was moved intentionally by a government that is the russian government into another territory that is ukraine. and into the hands of the separatists there. the pro-russian separatists. this is a clear line that connects. this act with the russian government of vladimir putin. this is a big deal. >> combine that with the intercepted phone call they're linking one of the leaders from the separatist phoning back right after the plane went down in russia intelligence there i mean, you see all this evidence, and it leaves to you wonder why president obama won't directly confront russia, particularly putin colonel bill cowan a hero here for our nation, fox news military analyst as well was with us and he said how everyone is waiting for our president to just take action. >> i think they are looking for some leadership somewhere. none of them are strong enough among their own partners to exert that kind of leadership.
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as we all know in the past they would have looked to the united states and said okay, boss, okay, coach, what do we do now? this president, this united states is not really giving them a lot of confidence. going to do anything, why should they do anything. none of them want to end up standing alone and being the only one to confront russia and paying some penalty for it we ought to all recognize, everybody, not just ukraine, everybody recognize russia poses a significant threat to the world, to the west, and more specifically to the united states. >> boy, add that to the long list of places that pose significant threats to the united states. here is the question. why would the president choose this moment in history, this chaotic volatile moment where clearly face greater threats than we have in my lifetime to draw down the military to this extent. he clearly has no problem spending money. and sending unemployment benefits or food stamps to people. why does he have a problem with paying our military? >> there is two separate times when he has cut the military when gates was in charge. chronicles in his book. he got a personal guarantee from the president this as far as you are going to go, only to find out when
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treasury secretary got a look at the budget it was a lot less than they thought. then once he left and hagel comes. in much more of somebody to go along to get along. even going down any further. he is getting a lot less push back than he was when secretary gates was there do you work the bush years. the president's words were not all benign. he said it's a wakeup call for europe. he said, quote: this should snap everybody's heads to attention. however, i would not have a problem and i'm kind of used to it as an american hearing this gets our attention even further. makes me feel as though vladimir putin should understand that this has got to stop here got to stop now. something to that degree, instead of we're going to continue our investigation and see where it leads us. was kind of odd to see samantha power on the u.n. floor be a lot tougher than the president. unless that was the plan. >> that didn't send chills down your spine? we're going to continue the investigation? >> you don't think dictators
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everywhere are shaking under their desk. >> nor do many people believe that the president should be the second most powerful in speaking out against it. why does he need someone to break the plane for him or splice the edge before he gets out there to say something that's less impactful when it comes to russia this time? why is he the first to blink in a staring contest with putin time and time again? >> vladimir putin feels he can get away with this. he doesn't blow up a passenger jet everything will pail in comparison. >> a live look at the gaza israeli border. continuing to feel the -- filling the sky with black smoke. our own david lee miller joins us from the israeli/gaza border. david, what's the latest there? >> well, for the second time now, in one week, militants in gaza have infiltrated israel, using a tunnel. the situation here, up until just moments ago, was
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extremely tense. roads were shut down. people were told not to leave their home. ultimately, two israeli soldiers were wounded in the squirmish. one of the militants was killed. the others fled back to gaza, they were very heavily armed. they had with them, among other things, antitank missiles, and rocket propelled grenades. just a short time ago, we caught up with some of the israeli soldiers who were trying to secure the area. >> >> israeli forces now scouring an area about 100 yards from the border, they are log for possible militants who were able to infiltrate israel. as israeli forces now operate within gaza, looking for infiltration tunnels. a short time ago, a number of militants apparently using a tunnel, were able to infiltrate the border. a number of them were killed, it is possible that
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some of them got away. and at this hour, along the border, the israeli soldiers, very carefully, searching the wooded area. the fear is, if militants were able to cross the border, they might try and commit catastrophic attack or kidnap israelis. the prime minister has said the number one goal of the ongoing ground incursion is to destroy the infiltration tunnels. >> and we now know that one of the militants was killed, the others apparently were able to get away. in another development, the israeli troops that are now operating in gaza, have been able to locate as many as 13 of these infiltration tunnels, they are now in the process of being destroyed. lastly, as you mentioned a moment ago, for the first time since this current conflict got underway, the first israeli civilian to
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die was struck by a rocket. it happened on the outskirts of the city of damona. the palestinianian death toll stands now at over 300. many of those killed civilians, including women and children. the israeli military, israeli government says that hamas and other militant groups are using civilians as human shields. back to you. >> and this -- thank you very much david lee miller in the eye of the storm. this is 48 hours from when the israeli military uncovered all the rockets in schools. of course, had to give them back it hamas. hamas much fewer allies this time around. sierra wants nothing to do with them because they sided with the rebels are. egypt said we are closing the tunnels. you walked away from our truce plan. it seems as though israel is getting somewhat more support than they usually get when situations like this pop up. >> more on this to come. meanwhile, gabriel is standing by right now with headlines for us. thanks for being with us today. >> thanks for having me with
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you this morning. we start with sad news out of new jersey. thousands of people pay their respects to a new jersey police officer killed in the line of duty. law enforcement from around the country joining family and friends in new jersey city for 23-year-old melvin santiago's funeral. the rookie cop was gunned down while responding to a robbery call with his partner. police say 27-year-old ex-con lawrence campbell waited for officers-to-a right to purposefully shoot at them. well, after killing santiago other officers returned fire and they killed campbell. isis militants tell iraqi christians to get out or else. terrorist laying siege to the city of mosul giving christians new deadline to leave the city limits. many are hitching rides with just the clothes on their back. christians have been in mostly for at least 1700 years. one of the oldest communities in the world. elders think today will be their very last day. and massive wildfires in washington state tore hundreds out of their homes. the carlton complex fire burning more than 260 square
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miles. new evacuations i couldn't knowway at this hour in two towns. this while people in the town of pateros returned to nothing but ash. a wall of fire destroyed 100 homes there. >> we watched the whole town of pateros burning. it looked like the whole town was on fire at night. all you could see was fire just everywhere. >> well, no injuries -- fortunately no injuries have been reported. casey kasem's body now missing. this after a month after his publicly drawn out death. casey's daughter says his body is longer in at the funeral home where it was legally supposed to statement kasem's wife claims is he not missing. carrie kasem's lawyer calling this all pure insanity. a strange case that just keeps getting stranger. >> the family of james brown even thinks that's strake. remember they couldn't bury him for a couple of weeks. 12 minutes house after the hour. shear is what is straight ahead. >> the press portraying israel as the big bad wolf,
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the villains in the worry over gaza. next up, what you are not hearing. how hamas uses civilians as human shields. governor mike huckabee here with that. >> walking in right now to join us, and we have all heard this while driving. are we there yet? now toyota wants to help keep your unruly kids under control. we are all ears. >> hands off your sister.
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told you about the escalating violence about israel and hamas. first civilian killed in the conflict. >> israeli soldiers say hamas is using innocent people as human shields.
