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tv   The O Reilly Factor  FOX News  May 2, 2015 1:00am-2:01am PDT

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a swift investigation brings charges, serious charges for half a dozen baltimore officers. the death of freddie gray ruled a homicide at the hands of police. this is "special report." good evening. i'm shannon bream in for bret baier. the prosecutors found that six officers had a hand in the death of freddie gray who died april 19th one week after suffering a broken back in the back of a police van. we have james rosen with a look at the city with problems plagued by this process. first, leland is in baltimore
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with a look at the charges. good evening. >> reporter: good evening. all six of those officers are in custody but we have learned the one charged with the most serious of crimes has already posted his $350,000 bail and could be at home asleep with his wife tonight. charges including second-degree homicide came less than 24 hours after police gave baltimore's state attorney a confidential police report on the death of freddie gray. a 25-year-old man who ran from police and ended up dead after a ride to the station house. marilyn mosby read the entire charging document at the press conference. all of the officers face felony charges, including assault and misconduct in office. the police wag don driver charged with second-degree murder and could face more than
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six decades in prison. >> to the youth of this city i will seek justice on your behalf. this is a moment this is your moment. >> reporter: neither hundreds of police in the national guard could dampen the mood. >> it was surprising. i thought they was going to be let off with no kind of charges. we are going to get peace. they are going to settle down now. i know it is. >> we are satisfied with today's charges. these charges are an important step in getting justice for freddie. >> reporter: the charges gave added energy to preplanned mayday rallies around the country. in many black lives matter became an added cause. at the white house, the president reacted within minutes but with restraint. >> it is absolutely vital that the truth comes out on what happened to mr. freddie gray.
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and it is my practice not to comment on the legal process involved. that's not appropriate. but i can tell that you justice needs to be served. >> some charges are politically motivated, say some, and moss mosby's cozy relationship with the gray family is seen as being biased. a claim she denies. legal experts say there is a good reason for the number of charges against each officer. >> i think the prosecutor did this in order to make sure there is some type of conviction. there's no way that these officers would not have ended up being charged with something. >> reporter: that officer charged with the most serious of crimes faces a may 27th preliminary hearing. it could be months after that before his trial takes place, shannon, although folks here on
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the street say if there's an acquittal for any of the officers the violence we have seen over the past week would pale in comparison to the response of such news. back to you. >> not something anybody wants to see. leland thank you very much. shedding light on a city in baltimore that has for years been in turmoil. baltimore has a crime rate nearly four times the national average. nearly a fourth of the city's residents live in poverty. james rosen has a look at the politics behind baltimore's plight. >> this is not new. we should not pretend that it is new. >> reporter: president obama is not the only official looking back at the situation to find broad historical trends contributing to the latest incidents of rioting. >> what it is the young folks in the community showing
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frustration. it's bigger than freddie gray. it's about the socioeconomics about poor america. >> r the system that failed baltimore's young black men? the city's last american mayor was seen with dr. king in 1966. his last year in office. maryland has had only two gop governors since then. the second being the incumbent elected six months ago. democratic congressman elijah cummings has spent two decades representing baltimore in the house. the leaders of the schools and major unions are democratic. not surprisingly some see the failed system as one party rules and liberalism. >> it's 10:00 p.m. in baltimore. isn't baltimore the epitome of a city that has been run by liberal democrats for years? can we make a con chugs thatclusion that those policies have failed the city of baltimore.
