tv Hannity FOX News May 21, 2015 7:00pm-8:01pm PDT
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earlier today i held a live chat at the new york headquarters and enjoyed interacting with many of you. thanks for watching chatting and have a beautiful holiday weekend. i'm megyn kelly. this is a fox news alert. a manhunt is under way at this hour for a quadruple murder suspect believed to have killed a wealthy family of three and their housekeeper inside their washington, d.c. home. in tonight for sean hannity, standing by live in washington, d.c. outside the crime scene is peter dooci. when's the latest? >> andrea the latest is that parts of this very nice neighborhood in washington, d.c. still smell like smoke. one week after somebody came here, murdered four innocent people set a fire and then got away. but tonight, a big break and believe it or not it comes from crust leftover domino's pizza
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crust that someone ordered while three members of the savopoulos family and housekeeper were held hostage. the leftovers survived the infer inferno inferno. they pulled dna that matched a name in the database. that name 34-year-old daron dylan wint from maryland and came to know savvas savopoulos through his position as ceo of american ironworks. for that reason authorities say this crime was not random. the suspect and the victims were connected. but it is mysterious and a package containing $40,000 dropped here by an assistant for savvas savopoulos after the four victims were held overnight but before the fire started. cash that was gone when the d.c.f.d. arrived and word of a housekeeper telling "the washington post" she knew the family for 20 years, never saw the suspect daron wint but they had a guard dog named ginger with a lab that would have
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attacked anyone who was not supposed to be there. this housekeeper thinks that the intrusion must have happened while the dog was on a which tells her that whoever is responsible for this unspeakable crime, these four innocent people being murdered and a fire set afterwards must have been intimately familiar with that family's movements. andrea? >> peter, thank you. and following this story live for us tonight in brooklyn new york is david lee miller david, we have heard reports that the suspect could be on the loose in brooklyn. when's the latest? >> the u.s. marshall service which is taking part in this manhunt is now saying that it is quote, standing down here in brooklyn. a spokesman for the marshal service says it is now not believed that the suspect is here in brooklyn at least at this hour. the a.p. reported earlier that wint was, in fact spotted in
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brooklyn on wednesday night. authorities questioned a girlfriend of wint's. she told them that he had plans to return to washington, d.c. and then to give himself up. not clear now, is this story credible? is it truthful or a ruse to throw investigators off track? as for wint's past he does have a criminal history. he was convicted of assaulting a girlfriend in 2009 and in 2005 his own family got a protective order after he allegedly threatened his father and stepmother. the question now, where is he tonight. authorities apparently do not know. but this they say, we must be mindful of. he must be considered armed and dangerous. there's a $25,000 reward being offered for information leading to his arrest. and conviction. andrea? >> david lee, thank you.
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joining me now with reaction to everything that's unfolding along the east coast tonight is former l.a.p.d. detective mark fuhrman fuhrman, bo dietl and geraldo rivera. i'll go to you first on this one. it looks like they're close. how close do you think they are? >> i heard from the chief of detectives at about 5:30 robert boyce, that he had been in brooklyn visiting a girlfriend. he also has other family members there. but then i heard a report a couple of hours after that a couple of hours ago, he was heading back had been in brooklyn and heat too much for him here in new york city. he headed back to the d.c. area. but the marshals have as david lee miller reporting, they're standing down in brooklyn. but he could be anywhere really along the corridor. >> how do you begin to start looking for someone like this? what are they doing? >> to give away all the secrets with the cell phone pings and all that that's one of the
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things i get angry about even with the dna now. why are we telling people how we're developing these cases? it upsets me very much giving away the facts. the next criminal that does a crime they try to clean up all the facts. what they're going to do now, obviously, they used the cell phone to know he wept to brooklyn and then other witnesses. also. they take the cell phone and numbers called and in contact, you backtrack and start to do a reverse call on who he spoke to who he was talking to in the brooklyn area and then start to develop a pattern. but then again he knows we are on to him in brooklyn and takes off. i don't think he goes back to the washington. probably on a flight soon and most important thing is we know he was involved with the murder of the four people with his dna being there and all that. but to catch him now is something that's all point bulletin out there. the technologies we have today, you have like a cops sting stuff showing every cop on a
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smartphone and identification and a picture o we're able the now dragnet him and capture him wherever he is in the country. >> i want to ask you, mark is there a window of time that they have? is this the most opportune time or is it then more difficult? probably not going back to the d.c. area. if they don't get him in brooklyn what happens next? >> well you have to see it for the kind of suspect you're dealing with. you are dealing with a highly efficient, professional criminal that is doing high-end crimes. he's already laid down his escape route. and he's probably acted that out within hours of the crime and he's gone. this suspect seems like he is a low level criminal. this crime does certainly does not fit his rap sheet. i have a feeling there's other suspects involved this at least one. he has a lot of information.