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media continues to ignore to a degree. >> governor mike huckabee has traveled there numerous times. he joins us with with insight. >> good morning. >> you have been making trips to the region there. what are the people there saying? >> you know, it's really sad. i got a text this morning from one of my friends in israel. he was telling about being on the freeway just yesterday. sirens go off. the recess take cover if you are in this area where exactly he was. he gets out of his car. he runs because you don't want to be in a car too much metal could be flying around in the indicates a rocket hits. he gets in a ditch and puts his hand over his heads for 10 minutes until the sirens quit going off. keep in mind right now 80% of the people of israel have rockets exploding over their head at any given moment. 80%. be the equivalent of 225 million americans were seeing rockets go off in their neighborhood. i just ask would we be happy if england and france and germany told us to just restrain ourselves if mexico and canada were shooting
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rockets over 225 million americans? i don't think so. >> you are alluding to the president's comments there? >> exactly. this has been a time whether we created this ridiculous equivalence is of saying well both sides need to hold back. nobody wants to see civilians get killed. but part of the problem is, this could have ended long ago if hamas would have stopped firing rockets into israel-think i'm as big as an israel supporters a well. what's good for israel? we know that the war in 2006 was bad for israel. it made israel less safe not every war makes israel safer do you think this a wise course land invasion into gaza. >> they have to get rid of those tunnels. they are not little tunnels where people crawl around. these are tunnels where trucks drive. they are huge tunnels. there are a network of tunnels that allow the terrorists to come literally right under ground up to israeli property. it also is the tunnels where
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these rockets transferred. if they want to live, this is not a fight for land. israel is not trying to take over the territory of gaza. they don't want it. they have left there they want to protect their people. >> this is a chance to eliminate hamas pretty much because you have a situation where they are not getting funding from egypt not the not getting funding from syria. ran out of money to pay their own people then they told fat that you go pay my people. then they start this war after the kidnapping of teenagers in israel. right now they are pushing forward. making a difference in gaza, the small operations do nothing. >> look, there is no real winner here in the sense that nobody wins when innocent people get killed. that's a horrible thing. but, do the israelis have a choice? would we allow our enemies to get closer and closer and tunnel right up under our homes and say well, i'm sure if they get closer they will be nicer? >> getting better with their rockets.
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rockets getting deeper and deeper. >> they're. used to not go beyonder is is -- serot. have little option for. those rockets going deeper. those are coming from iran. this war is not with hamas. this is a war with iran and iran is testing the resolve of the rest of the world to find out if they poke here what happens because if they don't have any backlash, they will keep poking. and never forget, israel is is the little satan, u.s. is the big satan. iran's ultimate target is not israel it's us. >> don't worry we have a peace agreement with iran and we will be fine. >> sure we will. >> thank you. watch huckabee tonight and tomorrow night. >> hope so. >> as always at 8:00. caught done camera, the frightening moment when man forces his way into a couple's home attacking them. they didn't give without a fight. >> governor, you saw tucker stole my read. >> i did. >> alli and noah in the
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quick headlines happening now in florida -- excuse me in california to texas. people taking to the streets to protest illegals across the border. today, hundreds of rallies planned across the country. part of a two day protest against immigration reform and amnesty for illegal immigrant children. tea party lawsuit against the irs gets a boost. a federal judge declining a request by the government to dismiss claims the agency targeted conservative groups. that means lawyers for 10 tea party groups can start gathering evidence and the case can go to trial.
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on a different note. >> thanks, brian. >> well, finding love is not easy. but now one company is making it possible to find your perfect genetic match. >> oh, it's complicated but here to explain the science behind attraction is co-founder of instant chemistry, jeremiah blue because, thanks for joining us. what does it mean a genetic match between two people. >> basically testing people based on their d.n.a. what the science is showing is that the more opposite two people's immune systems are the more likely they are to be attracted to one another. >> why? >> so it goes back to a study based in the 90's. it was called the smelly t-shirt test. a famous study. they took a bunch of men, had them wear t-shirts, no cologne, no showering for a few days. and they basically had them walk around, you know, their regular daily life and took these t-shirts put them in boxes and had women come and smell these t-shirts and rank their attractiveness. >> and rank was the word.
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>> rank, exactly. so what they found was that these women were ranking the t-shirts to be most attractive were the ones that had the most dissimilar genes to one another. this clicked in this researcher's head and started this whole field of the science of attraction. this has been a big research pro-project. >> you find your best mate based on d.n.a. here. you fill out, how does it work? blood work? >> no, it's a quick spit test. we send is you this kit that's right here in front of that you can see. yeah. >> so you send me -- i get this in the mail. >> yeah, taupe up. >> so i order this or someone sends it to me? >> you would order it from one of our partners like single --.com for example. >> this is a spit cup right here. open it up if you like. >> we are being told by our producers don't spit on air? >> no spitting on air. >> they will basically tell you how biologically compatible you are with someone else. this in addition to the
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traditional, you know, i like long walk once a beach on a dating site. those things are very superficial. dating sites don't work too well. everything you are saying makes sense to a nonscientist but do we have studies that show that people who are biologically compatible have longest lasting, deeper more satisfying elections. >> like the johnson family wheel out here. >> that's where the research came from. it's all pier reviewed literature. scientists who have done this research from around the world. over 20 years of research. >> by the way examples of questions that you ask. and this is what is sounds like. you and your partner have taken a long weekend together at a nearby resort. when you arrived both of you agreed that the accommodations aren't suitable. you promptly speak up and speak to the management in an effort to group grade if that indeed is your answer, is that possible yes you do that definitely you are going to do that. >> that what you just read off was a psychological test that we also give in addition to this genetic
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testing service it kind of ads to the seat of tests that we do to test come pattability between people. and it works. >> we just launched a web site. >> are you going to keep track. longitudinal study. if people get married, if so, how long do they stay married. >> absolutely we are tracking all the data in aggregate form. not person by person. it's a private person. >> maybe not i do maybe idna. how incredible. >> where does the psychological test match with the genetic test? how does that produce a product? >> so, actually, we look at the immune system genes. also look at something called the serotonin transport error gene. this is how you respond to emotions. was found is that couples who both have more strong response to emotions tend to have less satisfying relationships overtime. kind of makes sense, right? this is something that we can test for as well. this is something that we include in the suite of test. psychological component. genetic component all comes
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together in addition to the socioeconomic factors that you would normally rank someone on. >> amazing. thank you, that's the most interesting thing we have had on the set in a while. >> in the hamptons this weekend they are not going to be looking at genetic test they are going to go she is hot. >> there will be some spitting. >> in relationships may help them explain some things, too. >> absolutely. >> jamie bluvol thank you for being with us. co-founder of instant chemistry. >> thank you. >> up next, this rocket launcher one that shot down airliner over ukraine. we now know it's back in russia. unless we take military action, russia will be off the hook. stay tuned. >> and we have all heard this while driving. are we there yet? now, toyota wants to help you keep your unruly kids under control. my mother made the best toffee in the world. it's delicious. so now we've turned her toffee into a business.
