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tv   Hannity  FOX News  January 29, 2015 7:00pm-8:01pm PST

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some fun at the expense of deputy white house press secretary eric schultz last night. he looks like he's 14. turns out he's a fan of "the kelly file" and has a remark of his own. we'll have it for you tomorrow. see you tomorrow at 9:00. so why is it taking so long to make a decision on whether bowe bergdahl is a deserter? >> there have been no charges filed against sergeant bergdahl. >> pentagon press secretary john kirby is here to answer that question. eric holder under fire on capitol hill today. >> i'm here today because i was targeted by this government for daring to speak out. >> we're going to hear from his critics who testified. and tonight, only on "hannity," a former lieutenant thrown in jail 20 years for doing his job. tonight he needs your help. >> what mission? >> there is no mission. >> and super bowl sunday's right around the corner. we've got a sneak peek of some of the best super bowl ads.
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>> what? no. just the cabin. >> no explosions. >> "hannity" starts right here, right now. welcome to "hannity." the army announced more than three months ago in october that it had completed its investigation of bowe bergdahl's 2009 disappearance. the findings have not yet been made public. after the white house freed these five taliban members held at git moemo did this. >> he's going to be safely reunited with his family. he served the united states with honor and distinction. >> sergeant bergdahl put on the uniform of the united states voluntarily and went to war for the united states voluntarily. that takes honor. and it is a mark of distinction. >> it's not in the interest of anyone and certainly i think a
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bit unfair to sergeant bergdahl's family and to him to presume anything. >> members of bergdahl's platoon, people who served alongside him, tell a very different story. watch this. >> he needs to face consequences for his actions. not only is it a slap in the face to all the men and women who have served honorably, who upheld their oath and it's also a bad precedent to set towards future service members. >> to say that bowe is honorable, it's a spit right in everybody's faces. and it is frustrating. >> he needs to go through all the proper channels that any other deserter would go through. >> new tonight, official confirms fox news that one of the five taliban members traded for bergdahl has been discovered making phone calls to the taliban. joining me with reaction is pept gone press secretary rear
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admiral john kirby with us. thank you for being here. >> thank you sean. >> how do you reconcile a white house saying that bergdahl served with honor and distinction with his platoon mates say it's a spit in the face, that he deserted that he should be court-martialed. these are the people -- how do you reconcile these stories? >> i know there's a lot of emotion revolving around this. we understand there are former troops that served with him that have concerns about accountability here. what i can tell you is that the characterization of his service will be one of the things that general milly works on as he works through this investigation and how to dispose of the case. certainly characterization of service will become a part of that. and i can tell you no institution, none that i've seen in almost 30 years of serving in the military is more accountable than we are. and we're transparent about it. and we expect a certain level of conduct and behavior out of our troops and out of our officers. and when they don't meet that they're held to account. we don't want to rush to judgment here. general milly has only had the
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investigation for about a month. he's working his way through it. and then he'll make the decision about how this should be disposed of. i can guarantee one thing, i've known general milly a long time. he's a thoughtful, smart, measured leader in the army. very experienced in combat. and he'll make the right decision. >> let me ask you, the white house repeatedly said he served with honor and distinction. his own platoon mates said over and over again that was not the case. that he was deserted, that he left on his own that they heard radio transmissions that he sought out the taliban. it's reported as many as six platoon members died searching for him. i've talked to the parents of one soldier that died in the search for him last night on this program. how do you reconcile that though? why would the white house repeatedly say something that the people who knew him best say is not true? >> well, i can't speak for what others said about the character characterization of his service. i think it was more in terms of the volunteer nature of being in
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the military in general particularly at a time of war. but when we talk about specifically characterizing his service in afghanistan and this is what many of his fellow troops are concerned about that's what general milly is working through. in terms of the circumstances surrounding how he left that day, he came up with some findings i can't talk about them right now obviously about how it came he left the case. >> what do you make of today's news that of the five the taliban five, one has now returned back to the battlefield, one has now returned to terror? what does that say about the decision making of the white house releasing somebody for bowe bergdahl now potentially going to be out there killing soldiers or innocent people. >> let me cut this from a couple directions. first of all, we take all allegations of re-engagement very very seriously. there's different ways of considering re-engagement. it doesn't necessarily mean