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>> baltimore shed one-third of its white population starting in 1960. >> for people who remain they still have a right to expect from their politicians results and accountability. and here we would have to admit to failure in terms of democratic parting politics and policies. >> let me tell you that we can go to other cities that are conservative that have been run by other parties and i'm going to tell you you're going to find places where things are bad, also. >> reporter: scarce funding could be to blame for the predicament. only two schools spend more per student per year. and over the past five decades, american taxpayers have spent, shannon, $15 trillion combatting poverty. >> we'll talk with the panel about those efforts and how they have or have not been very
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successful. thanks james. >> you bet. german police say they have stopped a possible boston marathon bomb attack scheduled for today in frankfurt. a search of the couple's home turned up an assault weapon ammunition and chemicals commonly used in preparing homemade bombs. vice president joe biden is going to work towards a nuclear deal for iran even though he admits it could be adding fuel to the fire. mike emanuel has the story from the white house. >> there's nothing simple minimal or predictable about a war with iran. if required it will happen. >> reporter: tough talk from vice president biden who says military conflict may be the only option as tehran gets
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closer to a nuclear bomb. >> despite good reason to think mostly it would go to urgent and domestic needs, some have caused further mischief in the region. >> reporter: traveling through the strait of hormuz with u.s. warships accompanying them. a danish-owned ship carrying a flag of the marshall islands. >> the ship was asked to come to port. it refused. and our naval forces took action to escort it to the port. >> reporter: house speaker john boehner sounded stunned. >> this week the iranians fired on a neutral vessel traveling in international waters. >> we are working continually to develop the means and capacity to counter iran's destabilizing activities. as we demonstrated in places
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like the straits of hormuz every single day and we're prepared to use the force. >> reporter: despite the regime's bad behavior trying to transform a framework with iran into a nuclear agreement, the senate will vote on a bipartisan bill that republican chairman bob corker and ranking democrat ben cardin and congressional oversight is critical. >> congress would agree with a potential agreement with iran and iran by its words and actions is showing exactly why we need this type of accountability. >> reporter: a number of republican senators are pushing for votes on amendments they say make the legislation stronger despite a veto threat from the president. shannon? >> mike emanuel at the white house, thanks. up next how hillary clinton seems to be turning on her former boss and her husband. but first, here's what some of our fox affiliates around the country are covering tonight. fox 41 in louisville where they are getting ready for the 141st
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kentucky derby tomorrow. american pharoah is the favorite. >> a reality tv star bruce jenner and l.a. court spokeswoman says jenner is being sued for wrongful death by relatives of the woman in a car crash. so far, no comment from jenner who recently went public about his decision to transition into a woman. and a live look at chicago from fox 32 the big story there is that president obama's presidential library will be built in the windy city. the decision has not yet been publicly announced but sources say it will be built on chicago's south side not far from the obama family home. that's a live look hey, how you doin'? it hurts. this is what it can be like to have shingles,
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she is running to keep a democrat in the white house but hillary clinton seems to be distancing herself from two of the most recent democratic presidents her husband and her former boss. chief white house correspondent ed henry has more on the fine line hillary is trying to walk when it comes to the big issues. >> reporter: in the wake of the baltimore riots, democrats are scrambling to pull back on previous attempts to look tough on crime. senate minority dick durbin saying democrats are overreacting a view now running support from surprising corners. >> it's time to change our approach. it's time to end the era of mass incarceration. we need a true national debate about how to reduce our prison population while keeping our community safe. >> reporter: to win favor from the left in three short weeks as
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presidential candidate hillary clinton has broken from her husband on same-sex marriage and free trade. >> 100,000 more police officers are on the street for more space for the hardened criminals in jail. >> reporter: while the national media focuses on the flip-flops she's gotten more favorable coverage in early voting states like iowa and new hampshire because on serious issues like criminal justice reform, her views have evolved and clinton is carving out a space from president obama and her husband. >> i'm confident there will be situations where hillary clinton will have a different perspective on an important issue and a different approach than one that president obama has pursued. >> a clear example is the transpacific partnership where
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elizabeth warren has concerns over labor and other issues. the president is planning to head to oregon next week to visit the headquarters of nike which has a checkered past of using sweat shops in asia to manufacture their sneakers. >> by raising environmental standards in southeast asia principally but throughout the asia pacific region that will lower the levels for american businesses. >> one reason they chose nike, ron wyden is from the contribution that let's move be a factor and he said no. shannon? >> ed enhenry, thank you. guantanamo could free a one-time associate of osama bin laden. the administration has cleared the way for the transfer of nearly a dozen prisoners as early as june. now sources tell fox news that among them could be a recruiter
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for the 9/11 hijackers. a state department spokesperson denies that he is among the possible transfers. still ahead, chris christie's interview with bret baier about his political aspirations while today the former ally promises to tell all about bridgegate. first, a bike ride through texas with former
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former president george w. bush is back on his bike to take part in the fifth annual warrior 100k a three-day bike ride that honors veterans. this year's focus is on the wounds you can't see.