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we have a serious hairball issue. we clean it up, turn around, and there it is again. it's scary. little bit in my eye. [ michelle ] underneath the kitchen table, underneath my work desk, we've got enough to knit a sweater. [ doorbell rings ] zach, what is that? the swiffer sweeper. the swiffer dusters. it's some sort of magic cloth that sucks in all the dog hair. it's quick and easy. pretty amazing that it picked it all up. i would totally take on another dog. [ kevin ] really? ♪
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flerst. >> defense officials telling fox news this morning that this video of the rocket launcher that brought down the malaysian flight 17, killing all 298 people on board is, in fact, real. the rocket launcher is from russia and it's back in that country now. >> it's just the latest evidence indicating russia is likely involved in some level in the attack. so, does president obama have to say? >> there has to be a credible international investigation into what happened. u.n. security council has endorsed this investigation and we will hold all its members, including russia to their word. >> so will the administration stance let russia off the hook? max is a senior fellow at the council on formulations. good morning. >> good morning. >> did the president say enough in your estimation yesterday? >> i don't think he did. part of it was there was not a tone of urgency in what he was saying. almost as if he was reading a grocery list. not enough passion beyond
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what he was saying. not enough consequences either. he was basicking fingering putin and russia for a monstrous war crime downing this jet with 300 innocent people on board. but the question is, what are we going to do about it? and so far i have not heard a lot of consequences emanating either from the u.s. or from the european union? >> what's the risk of north having consequences on this? a lot of people saying ukraine i can't find it on the map. what do i care about that. >> that's what people were saying months ago. people said who cares? it's a far small away place of which we know little. we saw what happened when putin crimea. he marched into ukraine rebels so-called many of them russian intelligence and military officers, are fighting to break off a chunk of ukraine and now we see what happens when you let that kind of aggression go unchecked. you see this airplane coming down, 300 innocent people on board. i don't know what's going to happen next. all i know is we got to make putin pay a price for his
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aggression who are is there is going to be a lot more of it. >>ee poo the u.s. is not going to commit ground troops to the region. we know europeans, specifically germany not on board because they need the natural gas. so that means we can arm ukraine. wouldn't that escalate this into a proxy war really between the u.s. and russia and do we want that? >> ukrainians are asking desperately for american arms and advisors. they know what the risks are are. i would say let them bear the risk because they understand that if they do nothing, they are going to lose a significant chunk of their country. >> do you support american weapons, lethal weapons going there not mres and breakfast? >> absolutely. the ukrainians have a right to defend themselves against this kind of aggression. >> do we have an obligation to help them do that? >> i think we have an obligation and in our interest to do that to prevent putin from turning his sites on -- sights on the tall bic states. we should also be focusing on tougher financial sanctions this week even before the downing of the airliner, obama announced
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enhanced sanctions on about half a dozen russian companies. there is a lot more we can do. the death penalty here is called seq. toler sanctions. ban russian financial companies from doing come in national trades. we can impose sanctions on foreign companies doing dealings with russia. you have got to choose between russia or the united states. >> can can we do that on our own or do we need nation -- >> -- that part we can do on our own. more effective if we can can get the europeans on board. we have the number one financial market in the world. barring the russian firms from the u.s. financial market is going to do a devastating consequence for the russian economy. and we have got to pull that trigger. >> real quick, max, you you know a lot of people in this administration. does anyone agree with you you that you know on some level? assistant deputy? anybody? >> i think there is a big debated going on in the administration. i think there are folks like victoria nuland. eastern europe arguing for a tougher response. that has not been the way that president obama has
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been going. but i hope that this downing of flight 17 is going to serve as a wakeup call and make them understand we have not been doing enough to deter putin. we have got to do more now or there are going to be more tragedies in the future. >> all right. max boot thanks so much. >> thanks. >> lea gabriel standing by right now. you are bringing headlines we want to bring to our viewers now. >> lots to tell you about this morning. new top secret clinton era documents questioning cia report on embassy bombings. the "new york times" article said it would be hard to find proof that bin laden had a hand in the 1998 embassy attacks that killed 12 americans. a federal grand jury indicted bin laden in the terror plot. but in a memo he to then security advisor sandy berger, clinton said, quote. sandy, if this article is right, the cia sure overstated its case to me. what are the facts? well, clinton's response is still classified. and a robber shows up at a home asking for work. then burst in with a gun.
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the whole thing? caught on camera. take a look at this as the homeowner fights back and goes for the firearm. at one point his girlfriend tries to help throwing a pasta jar at the would-be robber. she gets tossed across the room. the homeowner stops him with with a pair of bolt cutters. >> we are both uneasy. we don't want to stay here tonight. we have children here. videotape doesn't lie. does it? there is a stranger in my home with a pistol in my face. >> and that gunman still on the loose. the boardwalk in ocean city, maryland, is getting caught up in some red tape. new state regulations saddling arcade businesses with higher fees and more paperwork. larry bernstein is owner of capital amusement and he joined us earlier to talk about the baffling new regulations. >> we don't really know why they are trying to do. this it's a solution in search of a problem. and we really think it's just bureaucrats that have no idea what they are dealing with.
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and really don't care and just are looking for a way to expand what they do every day. expand their power. >> well, larry says these new retions will require registration of every arcade game down to the very last pin ball machine. and, we have all heard this while driving. are we there yet? now, toyota wants to help you keep your unruly kid under control. it's called driver easy speak. built in microphone that broadcast a parent's voice to the backseat. the feature only works one way so kids can't talk back. it's an option on the 2014 siena due out this fall. i i like this. but somehow i think your kids with probably way too disciplined to ever need this thing. >> we just have a bull horn. >> a mega phone. >> it's good to know they can answer back we just can't hear them. >> so they think. that is fantastic though. i think it's an idea its time has really >> make it a little more like charlie's angels form of discipline. talk to the speaker.
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>> that's going to come back to haunt us i think one day. >> maybe get a voice over guy, announcer to tell the kids messages. >> that's right, brian, we are almost there. >> it turns out it's jimmy's fault. >> yes, shut up and sit down. >> we are out of stuff. janice, we have the weather. i hear it's brutal outside. >> it's a beautiful day in new york city. look who i have got here from texas. what part of texas are you from? >> east texas, tyler. >> okay. what are you ladies doing here? >> just on a vacation, a girl's trip. >> a girl's trip. any night life plan? >> we are going to broadway tonight. >> brian kilmeade can help you with the night life activity. who is this young man here? >> hayes. >> and he is -- where are you from? >> i'm from north carolina. >> north carolina. how do you like the weather here in new york? >> good. >> you like it? what about some temperatures? do you want to do the temperature with with me? >> yes. >> look over here. and i will show you what the temperatures -- look at those temperatures. what do you see on the map? give me a couple of readings? >> 61, 64.
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>> 70 in new york? >> 70. >> 79 in el paso. >> 79 in. >> charlotte -- i can't find it. >> very nice job. very nice job. a lot of moisture moving in the southeast and parts of the ohio river valley. i think it's going to be a really nice day for your travels in nofers new york city. thanks for coming. do you guys like "fox & friends"? >> yeah islam. [cheers] >> i hope so. back inside elizabeth, brian, tucker. >> he did a great job. yes, he is fantastic and we love the people of texas. meanwhile, coming up straight ahead. one of the most violent gangs in the entire world. ms 13 taking advantage our open border. exclusive look at the dangerous and deadly criminals now in the united states. >> and it's a popular caffeine powder that's already claimed the life of one teenager. this morning, a brand new warning from the fda that you have got to see. so stay tuned. [ male announcer ] we're the names you know in the places you want to be.
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vitamin commonly used to control cholesterol levels. niacin could raise the risk of internal bleeding, diabetes and death. all three i am not four. dangers of unregulated caffeine powder. being used by teens as energy booths ms warning comes after a high school senior in ohio died. lethal amount of caffeine in his body. 23 times the amount found in coffee. or soda. tucker. >> dangerous gangs in the world. ms-13 from el salvador is apparently taking advantage of the crisis on our southern border.