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return to the battlefield. doesn't matter, we take it all seriously. we have a good security partnership with the government of qatar. they have provided assurances. and i can tell you that we are comfortable at the defense department that we can mitigate any threat that could be posed by any one of these individuals in terms of terrorist activity. again, i can't talk about the details. i can tell you we're very comfortable we can mitigate that threat. now to the larger point of your question about the trade with sergeant bergdahl. i tell you, we still standby this decision as being the right decision. it's a powerful message to our troops and our families that we're not going to leave you behind. it doesn't matter how you came to be missing. we'll deal with that later. >> the administration, i had parents on. they lost their son who was killed in the search for bowe bergdahl. they were on this program last night. and they claim the administration and the military has not been transparent with
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them. they want answers. what do you say to those parents tonight? >> well, first of all, our thoughts and prayers go out to them and our deepest condolences. as a father myself i can't imagine the sense of grief that they're suffering right now. and i can tell you if there's more answers they need or more contact they need then we'll do whatever we can. and we'll reach out and try to support in any way possible. i can't talk, again about the specifics of the case and the disappearance as general milly is working his way through that. what i can tell that family and any other family that we take that obligation very very seriously to support and care for them. and we will. >> let me ask this question because this report was completed, we're told in october. can you tell me with any certainty, general, why has he not made the decision, general milly. and how do you know the charge sheet hasn't been delivered to bergdahl's lawyer? >> well general milly only got the investigation right around christmas time. in fact right before the holidays. so he's only had it in his hand for a month. >> it was finished in october.
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>> it was finished in october but there had to be a series of evaluations of the report itself. once the report is done in the military, it doesn't just get handed right over. it has to be reviewed by the chain of command and it was. so it took a while to work its way to general milly. it wasn't even an automatic decision it would go to general milly. one of the decisions the army had to make was now what do we do with it. they had to think that through. they thought it through said we need to give it to a four-star army general to figure out what judicial process is the right way ahead. and that's what they've done. he's had it for a month. it's about a 2,000-page investigation, sean. it's very big. i can tell you he's working very hard on it. and we'll get there. >> let's talk about the legal definition, the uniform code of military justice. how to you define desertion? and what are the options that general milly will have? >> well, let's not jump to a conclusion that he's going to be charged with desertion. >> his platoon mates say he did.
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>> i understand that. i understand a lot of people have already made up their mind about sergeant bergdahl, but the only mind that matters right now is general milly's mind. and i can tell you he has not made up his mind. but let's put that aside for a second. desertion exists on several levels. and it's all tied to intent. what caused the individual to desert their post to leave their comrades during a time of war. and the intent matters here what was in the individual's mind as they left. desertion is a very serious charge no matter what the intent is. but there's various levels of that. those are kinds of things general milly is going to have to work through. >> isn't this the type of thing where the lawyer for bowe bergdahl could have coached his client and give him an excuse. if you're talking about intentions of somebody you can't prove what somebody's intent is. don't you have to put the pieces of the puzzle together differently? he could say anything. i thought i was on a peace mission, oh, i thought my commander wanted me to do this,
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oh, i don't remember, i was suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder. in other words it seems they can make any excuse if the definition is by intent. >> well, i don't know what communications he's had with his lawyer. and i wouldn't speak to that. what i tell you is that sergeant bergdahl was interviewed for the investigation, he was very cooperative in that interview and was very open about what happened. i can't talk about the details of course. but i can tell you that general doll was very confident in the testimony he received from sergeant bergdahl that it was complete and thorough. >> rear admiral kirby thank you. appreciate it. >> thank you. >> the white house drew heavy criticism for saying the bergdahl trade is different than a potential prisoner swap between isis and jordan. here's what they said. >> the president's bedrock commitment as commander in chief is to leave no man or woman behind. >> isn't that what the jordanians are operating under? the taliban is still conducting terrorist attacks. can't really say that the war
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has ended as far as they're concerned. >> i would also point out the taliban is an armed insurgency. isil is a terrorist group. we don't make concessions to terrorist groups. >> you don't feel the taliban is a terrorist group? >> i don't think that the taliban -- the taliban is an armed insurgency. >> not a terrorist group? here with reaction fox news military analyst colonel david hunt. i'll get to that comment in just a second here. this has been finished since october. as many as six people died. now one of the taliban five has returned and re-engaging in terror. and we still have no answers. and one has to question what is going on here. what are your thoughts? >> question and comment. this is not the first time in the history of the united states army that we've looked at a deserter. it was two reports sean 2009 when bergdahl walked off his post, left a note made a phone