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>> reporter: with their former leader at the head of the pack 17 servicemen and women hit the trail for the annual w-100k bike ride. now in the fifth year the ride part of the bush institute military service initiative honors injured post 9/11 veterans. this year's ride focuses on traumatic brain injury and post-traumatic stress the invisible wounds of war. >> we're here riding with people who got hurt. they are injured. and yet they refused to allow their injury to consign them to you know a dull meaningless life. >> reporter: as many as 18% of service members who fought in afghanistan and iraq suffer from pts, according to the department of veterans affairs. the 62-mile ride over three days helps promote healing through endurance and teamwork. >> yeah! woo! >> reporter: this sergeant has
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served 24 years in the army and suffers from pts after being hit by shrapnel. >> it shapes me and makes me who i am today. i guess i can let it handicap me or come out and do events like this. >> not a lot of programs are dedicated to helping these warriors becoming the productive citizens that we know they can be. >> reporter: while 17 are being honored today, president bush hopes the message will resonate with warriors across the country. shannon? >> it's very important to spotlight that. dr. siegel, thank you. the dow gained nearly 184 points today. the s&p 500 up 23. nasdaq closed up 64 points. for the week the dow was down a third of a percent. the s & p lost half a percent. no grapevine tonight so we can bring you an in-depth
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conversation with chris christie. he opens up about whether a run for president is a bridge that he wants to cross.
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a guilty plea and two
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indictments that could spell trouble for possible presidential contender chris christie. david wildstein pleaded guilty to conspiracy charges for a 2013 plot to cause traffic jams on the george washington bridge. you all know it as bridge gate. his lawyer says wildstein will cooperate with the u.s. attorney's office. he maintains christie knew of the plot. >> i give a statement on behalf of mr. wildstein's team in january of 2013 that mr. christie new of the lane closures while they were occurring and evidence exists to establish that. >> christie's former chief of staff has been charged with wire fraud. christie has long-denied any role as political retribution.
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bret baier sat down with him recently to talk about a possible run for the white house but they also spoke about bridgegate and the toll that may take as a presidential contender. >> a town hall at a pub worked out generally okay. i think that worked out generally all right. nobody walked out, nobody threw a beer at me. >> chris christie is used to the occasion contentious crowd at his town hall meetings. >> nothing in our society works without competition. >> reporter: christie has been doing these events for years, taking whatever the crowds are giving and often dishing it right back. >> i'd be more than happy to have a debate with you, guy, because somebody like you don't know a damn thing that you're talking about. >> reporter: now his town halls seem laser focused on one state, new hampshire, the first in the nation presidential primary state. >> governor you're in the process of deciding we're told.
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>> yes. >> when does that decision happen? >> you know i think sometime in june. i've got a day job. i've got a tough democratic legislature that i've been dealing with for the last five years. i've been traveling and meeting people and doing the things that you need to do to make this decision the right way. >> if you're in will you have to tone back some of the pushback on guys that ask you dumb questions will sit down shut up and work in iowa or ohio? >> if it's appropriate works, and i'm going to be who i am bret you know in the end i think that people have come to notice me over the last six years in this country because i speak directly and bluntly to people. that i tell them the truth the way i see it whether they like it or not. i am who i am and if i decide to run for president, people will decide whether that's something that they want or don't want in a president. and so i'm not worried about it and i never have been. my mother used to say to me,
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christ christopher be yourself because then tomorrow you don't have to worry about remembering who you pretended to be yesterday. i think it was pretty good advice so i think i'll follow that advice. it's served me pretty well. >> reporter: he was born and raised in newark as the oldest of three children. he met his wife mary pat in school and later got his law degree at seton hall. after a barnstorming campaign christie successfully unseated jon corzine in 2009. >> we're going to have our work cut out for us. >> reporter: after being sworn as the 55th governor. >> new jersey you voted for change and today change has arrived. >> reporter: america came to know him as the politician with the no-nonsense attitude. >> i sat here stood here and very respectfully listened to you. if what you want to do is put on a show and giggle every time i
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talk well then i have no idea interest in answering your questions. >> reporter: but the hard decisions about cutting pensions and other moves have not been sitting well at home. >> new polls just came out. >> yeah. >> reporter: jury youryour job approval rating 38%. what do you think about that? >> listen these things go up and down. right after i was re-elected it was in the high 60s. you make hard decisions and i've always been a proponent of saying when your popularity is at the top, that's when you make the hard decisions you need to make. we're confronting tough budget times, as we always have new pension reforms and so you're going to have things that go up and down and then when you travel a lot, which i did last year at the governor's association, people don't necessarily like that too much when you're traveling around a lot as governor. in the end, if you do your job well the numbers go back up. >> i mean they are not great.