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ms 13 members are at the border processing center in arizona and using the services meant more migrant children meant to commit crimes and new members. some of them dangerous crimes katie pavlich joins us. she is denver this morning. thanks for coming on. what you have learned? >> well, we do know due to a sum arery last week that was released to us by border patrol agents that there are at least 16 ms 13 gang members being housed in the know nogales processing center. we do know from interviews engaged in murder in home countries before making their way to the united states. now we have documents detailing the exact crimes that they admitted to committing. one of them includes the ms-13 gang members using a fully automatic uzi to kill a rival gang member. another includes scouting to
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carry out other homicides for the group. extortion, money laundering, and so it is really important to keep in mind here that in the united states, minors are classified as teenagers under the age of 18. and due to that minor policy, border patrol agents can't separate out 15 to 17-year-old gang members in these facilities from the general population and they are now using that to their advantage and trying to recruit other members into these gangs through these ocessing centers. >> i just want to make certain i understand what you are saying. if an ms 13 member says to u.s. official, a border patrol agent for example, i'm a murderer, i have killed people with an uzi. i plan to do so again. but that person is under 18, there is nothing we can do about it? >> there is nothing that border patrol can do about it at this point because they are classified as minors. and so these gang members who are in these countries el salvador, honduras, guatemala understand that and they are coming through these processing centers and
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using these as hubs, actually using the phones inside those processing centers not only to communicate with gang members not only back in home countries about to communicate with people in the united states. if you look at the documents closely you will see that 15-year-olds, 16-year-olds, gang member minors were actually on their way to their parents who are living in the united states illegally. >> and, yet, somehow, we have decided, the obama in administration has decided there is nothing we can do to protect ourselves from these people. have any been deported that you know of? >> there are no reports of them being reported. border patrol's job is to process them through and then to turn them over to ice and ice has not said exactly what they are going to do with them. we do know they are scheduled for placement in the united states. the typical procedure there is to give them a court date, immigration hearing. and ask them to show up. but, typically they do not show up. about 97% of them don't show up for their court date. we have a very serious public safety concern on our hands when border patrol
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can't separate these people out from the general population. and not only is the ms-13. we also have 18 street gang members who are now in these processing centers and a gang rivalry problem that is going on as well. >> any policy that relies on the good faith of salvador ran gang members probably doomed to fail. thanks for coming on this morning. >> thanks, tucker. >> coming up, the boardwalk about to get regulated. the latest overreach out of washington that could wreck your summer fun and you have gasping with disbelief. plus, what do you do to celebrate your 18th birthday? of course you go sky diving with your dad, your grandfather and your great grandfather about. to talk to it a family of four generations who just took a leap of faith together. stay tuned.
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well, a recent high school graduate decided to take the plunge on his 18th birthday but ended up being once in a lifetime experience he never expected. it was a sky diving gift turned generational drop, four generations to be exact. his father, grandfather and even great grandfather all came along for the ride. you are looking at it here. joining us now is the dietrich family, 18-year-old nathan, 43-year-old darryl, 6 a-year-old dave and 88-year-old bob. when did this jump occur? looking at this just this wednesday? >> yes, ma'am. >> nathan, i am looking at your dad and his dad and his dad and i'm thinking did you ever think this guy would get knew so much trouble dropping from the sky, bob? >> no. it was no trouble. i enjoyed it because it was the whole generation. the four generations of us i
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would have never done it on my own with a gang i loved it it. >> exceptional that you share so much indeed. did you all go to the same high school? what's the name of your school. >> i went to warren hills. he went to warren hills, he went to washington high and he went to washington high. >> a lot in common here but nothing like this. 'this was birthday gift or graduation gift. >> birthday gift. >> your dad gave it to you. >> yeah. >> i am wondering you couldn't have expanded to turn out like this expanded gift. >> i used to want to do this but i hadn't recently thought about it but nathan asked my dad and i about doing it and after a while let's go ahead and do this. >> i can understand the two of you. explain how you convinced the remainder of the generations. >> so i asked both my grandpa and my dad at the same time. and they both talked about it and decided all right, we will do it. and then on a father's day, i asked my great grandfather, i was like papa do you want to go sky diving with us. i never thought he would say
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yes. three minutes later he said all right, i'm in. >> wow, were any of you hesitant the day of, on wednesday when you got up there, anyone want to back out? >> no. >> no. >> no. >> why? >> what did it mean for you. >> it was a family affair. and we were doing it as a family. and that's what made me go for it. i had no hesitation whatsoever. >> what an honor to share this and also to be asked by your great grandson. >> amen. >> to hang out together in this sky and drop down. would you do it again? i will go down the line. >> i'm actually doing it hopefully in two weeks. >> dad? >> if the -- if there is a special event. >> granddad? >> i'm the same as darryl. if it was a special event i would do it. never anything that i would have done without being sort of inspired by nathan and like nathan brought us -- led us into it and when my dad said go, that kind of shut the door on us. and how going to get out of it. >> and bob?
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>> it's -- as i say, the beauty of it is of us doing it. and 18 to 88, and no hesitation. i mean, once these guys asked me, i thought it was a great idea because of the family, it was family. i would have never done it on my own. but as a family, four generations, i loved it. and had no hesitation whatsoever. even when they pushed me out of the plane. [ laughter ] >> i'm ready to go. i said i'm 88 years old. i said if this is it, the lord is willing to take me because i'm a born again christian. and i say it's a family affair and it's something that i will -- my short life i have left i will always remember. >> a full life indeed. name it the dietrich drop. how is that? well done. congratulations to you, nathan. so glad to have your dad and your dad and your dad here to join us all on an adventure of a lifetime. >> thank you very much. coming up, another crisis
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turned -- another trip to be president. where is he going this week? well, of course, it's hollywood. and, first, the irs targeted the president's political opponent and now new agencies this morning about another government agency. going after conservatives. feet...splashing. better things than the joint pain and swelling of moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis. if you're trying to ma, now may be time to ask about xeljanz. xeljz (tofacitinib) is a small pill, not an injection or infusion, for adults with moderate to severe ra for whom methotrexate did not work well. xeljanz can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. seris, sometimes fatal infections and cancers have happened in patients taking xeljanz. don't start xeljanz if you have any infection, unless ok with your doctor. tears in the stomach or intestines, low bod cell counts and higher liver tes and cholesterol levels have happened. your doctor should perform blood tts before you start and while taking xeljanz,
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...and we'll replace destroyed or stolen items with brand-new versions. we put members first. join the nation. ♪ nationwide is on your side ♪ good morning, it's saturday, july 19th. i'm elisabeth hasselbeck aer from the. this is the murder weapon, the rocket launcher that shot the malaysian passenger plane right out of the sky over ukraine. the new evidence over who may be responsible. >> plus, first the irs targeted the president's political opponents. now, new allegations this morning the department of justice under eric holder went after conservative businesses we have knows details next. >> when is this going to stop? meanwhile, and they let their lawn go brown to help conservative water. at the order of the city. now they are facing a fine up to $500 because their lawn turned brown is this
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fair? of course it's not fair. i can't even pretend that it's fair. i'm supposed to pretend that it's fair but it's not fair, okay? i can't pretend that it's fair. it's interesting, but it is not fair. mornings are better with friends. it's time for "fox & friends." >> tucker, his mike was up up during the animation. >> it was? >> oh, sorry. i just thought that what a great way to introduce what elizabeth said in this script. this is the murder weapon. we have pictures of the murder weapon, the rocket launcher. wonderful way to crystallize the reality of it it's a murder weapon. >> we have been asking questions for a long time. we have this fox news alert for you now, brand new video this morning. showing that rocket launcher we just discussed used to shoot down malaysian flight 17. all 298 people on board were killed. including an american.