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call changed clothes, left his weapon. and now this report by general doll. that's two times. two times. the first time called a deserter and they changed it. the army changed it to person -- location unknown. invented a new category. now we go to a four-star general who gt to be a four-star general making decisions. the army has delayed this -- >> colonel -- >> to say one month, doesn't take a four-star general three days to make a decision on something as straightforward as bergdahl. >> as many as six people died. many others injured. >> yep. >> you just laid out the evidence, pretty compelling evidence, that he consciously made a decision to leave his post. and there were radio transmissions that were picked up where locals were saying over the radio that there's an american looking for the taliban. okay. so six americans die, as many as six, many others injured here. and then the white house says he
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served with honor and distinction. and now we can't get an answer as to what the report is. so what are we to conclude? now we have one of the -- back on the battlefield. >> there's a big gap between not leaving anyone behind and trading a deserter for five terrorists, which are now not terrorists because somebody decided they're armed insurgents. which is crap. and the fact we had a white house meeting with the mother and father. this has been tortured. it doesn't need to be. we know how to do this. it should never have taken the amount of time it has. we should never have traded. and now they have a four-star people scratching their heads going, well it takes some time. no it does not. if it takes a four-star general this kind of time in the army three months we need to re-evaluate the four-star system. it's not hard considering the two investigations we've had. >> colonel, thank you for being with us. appreciate it. coming up tonight right here on
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"hannity". >> the incendiary words used by eric holder used a false narrative that then became the rallying cry for cop haters across america. >> a lot of swipes were taken at the man she wants to replace that's eric holder. now, three of the key witnesses from today's hearing join us exclusively. and later the story the mainstream media refuses to cover, a former army lieutenant sitting in jail tonight all because he tried to defend his fellow men in afghanistan. a heartbreaking story and how you might be able to help that man right there.
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welcome back to "hannity." today was the second day of confirmation hearings for loretta lynch, that's president obama's nominee for attorney general. while lynch was not in the hot
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seat today lawmakers got an earful from witnesses who spent most of the time attacking the man she will be replacing, eric holder, because of the dangerous decisions he's made as america's top cop. watch. >> the american people in my view have been poorly served in recent years by the justice department. >> they covet and withhold public information that we as citizens own. >> this is a department that has some real serious problems right now. problems that really make the hair stand up on the back of my neck sometimes. >> what i've witnessed from the department of justice under the leadership of attorney general eric holder has been almost hostility towards local law enforcement. >> i'm here today because i was targeted by this government for daring to speak out. they bully and threaten access to journalists who do their jobs, news organizations that publish stories they don't like and whistleblowers there to tell
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the truth. >> incendiary rhetoric used by eric holder created a pathway of false rhetoric that then became a rallying cry for cop haters across america. >> the department being eroded, the situation is not good in this country. >> general holder called america a nation of cowards. well, if you remember nothing else from my comments, please remember this, i am not a coward. and i am not a victim. i'm a messenger for all of those americans who love our country love our fellow countrymen and pray for a better tomorrow. >> here now are three people who testified at today's hearing milwaukee county sheriff david clarke investigative journalist sherl attkisson. more than anything, i know a lot of people didn't have time to watch the whole hearing. i wanted to give you all an opportunity to tell your story. and why this is important as we now go through the process of picking a new attorney general. kathrine, we'll start with you.
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you told them today what? >> i told them today that the department of justice has been an ever-present shadow in my life for these last few years as i have endured 15 audits and investigations and inquiries from four different federal agencies. and today i wanted to make sure we had a real clear understanding of the role that the attorney general played then and the role that the future attorney general might play. it's too important to leave these things to chance. >> you are the target of all of these irs investigations. it's pretty amazing. and you also have issues with voter id laws, correct? >> well, i have grave concern that we're headed right back down the same path eric holder took us down which was to sue the states that were trying to institute common sense laws that would support legislation for voter id. yes, i'm very concerned about where we're headed. >> sheryl, your story's unbelievable too.