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do you think chris christie would make a good president? yes, 29%. no 65%. >> listen hi a woman at a town hall meeting in new jersey last week say to me governor i don't want you to be president because i want you to stay here. and i think there's a lot of that sentiment in the state as well that people don't want you to leave because they like the job you're doing there and they don't want you to go. >> reporter: despite those numbers, christie's unusual style could help him stand out from the pack. >> the big question in my mind is whether he sells personally over the long term. >> reporter: during his two terms of governor christie has dealt with a host of challenges. in 2012 hurricane sandy hit the coast hard. and christie a mitt romney supporter, was criticized by conservatives for his chummy appearance with president obama when they surveyed the damage together just days before the election. >> it's been a great working relationship to make sure that
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we're doing the jobs that people elected us to do and i cannot thank the president enough for his personal concern. >> reporter: then in 2013 there was the infamous bridgegate scandal. >> i come out here today to apologize to the people of new jersey. i am embarrassed and humiliated by the conduct of some of the people on my team. >> we've been down the road of bridgegate. in this poll even new jersey has some doubts about whether you were aware that your aides caused the traffic jam. yes, he was aware, 53%. no, 38%. that's in new jersey. they listen to you every day. why is that? >> because there's been enormous media coverage to the contrary and so you know people believe what they hear. i've told people and there's not been one fact bret that's come out during the last 15 months that's contradicted anything i said after a highly partisan
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democratic legislation investigation or after a u.s. attorney's investigation. nothing has come out to contradict what i said in an hour and 15 minute press conference that came out after this went public and nothing will. i am accountable for it. >> so for folks out there who say i would like to support governor christie or said let's take a look at him but they are worried about another shoe dropping you say what? >> don't worry. what shoe has dropped in what shoe has dropped? i mean there's been nothing. so what shoe are you worried about, bret? >> not me. >> well you're asking the question. what shoe are you worried about? >> somebody in this investigation, some aide says, you know what he did know. >> it's not going to happen because it didn't happen. >> reporter: christie is in the process of laying out big ideas that may eventually frame his presidential campaign. his latest a national entitlement reform plan. >> you need to deal with this
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problem and the fact is we do this over a graduated period of time. it makes sense. everybody knows it. the numbers don't work. and those people who don't address it are just sticking their heads in the sand and putting it off to a later day to where it will be tougher to fix it. >> when you say i've been paying in to social security this isn't your money, it's my money. >> i would say for the majority of people in this country, they are going to get their social security benefit. bret do we really need people making over $200,000 in retirement income which means they saved 4 to $5 million at least -- >> but isn't it their money? >> listen there's lots of things that we pay for in our society that we don't get anything back on. do we need social security and medicaid to either collapse or do we want to finally get to raising the retirement age which reflects that americans are living much longer and, secondly we need to make sure that this is there so that no elderly person in our country
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lives out their life in poverty? that's not what should happen. that's what social security was meant for, not for folks making 2, 3, $500,000 a year in retirement to get another check every month. >> taxes, president christie, what do you do? >> we're going to give a detailed speech on that in the coming weeks but that flatters the incentives given and brings the rate down both at the individual level and corporate level. >> someone looks at you and says what are we going to do about foreign policy what would you say? >> i would say, the fact is that foreign policy is very much about courage and about character. that you need to know what you believe and that your adversaries need to know that you'll do what you say you're going to do and your allies need to know that when you say you'll stand behind them you will. i don't think our allies would doubt my word if i were president and i don't adversaries would doubt it either. >> do you think the fight
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against isis is going well? >> no, i don't. >> what would you do different? >> first, we have allies in that region that want to fight this fight but they are concerned about america's level of dmimt commitment. we need to let them know that america will stand in despite what the political winds are of the day. >> the family as you said it's been an interesting, 15 18 months. are they into this? >> sure. they support me. and we love each other. i have a great wife who i've been married to for 29 years and we have four wonderful children. they are a great family. i love my kids and i love my wife and they love me. if we decide to do this we'll do it as a family. >> as a guy who battles with forks and knives sometimes, how is your health? >> listen it's gone great. the last two years have been really really good. and i've obviously lost a significant amount of weight and
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it's not only makes me feel good today, it's going to allow me to be here for my children and hopefully some day some grandchildren. and so the last two years have been great. i'm really glad that i got the surgery and that i did what i did. it's helped me. it's helped me be healthier. my first job is to be father and husband. that's my most important job. and being in better health and being in better shape not only makes my day better but it makes me a better husband and father. bret will have an interview with former arkansas governor mike huckabee.