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19-year-old quinn chasman who had a dual us citizenship. blocking investigators from entering the crash site as leland vittert who worked out there predicted yesterday. >> our own elizabeth plan joins us live from washington with the very latest on this breaking story. elizabeth? >> good morning. and we have a sound bite from malaysian press conference. i want to play it for you. reacting to the news that the site is being blocked. take a listen. >> >> malaysia is deeply concerned that a crash site has not been properly secured; integrity of the site has been compromised. and there are indication that vital evidence has not -- >> we are getting word that waves of international support is starting to arrive. enemiers say that time cannot be wasted. much of the crash site which spans for miles and includes human remains is starting to deteriorate. shortly after the first
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group arrived yesterday from the organization for security and cooperation in europe, armed separatists allegedly blocked the team from gaining access. the standoff lasted about an hour before investigators say they left for the day reblesz reportedly fired warning shots as the team left. you heard malaysian officials are reacting to the news today. they say the reports are disrespectful to all of the families looking for closure. now, some are very critical at the finger pointing which continues in the midst of this tragedy. ukrainian authorities are accusing the rebels, even releasing a recording of what they claim is an intercepted call between a rebel commander and russian intelligence officer discussing the crash. the rebels and russian media say ukrainian forces were the ones who were responsible. now here in the u.s. president obama did hold a press briefing just yesterday. confirming the location of the launch but not officially announcing who the administration deems is responsible for the missile launch. elizabeth, tucker, brian, back to you guys. >> all right. thank you very much. elizabeth. and we will check with you again.
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so, right now we see the intercepts. we hear the interaction after the explosion. we hear the russian rebels, excuse me, the ukrainian -- the russian separatists talking to each other, thinking that they hit a cargo plane, military plane, realizing it's a passenger jet. now we have video that seems to be the actual weapon used to kill 298 people. so, getting a lot through, but we can't actually get to the actual site because the separatists are keeping us from there. there is over 100 inspectors weld up around that area trying to get to the bodies of the people and the evidence and they can't get through. what i also find astounding too at this hour is there isn't more outrage at vladimir putin and the separatists throughout europe. >> that's right. >> it's chaos. and right in the center of europe, as you just said, europe won't step up, of course, because they have economic interests at stake. all that natural gas that flows from ukraine through russia. but more amazingly from my point of view is how passive the president seems.
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you saw him address this yesterday in contrast to some of the people who work for him, even. the u.n. ambassador samantha power gave this fiery statement. the president seemed very much like this was happening in another universe watch the contrast between the two. >> we don't see a u.s. military role beyond what we have already been doing in working with our nato partners in some of the baltic states giving them reassurances that we are prepared to do whatever is required. >> this war can be ended, russia can end this war. russia must end this war. >> russia decided they didn't like the regime change that took place in the ukraine and have been involved in the ukraine ever since. samantha powers actually looked as though she was quite emotional there. the president did say some direct statements i thought were, it felt good to hear him say this is a a wakeup call for europe, actually for the world. he went on to to say this
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should snap everybody's heads to attention. the question is, is the president saying it to vladimir putin when they spoke yesterday? hopefully when they speak again today and the next day. is he letting them know that these sanctions aren't going to gradually get tighter. what you did on thursday is a game changer. >> it was frustrating for i think many people here and probably across the globe to hear just 38 seconds spent on the issue on day one. not as strong language yesterday. lt. bill cowan is one of those individuals. he said leaders around this globe are waiting for leadership from president obama. >> i think they are looking for some leadership somewhere. none of them are strong enough among their own partners to exert that kind of leadership. as we all know in the past they would have looked to the united states okay, boss, what do we do now, this president, this united states is not really giving them a the lo of confidence that we're going to do anything and therefore, why should they do anything? none of them want to end up
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standing alone and being the only one to confront russia and pay some penalty for it. >> i think we ought to all recognize, everybody, not just ukraine, everybody recognize russia poses a significant threat to the world to the west and more specifically to the united states. >> yeah yeah yeah whatever. that's the vibe you get from the whowssments let's be totally honest. this administration has run out of gas. the president has lost interest. he doesn't seem animated. he doesn't seem clued. in he seems very focused on vacation and spending time with celebrities and, above all, on fundraising. he has raised more money than any president in american history. that's what he is spending his time doing. hillary clinton on charlie rose actually sounded more outranged than the president. says the u.s. needs to put putin on notice that he has gone too far and we are not going to stand idolly by. that would be an interesting take. we don't think that vladimir putin and russia knocked that plane out of the sky and we don't think the russian separatists probably more than likely did it on purpose. >> doesn't sound like they did.
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>> russian-supported separatists are the ones that obviously did. this there was a report that cargo plane in the sky roughly around the same place as this passenger yet was people learning how to use this hit the plane. >> not the people you want operating the long range antimissile system. >> no. you know, will anyone hear the cry for cease-fire from the president and should he cease fundraising. at this time let us know what you think about that meanwhile lea gabe bill has headlines for us at this moment. >> i sure do. thanks. >> fox news alert. overnight explosions rocking gaza for a third day. thriller morning, an israeli citizen killed by hamas rocks. the first photo from the scene that shows what's left of his home even our own fox news reporters right in the middle of the action. >> okay. [beep] [explosion] >> whoa whoa whoa whoa. [jesus christ. >> today was one of the bloodiest by the way.
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[explosion] >> new video shows the israeli's military mission to dismantle hamas quote terror infrastructure that includes rocket launchers and underground tunnels as the israeli military moves forward calls for the complete decimation of hamas grow louder and that would mean an extended operation. this as the death toll grows. the israel defense force killing 20 terrorists while gaza health officials say 25 palestinians have been killed. thousands of people pay their respects to a new jersey police officer who was killed in the line of duty. law enforcement from around the country joining family and friends for 23-year-old melvin san santiago's giewrnl. 27-year-old lawrence campbell waited for officers-to-a right to purposefully shoot at them. after santiago was killed. other officers returned fire and killed campbell. and is is the justice department the next irs?
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a doj program called operation choke point under fire for allegedly pressuring banks to deny services to businesses for political reasons. now, the doj is is accused of only targeting high risk industries that line up against the administration's political leanings. >> researchers at johns hopkins are working to save soldier's lives. can help stop a soldier from bleeding to death on the battlefield. the students working on this device say it's much more effective than gaza and tourniquets. when it is injected it fills the wound and hardens basically helping soldiers survive between the battlefield and the hospital. wonderful to see these developments in battlefield medicine, the reason so many have come back from these wars is battlefield medicine. >> powerful science for recovery and survival. lea gabriel, thank you. >> thanks. we are going to be coming up. a lot more left in the show. for example. many media outlets are
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portraying israel with conflict in gaza with the palestinians with hamas as the bad guys. with you is it true that they deserve the derision? because it's hamas that's using their civilians as human shields. we will examine what's happening in that war zone. >> that's right. and they let their own lawn go brown to help conservative water at the order of the city. and now, they are facing a fine up to $500 because they their lawn turned brown. is that fair? brian doesn't think so. >> wow. >> elizabeth, let's go outside right now. no lawn here. what about a basketball court? you are looking at street ball, ladies and gentlemen. you will find out how you can join this traveling team and do some dynamic things above the rim where i spend most of my game. all coming up on "fox & friends" weekend edition. you want to save money on car insurance? no problem.