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you've recently filed suit against the department of justice. and this has to do with them hacking into your personal computers. and this goes even deeper in your case. explain. >> well, failing to answer lawfully the justice department freedom of information requests regarding my case and just in general many others, everyone knows it's a huge problem freedom of information or f.o.i.l. law is being flouted by federal agencies and then deflated by the justice department as they too delay and withhold public documents. i was asked to be there to address basic restrictions on free press that have come into play. and i use the words of many other journalists in "new york times," "the washington post," abc news and many others as they have raised objections in one case likening some policies at the white house to the soviet news agency. others saying it's most difficult administration one correspondent said she'd worked for in terms of transparency in seven presidents.
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and i compiled a lot of those quotes and anecdotes to explain how serious i think some of these press restrictions have become. >> yeah. and as part of -- this was all because you were investigating. you were digging deep into issues like fast and furious and benghazi and obamacare and some other issues and they didn't like that right? it was that simple. >> well, who knows why. i can only presume because the guilty parties haven't stepped forward and said i did it and here's why. but the monitoring and surveillance happened during a time period when, yes, we were getting extraordinarily aggressive pushback from the administration and its surrogates and bloggers and so on on a host of stories i was covering for cbs news. >> and sheriff, you talked about the hostility the department of justice was showing to local law enforcement and went onto say the incendiary rhetoric plays into the cop haters across the country and we saw a lot of that for example in ferguson. >> sean, i don't engage in
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hyperbole. i don't think it's a stretch or an attack to say attorney general eric holder has demonstrated a hostility toward the american police officer. i'm not talking just in the last four or five months since the ferguson, missouri incident. eric holder walks around boldly proclaiming and bragging he has placed consent decrees on 15 law enforcement agencies across the united states. that's nothing more than an attempt to federally take over law enforcement agencies. if the eric holder justice department comes into your law enforcement agency into your city or county to conduct an investigation, you can take it to the bank that you're going to be found guilty before the investigation even begins. i think it's a shame because we need the u.s. doj to be an ally the bad guy's the criminal, but sometimes my feeling anyway under eric holder is that we're treated as an adversary. and that's not good for law enforcement officers. and it's also not good for these communities that need assertive, aggressive and reasonable
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policing. >> last question. i'll ask the same question of all three of you. catherine, we'll start with you. in light of what we heard from loretta lynch, in particular she seemed very supportive of the president use of executive authority on immigration, et cetera. did you get any inclination that things will change? or do you feel that this culture that was created that went after you and sheryl and the hostility that the sheriff's talking about towards police officers, do you think that will continue based on what you heard from her? >> i wish i could say differently, but i think it will continue given the comments and the context around them yesterday. what i know to be true of other comments she's made prior to her testimony, i fear we're headed for more. >> sheryl. >> federal bureaucracies and cultures are hard to change. and trust is difficult to rebuild. but i don't have a position on the attorney general nominee.
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and i haven't investigated enough about her really to say one way or the other. >> sheriff? >> i'm willing to give her a chance, but i want to hear out of the gate that she's going to recommit herself and her organization to want a strong working relationship with local law enforcement. i'm not going to give her a whole lot of time because as one of the other guests mentioned bureaucracies are hard to change. so i'll keep a close eye out. i'll just hope it gets better not for me, not for my organization, but for the american police officer on the street and the communities in which they serve. >> all right. thank you all for being with us and sharing your testimony with us tonight. coming up he says he was protecting his men from the taliban, but he's serving nearly 20 years in jail now for murder for what happened in afghanistan. this is a story you will not see in the mainstream media. and you might be able to help. and later, a blockbuster report about a convicted sex offender and connections to former president bill clinton. will this impact hillary's campaign? shocking allegations coming up straight ahead.
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welcome back to "hannity." former army lieutenant now in jail convicted of murder after he orders his platoon to shoot at three afghan men that approached their patrol on a motorcycle at a higher than normal speed in kandahar. military prosecutors said lorance violated rules of engagement while his defense and supporters say he was trying to defend his men. he didn't even fire a weapon. earlier this month his kblt verdict was upheld. a petition for a presidential pardon of lieutenant lorance has now received more than 100,000 signatures needed for a white house response. joining me clint's mother, his attorney and retired army ranger
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sean parnel who wrote this week an article entitled lorance could be any of us. hannah, i've talked to you a couple times now on radio. your son, he was leading his platoon, right? >> yes he was, sean. >> okay. and this -- he was told that this particular road was an area where there was a lot of terrorist activity, >> yes. he was told it was heavy with taliban. >> and also we know other members of the platoon had been shot and killed in that exact same area in recent weeks, right? >> correct. he was sent there to replace a lieutenant that had been wounded. so he didn't know these soldiers. and they didn't know him. >> all right. so then all of a sudden the motorcycles are approaching. he's got to make a split second decision in a war zone. how did that get to this point where he got prosecuted for this?