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the findings of our
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comprehensive, thorough and independent investigation, coupled with the medical exercise's investigation that mr. gray's death was a homicide which we received today, have led us to believe that we have probable cause to file criminal charges. >> it is our intention to try this case in the courtroom and not the media. we believe that these officers will be vindicated as they have done nothing wrong. >> both sides of the conversation now that six police officers are facing charges, criminal charges in baltimore. let's talk about it with our panel. jason riley, columnist with "the wall street journal," judith miller is author of "the story" and charles krauthammer, thank you for joining me on this friday. charles, first with you. some are asking how this could happen so quickly and others are saying it's important to act when you have the evidence and you've had a chance to review it and it may quell what we're seeing in the streets as well. >> well having the evidence and quelling the riots on the
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street we don't know if she has the evidence because the report has been given to her confidentially. the investigation. so we don't know what happened inside the van. we don't know what she was told happened inside the van. i must say, i don't quite understand how a medical examiner can determine whether something was a homicide or accidental if it happened inside of a van or presumably nobody was at the time that the injury was suffered. i do think it is problematic but we will know when the evidence is out, we will know at trial, perhaps. we will know being looking back if this is warranted. i must say that the way that she spoke at the very end and what she essentially said to the mob i will speak on your behalf i will bring you justice and now you will bring peace, she doesn't speak for the mob and her job is not to bring peace. her job is to adjudicate these issues without consideration for what's going to happen outside. it looks like appeasement of the
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mob. we will only know when the evidence eventually comes out. >> well and leland vitter has been there for days and he said people today told him if any of these guys were acquitted, what we saw this week will be nothing compared to what they planned to do on the streets of baltimore. >> right. i know they postponed what could be an even deeper broader, uglier clash but they have postponed it. the problem is we're left with these incredible underlying issues that will not go away. people talk about l.a. and 1992 and the rodney king riots but i really think you have to go back to watts, 1965 50 years ago. you know what the commission who investigated that riot said? they said the root causes are unemployment poor schools and poor community police relations. >> no. >> nothing has changed since then and these problems are so difficult to solve and i don't
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think that they are going to get solved in baltimore. >> judy when the watts riots happened they had a substantial and growing black middle class. when the detroit riots happened black unemployment in detroit was lower than the national average for whites. again, those populations then fled after the riots and i think you are reversing the order here. i agree that we have underlying problems not only by the prosecutor but hillary clinton and barack obama and the protesters and all of the rest who are pretending that we have an epidemic of black men dying at the hands of police. that is not an epidemic. that is exceptional. that is rare. what is normal is young black men dying at the hands of other black men and they do not want to talk about that. >> well, you had a very interesting piece that i
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recommend people read in "the wall street journal." hard statistics for people is not an opinion. these are factual findings in baltimore and beyond where we see the underlying problems that judy spoke about. it's an uncomfortable and uneasy one to have sometimes but a lot of things lead up to what we saw this week. >> look if you want to go way back you go back to pat moynihan and the report that he made in the '60s. he was a racist because he simply said we have a real epidemic and a real problem and the consequences are going to be really awful. and what you have with baltimore and these other areas are extremely high levels of this. you don't have to be a sociologic genius to understand that. and then you get gangs because you acquire the male authority.
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the video that we saw of the mother slapping her kid, everybody cheered that but the question is where are the fathers. that's a question that we have no answer for. the other issue is the terrible schools and the idea that they have been deprived of money is preposterous. there is the second highest per capita spending on kids in the country and if you want to blame it on political ideology it's the ideology of liberals who want to throw money at the problem. we think if we throw more money at education it will work it will not. the public schools are rotten. what the parents need are school choice. >> we're about out of time. i know you're chomping at the bit there. >> let's remember the narrative in ferguson that we had a white minority oppressively running things in a town that was majority black, from the makeup of the police force and so
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forth. what is the excuse in baltimore? we have a black mayor you don't have that excuse there. the problem is black criminality, that the racial makeup of the people committing these crimes not the racial makeup of the law enforcement. >> we're going to have to leave it there. we're going to have a true lightning round after the break. hillary clinton's new view biden gives the hard sell. i'm only in my 60's... i've got a nice long life ahead. big plans. so when i found out medicare doesn't pay all my medical expenses, i got a medicare supplement insurance plan. [ male announcer ] if you're eligible for medicare, you may know it only covers about 80% of your part b medical expenses. the rest is up to you. call now and find out about an aarp medicare supplement insurance plan, insured by unitedhealthcare insurance company. like all standardized medicare supplement insurance plans it could save you in out-of-pocket medical costs.