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we have a fox news alert for you. one civilian killed by explosions rock the israeli gaza border this morning. while hamas is using civilians as human shields the press here not reporting that. >> but despite the rising death toll on the streets of gaza today, strong support for hamas and their rockets, gazaens telling us it's a matter of self-defense. >> definitely reject the labeling of using civilians as human shields. this is an issue that always comes up against hamas. they will say that this is the nature of the battlefield. >> fox news contributor and editor of national review rich lowry. thanks a lot for coming on this morning. >> hey, tucker. how are you doing? >> your view is that hamas -- that the civilian casualties are mostly the faulted of hamas and they set it up as a propaganda tool? >> yeah. exactly. i mean, this is their whole strategy. you are not going to beat israel with rocks that you can't even aim. the whole idea is to invite
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retaliatory fire. to tell your civilians not to hide or to flee the areas where the israelis are about to hit. and then get the civilian casualty numbers up and then use that as a propaganda tool and hope the media is lazy enough to just report it as if it's israel's fault that it's being is hitting back and there happen to be tragic civilian casualties. >> so the four little kids, for example, killed on the beach mediterranean in gaza, you think that's hamas' fault? >> yeah. look, tucker, it wouldn't be happening. there is no reason for this conflict except for that hamas is sending the rockets over into israel. and israel is willing to accept the cease-fire that was offered the other day by the egyptians. hamas was not. so, why would -- there wouldn't be any war for there to be any clated teller damage or a tragic miss fire like that if hamas wasn't shooting the rockets. >> so you often see news
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stories tally up the numbers. i think on the one side you have had well leaders reporting one civilian death so far. also a soldier, i believe, killed yesterday, an israeli soldier. ids soldier. on the other side you have over 300 palestinians killed. fox news is reporting a number of them women and children. you think that's a false comparison? >> yeah. look, hamas is hiding among civilians. hamas, obviously, has devoted a lot of resources into importing rockets and all sorts of military material. why tonight they build bunkers or tell their people actually when israel warns you that they are about to hit, please flee. please go some place safe. they don't. and you have had, you know, various hamas officials over the years bragging he we are going to win because we love death more than you love life. so, this is, you know, an islamist group that is in the same ideological family
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as boko haram. don't see anyone making excuses for boko haram but for some reason people do make excuses for mams. >> the "new york times" report a bunch of children have been killed in gaza last few days while sleeping in their homes. do you think that that is the fault of hamas? >> yes they hide rockets in civilian areas. you will see the other day we had a story about hamas hiding rockets in a u.n. operated school why do you do that unless you want to invite these sort of trageds. i believe hamas is hoping that there is an accidental hit on a hospital or a school that creates dozens of these casualties all at once to create international pressure on israel. tucker, i don't get what their tragedy is otherwise. >> rich lowry of the national review. thanks a lot for coming on this morning. >> thanks, tucker. >> coming up. president bill clinton questioning his own cia over usama bin laden. the brand new details just
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revealed from top secret documents, they change understanding of history. stay tuned for that will he let their lawn go brown in the name of environmentalism to try to preserve water because the city told them to. now they are facing a fine of up to 500 bucks because their lawn turned brown. is this fair? brian kilmeade says oh, yes it is. we will let you decide. plus, brian -- you stroll stay tune to see. brian and elizabeth go yuan w yuan -- one-on-one in our plaza. ♪
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quick head lines for you now. 46,000 drug convicts may get out early. thanks go to cost cutting sentencing changes. a move the obama administration has embraced. inmates who have served a decade or longer can apply for early release with an achance to shave off to 25 months off their sentence. border patrol agents bus 23 criminals trying to smuggle drugs and illegals into the united states. $1 million worth of marijuana was found in a truck at a check point near tucson, arizona. in four other smuggling bus, agents found a total of 12 illegals locked in trunks. brian? >> all right. 80% of california is now in
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an extreme drought. what else is new? so many owners are not watering their lawns to conservative water. it seems reasonable. >> the corning family did just that now facing fines of up to 500 bucks for a brown lawn. michael and laura join us from california. thanks a lot for coming on this morning. i want to make sure we understand the story correctly. you were asked not to water your lawn and so you didn't, because there is a big drought. and now you are facing a fine because you didn't water your lawn? is that right? >> that's right. it was -- we're following the orders of the state government and our consciences and stop watering. the city government fined us or we face criminal actions for having a brown lawn. >> that's incredible because we have no crime now so we should focus on the grass. laura, how did you find out that you were targeted for this potential fine? >> tuesday afternoon i was
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at home and we received a flier on the door. so we still are trying to reach the code enforcement department in the city to try to find out what we need to do to remediate the lawn. >> mike, are you ready to go it jail for your leaf beliefs as a conscientious lawn on tore? >> conscious lawn on tore. i like that. i will stand up for my principles. i'm thinking the city of glendora will not go that far. but, if worse comes to worse, i will add a little more water to avoid jail time. >> well, that's good. we broke some news there. here is what glendora city manager is saying, quote: our policy is to seek control tear compliance dot dot dot when staff occupied on the verge of violating the maintenance standards, they left a flier just reminding them that we can conservative and have a wonderful landscaped property that helps achieve
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conservation. do you believe that you just don't have the right mix of water and drought protection? do you believe the city is right in saying you can have it both ways? laura? >> the way they gave us the flier, they really didn't offer us any suggestions on what we could be doing. you know, our only guidance was what we had heard from the state, which was just to reduce overall water usage by 20%. so, you know, we are still waiting to hear what we could do with the city. i mean, we have gotten feedback from friends and other people about lawn removal. i have a feeling that's where we are going to have. >> you probably are. i can tell you you, this that america's landscaping community raises its leaf blowers in solidarity with you. >> absolutely. >> mike and laura. >> and your response. >> your responsible in california. it's always in a drought. you take action. now you are going it get fined thanks so much. >> good luck. i hope you enjoy -- avoid
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jail. >> thank you. >> totally enjoy your summer fun. stay tuned for details. >> plus elisabeth hasselbeck was brought up in the streets can she call back that beautiful street game of basketball and beat some of america's finest? street ball which is once our remember van da. been converted to wake hardwood. look at that field. and the jumper just off the rim. the camera doesn't go high enough. some mystery whether it went or not. >> you should do play by play.