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>> i have no idea. i have absolutely no idea how it became -- they got a prosecution from him protecting himself and protecting his platoon. sean, but i do feel that if he had not made that call that he may -- and gave permission to fire, i feel that my son today would be called a hero killed in action. >> yeah. john, you're the attorney. how did we get to this point? if he's in an area where there's well-known taliban and terrorist activity and people in that platoon have been killed on that very road and a motorcycle which has been the tactic that is used by the enemy is approaching them at high speed he orders them to shoot. he doesn't even shoot himself, how does he get convicted of that in a war zone? >> here's how he got convicted sean. what happened was everything anna and you articulated was discounted by the government prosecutors. instead they characterized the entire event that the two men who were shot and killed and the third that ran away were
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innocent civilians. but as it turns out we've been investigating now we came on the case after the trial we've uncovered very solid and apparently very good evidence indicating that everyone on the field that day, not just five of the seven afghan military-age males but all seven are connected to ied networks. >> was there anybody in the platoon that was with clint that said that was the wrong decision? >> that i don't rightly know. >> then who made the determination from afar that this was the wrong thing to do? >> the chain of command. the entire chain of command -- >> people that weren't there? >> that's correct. people off that particular strong point. they were back in the rear at the battalion and or brigade headquarters. they made a determination that the people that were killed were innocent civilians. and that gives rise to the biggest problem in this case. and the biggest problem in this case, sean is the idea that the evidence was sitting on government databases.
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it was a very easy, relatively straightforward database search to identify all those afghan military-age males. the prosecutor once in the opening statement, several times in the closing statement and three times in the sentencing statement presented and urged the jury that there's no suggestion that these men were taliban. as it turns out there's every suggestion to determine they're taliban. >> sean, clint could be any of us us. >> yeah. >> so we're asking young men to sign up for war, risk their lives, go in the war zone, be told about a specific area where people are dying and a specific tactic of using motorcycles. he protects his troops and orders that they battled people charging at them in the motorcycle and then gets 20 years in jail. who would ever want to serve under conditions like that? you cannot win. you're either going to make a decision wait and die.
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what do we want these guys to do? >> yeah. i don't know. i mean, you're absolutely right, sean. this case haunts me because i look back on some of my experiences in afghanistan and i think of a number of different occasions that my gosh this could be me. the benefit of the doubt in a combat situation should always go with the soldier on the ground that has the most intel. let me ask you a question here, how is what clint lorance did on the battlefield any different than how president obama evaluates and executes his drone program? he gets evidence from joint chiefs of staff and national security advisers and sometimes has to make a very difficult call as to whether or not engage the enemy on the battlefield. >> by the way, children have been killed -- >> that's exactly right. >> innocent casualties have taken place. >> that's exactly right. there's noncombatants often lose their life. my position is we should hold our soldiers on the battlefield the same standard the president and his administration holds
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themselves. and by the way this entire conversation assumes the people engaged on the battlefield were innocent. which i don't believe they were. >> i want to say to you, on my website hannity.com we have the story there. and how many people now over 100,000 have signed the petition. how many do you need? >> we have 30 days to get as many as possible. we actually needed 100,000 and we have 105 now. >> okay so as many people watching right now if they can head over to my website, you can sign the petition there and help out clint lorance. i'm very sorry you're going through this. appreciate you guys telling your story. we'll stay on this. >> thank you, sean. coming up, new reports about a convicted sex offender. connections to former president bill clinton. is this going to impact hillary? juan williams and i go one-on-one. then later tonight.