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we're back with our panel. judy, i want to start with you. some of these comments from the vice president talking about iran saying there is nothing off the table when it comes to talking about a threat of a nuclear situation with them. he says none. today asked about white house press secretary josh
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earnst says that's always been our pose tore that nothing is off the table. >> the speech gave last night was important. i was there responding to a washington institute panel what he said. the consensus of iran watchers in the room very important statement in that joe biden responded to the ayatollah. he said the ayatollah has said we are not going to have sanctions on right after the ink on the treaty is signed. he also said you are not coming into our military facilities if they are suspect. and joe biden took both of those on and said if that's the case, there is no deal it was a speech ayatollah and also bibi netanyahu saying get out of our way. >> after all of this with the administration do you think there is a chance we don't get a deal? >> i think it's a very small chance because obama is determined to get it. he needs one thing to show as a success and this is it. even though it's going to be a catastrophe. but i think this also was
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aimed at our allies, the gulf arabs and israelis. biden also said because the u.s. administration is now going to offer guarantees, he said i know the president. you should trust him because he has a spine of steel. i don't know anybody who believes that except joe biden. >> okay. [ laughter ] >> someone hoping she doesn't have to deal with joe biden running, hillary clinton. she is doing distancing between herself. talk about crime and trade and all kinds of things. that's a tough line to walk. >> it is, she -- hillary wants to run as bill clinton's third term but at the same time distance herself from many of his policies in the 1990s whether it is that crime bill or even on social issues like gay marriage and so forth. she is more wholeheartedly embracing the gay rights agenda than her husband ever
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did. it's no longer bill clinton democratic party. she is struggling to find her place. >> we will watch that because certainly there are things that happened under president obama's administration when she was secretary of state she is going to have to talk about. charles, i'm going to start with you this week on our winners and losers? who have you got? >> our loser stefanie rowling's blake mayor of baltimore hopelessly over her head she says on monday that the city of baltimore has to give room and space to those who want to destroy. she then holds back the police reportedly because it's only looting. and then she ends the week by taking shelter in the shadow of al sharpton. my winner of the week and i choose this because it's been a tough week and we need a little bit of light news and because i have a soft spot for large mammals is lola, the 4-year-old sum sumatran tiger who escaped her enclosure on thursday. her independence in tigers
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lasted only 20 minutes. they bagged her and tranquilized her and put her back in her enclosure however, may not have been quantity time but it wasality time and in it she spoke on behalf of all large mammals for whom burning in their hearts is a yearning for freedom. >> i literally do love lola i literally just have to have you tell me who your winners and losers are names only. >> toya graham, the mother of baltimore on any other day she would have been arrested for child abuse but not that day. and then chris christie and martin o'malley, republican democratic candidates because they have had scandals and problems baltimore and brigitte gate that is really going to make life impossible. >> tough week. jason? >> elizabeth warren. the do not trust hillary clinton. elizabeth warren is the primary opponent hillary fears most. the loser is the city of baltimore.
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after rioting cities can take decades to come back if they come back at all. >> stick around though, we have a look at one of the unknown talents of one of the latest 2016 contenders to jump into the race. you don't want to
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finally tonight, senator bernie sanders says is he in running for the white house. apparently he has some special talents up his sleeve ♪ loud music] >> corporate america says he wants to ♪ that's what we will do. >> madam president the six largest banks on wall street over $9 trillion. [type writer] >> now when an issue comes up that impacts wall street.
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>> conductor and typist exextraordinaire who knew? greta goes "on the record" right now. sean, live. >> thanks, megan. this is a fox news alert. tonight we have an exclusive interview with a colleague of the six officers who were charged in the death of freddie gray. now, in just a moment, we will have new insider information about what happened when freddie gray was, in fact, arrested but first, six baltimore cops involved in the arrest of gray are now facing an array of criminal charges including second degree murder for the cop that is driving the van. now, in baltimore tonight the city is once again on lockdown and with authorities now trying to clear the streets to enforce a curfew that is now going into effect at this very minute joining us now on the ground in baltimore once again is our own leland vittert. leland? >> and sean, there has been celebration all day. can you hear the honking horns still going