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laughing all the way to the river bank. >> hi, everyone, welcome become. troublinger carlson was outside. thought this segment we were doing basketball was now. he went outside instead of being here. looping at some of the
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typest street ball players in the country. looking to add a couple players mount opponent team at the end of this series. they will sell out overseas go. to china have 20,000 people showing up. yesterday as i was leaving they were putting together the court outside. >> it's incredible. opportunity to have $100,000 paycheck roster shot here. who he exciting this s. this? brian and i are going to try out. who do you think has a better chance of making the team right here in our plaza? tweet us, send a facebook note? who do you like out there? we play more of a team guy impossible to imagine competing against each other. utter collaborative. >> we are going to look to wins a the three of us. but we are also going to look to show our skills in order to get picked and possibly travel the country and miss hosting the show unfortunately. >> i'm still out of breast from just taking a couple shots. >> that's what freedom is about. let me tell you something about the opposite of freedom. that's what's happened in
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maryland. the state of maryland has decided it has to regulate really regulate, clamp down on children's arcade games. for example, the claw, you know, reach down to get the stuffed animals, pin ball. all the boardwalk games you grew up that really summarize summer on america. >> the club very unfair. >> you sound like a regular from the state of maryland. >> they are putting some of these arcade owners out of business. we interviewed one earlier in the show. here is what he said. >> they want to register each and every operator, each and every machine, make us report every machine, have certificate for every machine. it's a huge amount of paperwork. we don't really know why they are trying to do this. it's a solution in search of a problem. and we really think it's just bureaucrats that have no idea what they are dealing with and don't care and looking for a way to
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expand what they do every day. expand their power base. >> unbelievable. >> i will say. this arcades, the prizes have got to get better and if you are doing the basketball game the hoop has got to get a little bigger. magic johnson has a hard time imagine being successful at the free throw. >> win out there today. >> when it comes to the arcade games. it's too stilted against the human being. >> are you going to say it's unfair when we get outside and take a few shots. >> blaming the equipment. i just, you know what? i just transferred my bet. i just put 100 on you. >> wow. where do you get that money? >> yes. because i are. >> reading between the lines today on this saturday. "fox & friends" edition. >> so, listen, do we run outside now? headlines first though i don't think she is coming back. next time i'm going to look at the run down. >> i think you should do that you have been on three and a half hours. things get muddy this hour.
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take control of this program and tell you what is happening around the world. >> thanks for having me. let's get right to it one of the most dangerous gang in the world ms 13 taking advantage of the crisis on the border. ms 13 members are at the nogales processing center in arizona. using the services meant for migrant children using those services to commit crimes and to recruit new members. just how dangerous are these gang members? katie pavlich obtained exclusive documents detailing their crimes and said this earlier on "fox & friends." >> now we have these detailing e exact crimes that they admitted to committing. one of them includes one of the ms 13 gang members using a fully automatic uzi to kill a rival gang member. another includes scouting to carry out other homicides for the group. extortion, money laundering. >> pavlich says that there are at least 16 ms 13 gang members at the processing center. isis militants tell iraqi
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christians to get out or else. terrorists laying siege to the city of mosul giving christians a noon deadline to leave the u.s. city limits. many leaving with with just the clothes on their back. christians have been in mosul for at least 1700 years. one of the oldest communities in the world. elders think that today will be their last day. and new top secret clinton era documents showing president bill clinton questioned the cia intelligence following news report on two embassy bombing. hard to find proof that bin laden had a hand in the 1998 african-american embassy attacks that killed 12 americans. while federal grand jury indicted bin laden in the terror plot. in the memo to then security advisor sandy berger clinton said sandy, if this article is right. the cia sure overstated its case to me. what are the facts? well, clinton's aids' response is still classified it was a generational drop. literally. nathan dietrich getting the gift of a lifetime for his
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18th birthday. he went sky diving not only with his father but with his grandfather and his great grandfather, tag along two. the four joined us earlierier to talk about that very special experience. listen. >> on a father's day i asked my great grandfather. papa do you want to go sky diving with us. i never thought he would say yes. >> it was no trouble. i enjoyed it because it was a whole generation. the four generations of us. i would have never done it on my own. but with a gang, it was great. >> well, the family proved that age is not an issue. dad 43. grandfather davis 65. and great grandfather bob is 88 years old. and next up, the "fox & friends" anchors are going to be sky diving here in new york city. right? >> well, that would be a lot easier than being in the street ball. the class of america. >> come on, i want to see you guys do it? >> i want to go outside. according to reports. janice is outside. >> i am. i think we need hazard pay because elizabeth is dribbling with two hands.
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you have got to see that stay tuned for that it and sometimes the ball comes over this way. we are going to do a real quick weather. first of all are where are you from. >> palm beach, florida. >> what's your name, bob and deb biff. >> what a special wish today. >> 45th wedding anniversary. >> fantastic. happy anniversary, everybody. let's take a look at the maps and then i want to do something real special after that potential for showers and thunderstorms across the gulf coast up towards the southeast and the ohio river valley but for the folks visiting new york city today. everything looks spectacular. we're going to see some of that moisture build in later on this week. get those bar barbecues in this weekend. there is a look at some of the potential rainfalls along the gulf coast can you get 4 to 6 inches. be prepared for that up towards atlanta. several inches of rain for you and then, of course, we are watching the northwest where it remains dry and we have some wildfire danger. okay, real quick, guys, we are going to do the wave. we are bringing back the wave on "fox & friends" weekend. are you ready? >> yeah. >> go! >> woo! >> that was fantastic.
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back to you, elizabeth. >> i need a wave. >> yeah. almost every time. you guys have got to come out here. look at her go. >> i love the ban danna. >> elizabeth, double dribbling. >> i need to practice because brian was talking trash inside. >> elizabeth, you are going to be on my team, elizabeth. we are going it play together. and tucker, all three. >> is that the plan? >> finest street ball players in the country that will be a lot of fun. meanwhile, coming up straight ahead. the story we have been covering for the last three hours and 45 minutes. new details pouring in about the malaysian jetliner. the people who took it down. highly trained shooters. our next guest calling it international drive by shooting. lt. colonel tony shaffer with that intelligence next. >> plus, the question you have been asking all morning. does elizabeth have what it takes to ball up street team is holding nationwide tryouts stop by our station first. no doubt she will dominate.
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look on what is coming up you on the cost of freedom block. hi, neil. >> hey guys, good morning. money talks, so is the best way to deal with these crises to cut off aid and trade to the bad guys. and after an airliner is shot done, is it time to put missile defense systems up on all commercial planes. it's pricey, is it worth every penny? did the white house just say the privacy rights of illegals trump our owns a the government spreads thousands of illegal immigrants across the nation, it's refusing to say exactly where they're being housed. don't taxpayers deserve to know the cost of freedom all over it at the top of the hour. we will see you then. gas. introducing new dulcogas, which starts working to eliminate gas bubbles in minutes for effective relief. dulcogas, from the makers of dulcolax- nothing relieves gas faster. dulcogas, from the makers of dulcolax- zing! need new gear? then go to bass pro shops for huge savings during our
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if energy could come from anything?. or if power could go anywhere? or if light could seek out the dark?