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welcome back to "hannity." disturbing new report about a convicted sex offender's connections to former president bill clinton. "new york post" "sex slave" visited epstein's -- island. joining us juan williams two things that are interesting. this story keeps getting deeper and deeper. jeffrey epstein, convicted pedophile. so you have that headline by "new york post." then you have gawker headline flight logs put bill clinton on
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billionaire's sex jet. and took repeated trips to the lolita express owned by jeffrey epstein with an actress in soft core porn movies. the girl claims she was under age this one girl saw bill clinton on this particular island, flies with them on the jets. now, hillary's campaign has gone on, well maybe we'll announce in june now. do you think this could have something to do with it? >> no. but i think they're going to have to respond to this in a big way. but what you can see right away is that there's political dominos falling. if this in fact is true and we don't know. this is not in any legal document. so it's a little different than what we've been hearing about with epstein -- >> well the flight log show he was on epstein's flight. the flight log shows he went to the island where all of this "activity" happened. >> but nobody has defined they were involved with bill clinton or saw bill clinton involved in
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any sexual activity. >> no. based on his history, paula jones, jennifer flowers run through the list of women. here's the thing, hillary wants to be president. and if something like this breaks in as much as he's connected to it, traveled with him a lot unanswered questions, maybe one woman at some point comes out. this could be explosive, no? >> well here's the thing, sean. i understand why republicans would see this as a way to get at hillary who is right now looking like a titan on the democratic side running for president. but the question is is the argument going to be is rand paul said a year ago she was an enabler for bill clinton. do you think hillary clinton knew about this and excused this kind of behavior? >> i don't know. it seems that society's patience for this kind of behavior i'll use bill cosby albeit a little bit different scenario, but look what happened to bill cosby's reputation. as many as 30 women now have
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come out. but the difference here is he's hanging out with a guy that's a convicted pedophile. and he's going to his island. and he's flying on his private jet. and he has this sexual history of his. >> well, again -- >> i'm putting thoughts together. >> that's what i'm saying. you're putting some thoughts together and it's a matter of guilt by association to some degree. but the larger story here is how does it impact hillary clinton. i think you have to be careful there because i don't think hillary clinton said to him, go off, get on the lolita express associate with a guy who's then going to be charged with having procured young girls for old, rich men. >> if in fact -- because it's young women this time, it's not older women. >> right. >> does that make a difference? does that potentially make a difference about the clinton's reputation in general? >> no. >> in your opinion. i don't think so. i do. >> you're saying if it's underage girls? you said young but you meant underage girls. >> yeah. >> that's a whole bunch of
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different -- >> that's what was going on. >> here's the thing, epstein himself, there's no question underage girls, now prince andrew and all of those people. but then you've got people who say they're simply libelled by this. >> alan dershowitz said that. >> we've got our hands on some of the biggest ads that are going to run during the super bowl. that's coming up next straight ahead. (woman) caring for someone with alzheimer's means i am a lot of things. i am his guardian. i am his voice. so i asked about adding once-daily namenda xr® to his current treatment for moderate to severe alzheimer's. it works differently. when added to another alzheimer's treatment, like aricept® it may improve overall function... and cognition. and may slow the worsening of symptoms for a while. (man) namenda xr doesn't change how the disease progresses. it shouldn't be taken by anyone allergic to memantine, or who's had a bad reaction to namenda xr or its ingredients. before starting treatment, tell their doctor if they have, or
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ever had a seizure disorder difficulty passing urine, liver, kidney, or bladder problems, and about medications they're taking. certain medications, changes in diet, or medical conditions may affect the amount of namenda xr in the body... and may increase side effects. the most common side effects... are headache, diarrhea and dizziness. (woman) all my life, he's protected me. now i am giving back. ask their doctor about adding... once-daily namenda xr. startup-ny. it's working for new york state. already 55 companies are investing over $98 million dollars and creating over 2100 jobs. from long island to all across upstate new york, more businesses are coming to new york. they are paying no property taxes no corporate taxes no sales taxes. and with over 300 locations, and 3.7 million square feet available, there's a place that's right for your business. see if startup-ny can work for you. go to startup.ny.gov. (son) oh no... can you fix it, dad?
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yeah, i can fix that. (dad) i wanted a car that could handle anything. i fixed it! (dad) that's why i got a subaru legacy. (vo) symmetrical all-wheel drive plus 36 mpg. i gotta break more toys. (vo) introducing the all-new subaru legacy. it's not just a sedan. it's a subaru.
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so the super bowl sunday only a few days away. for some of you the highlight might not be the game but the big-budget ads. here's what weathertech is now going to air. >> there's something happening right here in this country. it's the sound of america working with american materials in american factories. at weathertech, all we do is create the highest quality automotive accessories including laser measured custom fit floor liners. weathertech floor liners, proudly made in america. >> here with reaction comedian
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ryan reese and co-host jedediah. that was the worst most boring, dull ad i've seen. >> you're going to get hate mail for that. >> why? i want something more exciting. >> no you don't. you want an ad that's going to let you g to the bathroom and not miss anything. that's exactly what this does. >> how about david letterman eating doritos. >> i love it. not every ad has to be sexy. i loved it. it was pro-america. and i know more about this product. >> have you bought floor mats before. >> if i ever move out of the suburbs and i need a car, i'm buying floor mats from weathertech. >> i like that part but -- >> you fall asleep. >> yeah. >> it's the super bowl. >> i don't like football. i know everyone's crazy now i'm not a football girl but i do tune in for the commercials. i want to be entertained. i want a reason to not go to the
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bathroom and instead sit on the couch and absorb commercials. >> this ad by victoria's secret kind of gave a preview of the ad. this will grab people's attention i'm just guessing. why. but watch. >> that is not the ad. it's a preview. that is interesting. >> that is what i'm talking about. it's sexy and catchy. who doesn't want to see hot chicks in football uniforms? >> i liked it. i liked this better than the other one.
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>> an american product. right? >> right. >> i like it. >> american made. >> yes. i like it. yes. and one of my favorite sports, football but they're not wearing bras and under wear. >> and we have pierce brosnan in kia's ad. look at this. >> come around the bend. >> something blocking your way. >> a moose? >> a moose? >> there is no mission. >> top secret? >> yes. right. >> so you keep going towards the center and there it is. a cabin. >> and it explodes? >> no. >> just a cabin. >> no explosions? >> no explosions, but there are fire works. >> oh. i like fire works. >> see? that is interesting. >> that is a great one.
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>> i didn't hear a word he said. i can't hear a word did you see him? just look. focus on him. >> he had a lot of makeup on. >> i wonder how many floor mats are in that car. >> remember the hamsters? >> anything with puppies and horses is a winner. >> yes. >> that go daddy one, yeah. >> i liked the ad. >> the dog comes home. he is on a long journey, gets home. as soon as he gets home she's like i'm selling you. bye. heartless the dog running home. >> who pitched this idea? >> that is why i like it. >> whoever wrote the bill. >> you know it's going to piss everybody off. >> exactly. >> right. >> they're talking about it. also someone from the company
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adopted that puppy. . >> i would have adopted that puppy. >> some puppies. >> yes. >> one puppy. >> yes. >> pierce brosnan ad is our favorite. yes. >> handsome. >> every man thinks they're james bond. it appears to men, too. >> you don't think you're james bond? >> i don't think i'm james bond you have stocked water if there is an explosion. see? see? >> yes. fair point ainsley earhardt. our question of the day, straight ahead. nd. and sometimes i struggle to sleep at night, and stay awake during the day. this is called non-24, a circadian rhythm disorder that affects up to 70 percent of people who are totally blind. talk to your doctor about your symptoms and learn more by calling 844-824-2424. or visit your24info.com.
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you know.... there's a more enjoyable way to get your fiber. try phillips fiber good gummies. they're delicious and an excellent source of fiber to help support regularity. mmmm. these are good! the tasty side of fiber. from phillips our question of the day just a minute but first folks noticed a flend a recent speech by the president. what is it? well, they knew this is a long time coming and a surprise to you, but president obama likes
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to talk about me, i, me oh my himself. . >> i recognize india was the first state visited in my presidency we danced to good music we had a chance to meet. she's beaming with pride i bring friendship on behalf of myself. >> thank you for bring welcoming us to india. >> what happens to all like minds >> i'm getting gray hair now. i was more youthful when first starting this office. >> michelle and i don't come from wealthy back grounds. i, i, i, 118 times in three minutes. that is a short clip. 33 minute long speech the president refers to himself all about me i, number one, oh, my my 100 times the question of the day. are you willing to help kwint lawrence for doing his job?
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let us know, you can sign the competition on our web site. hope you have a great night. gretawire. o'reilly factor is on, tonight: >> we -- terrorist group? >> i don't think that the taliban huh -- >> more embarrassment over terrorism. stunning new poll how the americans think the president is handling this very dangerous situation. >> no decision has been made with respect to sergeant bergdahl none. >> we will continue our reporting on the sergeant bergdahl stonewall. colonel ralph peters will weigh in. >> it's been a disaster what's going on with the country right now is very sad. >> also ahead, donald trump tweeting. the factor is going in the wrong direction. what? he will be here.