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what would happen if that happens? anything. fox news alert. defense officials telling fox news at this hour this is a video of the rocket launcher that brought down malaysian flight 17, killing all 298 people on board including three infants. the video shows it's heading
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to the russian border. >> next guest, sources say this just enforces russian special ops support for the pro-russian separatists. >> joining us now in senior fellow with the london center for policy research. lt. colonel tony shaffer. term, thanks for being with us this morning. >> thanks for having me. >> in your estimation, who is behind this? >> this is a combination of two parties. the russian separatists, i do believe that they pushed the button, with that said, there is no doubt in my mind, based on the sources i have spoken to. russian spits nats special operation sources been on the ground advising these guys for the past year were the the ones that trained these guys. let me be very clear on this. sa-11 system is multiunit system that what you see there on the screen is but one unit of a multi-unit system. not like picking up a manned portable weapon where it takes 10 minutes to teach someone to point and shoot. this thing changes tell men tri between the systems and requires that you understand how to fire the missile,
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track it towards the target until the honing radar on the radar itself can take over. this is not a simple weapons system. this is very complex and, again, even if we come to find that the rebels fired it vladimir putin's fingerprints are all over this. >> that's a pretty heavy duty weapon, which makes me think it's a pretty aggressive move of putin to give this to the separatists. >> no doubt. >> why we do -- this seems reckless, why we do that? >> we have talked about this, i think on and off camera, all of us. what's going on here is a little by little, eating of ukraine. he knows he cannot do a full blown invasion. he knows he would get all sorts of push back. what he has been doing, tucker, is actually little by little, bite by bite trying to get more of ukraine until destabilizes until it falls. this is part of a larger strategy. frankly in this case i think overestimated his hand. overplayed his hand and i i do call this -- i believe appropriately a drive by shooting. and i think that they have
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miscalculated in allowing these rebels to have the system that brought down 26 on the 149 of this month. i think they thought they were shooting at a cargo aircraft that turned out tragically to be passenger aircraft. >> you are saying that nobody's goal was to kill 298 people and the ramifications are all bad for the rebels. first off to the victims. number two, for the rebels. and, vladimir putin, anyone sitting on the fence understands that he is the bad guy in this situation. will we respond like we did in the 80's? and the beginning of the 90's? and say nato come together and start arming those people that is he abusing? >> we don't know if putin -- he is a thug. he assassin united states enemies. no doubt. what w. that said. i don't think there is any interest as you point out of them doing this because it's all down for them. and the question, as you -- what do we do now? nato has to rally around this. if nato doesn't rally, they are going to be in trouble because once is he done with ukraine. is he moving on to them. so we have got to do something.
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we have got to be decisive. if we don't. you will continue to see agress out of putin. putin only understands power. unless you counter that with some level of either force or a credible threat of force, he will continue to do what he is he doing. there is no doubt in my mind. these sanctions aren't going to work. >> colonel, on top of that, i think it's also important to point out that the ukrainian forces were doing better than anyone thought. they were pushing back on these russian rebels. they had some success in the air. but that was it do you think that if we gave them actual arms, things to help them win a ground battle, that would tip the scales? >> no doubt. we helped defeat the soviets in afghanistan without putting one boot on the ground by working through problemsies, here is another opportunity. do i believe that the ukrainians would be able to do a lot more if they got a lot more from us than, you know, basically first aid band-aids and hash tags. i think if we gave them real weapons which i think we should be doing, they can defend themselves.
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that's what we should be looking at. that's not what we heard yesterday. the president seemed to take military options off the table, correct? >> boots on the ground anyway. >> military options for us, we don't have to worry about that. again, ronald reagan defeated the soviets without ever having to put boots on the ground it was all about the fact that we actually had a credible threat that russians knew that we would use force and in places where we could through proxies, we were using force to push them back. this is where i think we have to think this through. i would like to see the president make a very strong statement of condemnation. calling out vladimir putin for what he he is. a thug and he is definitely behind supporting this. >> there is a lot of democrats in congress like congressman adam schiff that belief exactly what you were saying. and have said something very aggressive -- set a very aggressive tone so we wouldn't be siding with the republicans if he did that thanks so much, colonel for joining us. >> thanks a lot. >> thanks for having me. >> up next: >> they know how to play ball. but do brian and i? we are going to find out. do we have what it takes to be an all star in the ball
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up team hits the court. street ball you are not going want to to miss this. probably get a little ugly. >> anyone can jam. we are going to do the team work. >> they are good. we are not. >> hey, speak for yourself. [ yodeling plays ] worst morning ever. [ angelic music plays ] ♪ toaster strudel! best morning ever! [ hans ] warm, flaky, gooey. toaster strudel! i make a lot of purchases foand i get ass. lot in return, flaky, gooey. with ink plus from chase. like 50,000 bonus points when i spent $5,000 in the first 3 months after i opened my account. and i earn 5 times the rewards on internet, phone services and at office supply stores. with ink plus i can choose how to redeem my points. travel, gift cards, even cash back. and my rewards points won't expire.
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paragraph sprint car i won. second place car but had a little luck. develop graduate legs. elizabeth? >> thank you, you know, we are out here on the court and we are with the demetrius, ceo of ball up street ball with a huge weekend about to take place. tryouts this weekend. >> exactly. we tour all around the u.s. doing u.s. tour where every market we go to there is a tryout big game they play against us. at the end of us we are going to select the 10 top players in the u.s. come to vegas and have the win $100,000 contract to join our team. >> this is a deriffive of street ball. no,. >> that's why it's so exciting we are here today. that's this is the home of street ball in new york city. we are looking for the best.
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you have got some of the best players in the world here. >> right. so they put on a show. a lot of exnbaers traveling around packing stadiums. fox sportsnet work televising your name. >> great televised partner with us the last twoers i don't. see it again this summer. every market we go to a special nba. we have nic young with us. help coach team new york. >> elisabeth hasselbeck does not believe you have a player that if i put her right here could dunk over her. >> right here. >> >> successfully. she is nonbeliever. >> they call him air up there for a reason. >> okay. so let's see. >> i trust for a reas reason. >> i trust you. >> don't you hurt her. >> okay. >> i can't watch him. >> okay. this is balling here on 5th and
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86th. >> that is why they call him the air up here. >> all right. we will take it to another level right ooh now. >> okay. these guys are known as the best street ball players in the u.s., and not only the u.s., but we tour everybody nationally and we go to australia and japan and they pack stadiums to see the best of the best in the world. >> well, we want to put the best of the best to the test. and so we are going to -- you are going to join me and t.j. and, brian, we are going to ball up right now with a little game. you guys think that you have what it takes. ok okay. >> they need a coach. >> hey, get my wristband. demetrious, if i do well, is there a chance that elizabeth and i will join the tour? >> well, this is the secret
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assassin, and if he does well. >> all right. here we go. >> and the teammates will hem you. >> and how are we on time, gavin? are you guys ready? >> well, we don't need a huddle. just score and win. okay. >> okay. >> all right. go good. that's right. >> okay. we need defense. >> oh, way to be there. that's right. >> trickiness. >> this is balling with jason demetri yo demetrious. >> come on now.
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don't we get the ball back? >> give me the ball, elizabeth. >> what? no. >> oh, there you go. i'm k-a-t-e and i have copd, but i don't want my breathing problems to get in the way my volunteering. that's why i asked my doctor about b-r-e-o. once-daily breo ellipta helps increase airflow from the lungs for a full 24 hours. and breo helps reduce symptom flare-ups that last several days and require oral steroids, antibiotics, or hospital stay. breo is not for asthma. breo contains a type of medicine that increases risk of death in people with asthma. it is not known if this risk is increased in copd. breo won't replace rescue inhalers for sudden copd
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welcome back, everyone. right here on the plaza. hey, demetrious, you are running the show, what time are tryouts today? >> 1:00 at rutger park and a big game tomorrow night at 4:30 at st. john's, and get there early. >> all right. and for the close? >> the 6-year-old baller right here, and we are going to run a little play of magic for him. >> okay! air up there.
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you can do it, buddy. >> all right. elizabeth and tucker tonight on the show. with tensions escalating over there, new fears about our economy brewing here. layoff announcements growing. consumer sentiment is falling. prices on just about everything keep rising. how much more can the economy take? hi, everyone. i'm brenda butner, and this is bull bulls and bears. these are the bulls and bears. gary b. smith, tracy byrnes, jonas max fairis and john lockner and so you say that what

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