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a lot of intelligence. there can only come from inside the family and he certainly doesn't have that contact. you know, this crime just does not fit $40,000. we could have walked into any metropolitan bank got $40,000 and if he was caught he's doing 15 years in federal prison and now looking at the death penalty. >> there's no question this is such a bizarre -- >> i think the fact the $40,000 means that he is on the lam some place and has enough money to buy motels some transportation. i think that that is important. secondly i would suggest that he mastermind this crime to get the 40 grand and having the family under his control and tortured them to call to get the owner of the business to get someone to bring 40 grand in cash to the house, so once he started torturing them he had them under his power, i think he became a sadist and the real
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sickness. >> andrea my experience are a lot of these criminals don't turn out to want to kill four people. also they get themselves into a situation. now they have to eliminate everyone. that guy had to kill every one of those ten kids because they knew him. he had to kill every one of them because he was known. he worked for the company i believe. he was known and had to eliminate them. he maybe didn't go in the house to think he would kill all four and then they're a new criminal. >> also breaking news today on the baltimore case the murder case of freddie gray. i want to go to you first on this mark. the grand jury has indicted these six police officers. your reaction to this indictment? i want to ask you what you think is going to happen. you saw the riots. geraldo was on the ground. what happens if they don't get this conviction? >> well i don't think it's a consideration that you can actually use to actually form
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late any kind of a tactic or an approach to the case. you have to see the case for what it is and if he is not -- these officers are not prosecuted there's nothing you can really do. of course they'll riot. they rioted before the officers. they rioted and actually acted out when the officers were indicted. so they're going to continue to do this. and they were doing this long before freddie gray. so you know it's -- i stumble with this because it makes no sense. in any regard. no matter if you indict or you don't indict. you have the same situation and now baltimore's a blood bath. what a shame. >> do you know since on monday and freddie gray died there were 34 young african-american kids killed in baltimore? another 145 shot. not dead. in baltimore.
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this is happening. this is a killing field there. and the cops are not killing those 35 kids that were killed since this young man died. so -- >> earlier today, baltimore registered the 100th homicide this year. baltimore has almost as many homicides as new york. 600,000. new york is 8.4 million. 15 times the murder rate of new york. baltimore is right now. it seems that -- i believe the freddie gray case will mark the decline into irrelevancy of the modern civil rights movement. it seems that they are only interested, black lives matter. black lives matter only when they're killed by cops particularly white cops. where is the outrage on the 100th baltimore citizen who's been shot dead this year? there is none. and i think now you have the cops backing off. arrests are plum meting. baltimore will become -- mark used the term a blood bath.
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it's a killing zone. >> where's the attorney general on this with the kids being killed? >> that's a civil rights issue. >> why isn't the attorney general taking this to issue? our kids our young african-american kids are kilned. why isn't that an issue? because a cop's not involved? these kids are dying at gun point. the cop in jamaica shot. the detective i should say. she was shot. took two bullets and meant for kids in that community. we have to deal with the real problem and the cops are not the problem. the problem is the inner city with the illegal guns on the street. >> last word. >> the cops in baltimore are overcharged. i don't know how can prove a murder rap, the driver of the van is guilty of murder 2. not reckless homicide. not negligent homicide. not involuntary manslaughter? >> i was looking through the charges. the case is falling apart. it does look overcharged. thank you very much. coming up senator rand paul is here to talk about his
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ongoing fight against renewing the patriot act and the ten-plus hour filibuster last night and isis on the march in syria. i am totally blind. 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. don't let non-24 get in the way of your pursuit of happiness.
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welcome back to "hannity." senator rand paul took a big stand against the renewal of the patriot act last night by holding a ten-plus hour filibuster on the senate floor. >> my voice is rapidly leaving. my bedtime is long since past. and i think it's time that we summarize why we're here today and what my hope is for the future with this issue. we need to end the bulk collection of records but that's
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not where this battle ends. there's still a question of whether or not the executive is gathering a great deal of information through executive order. i think that has to be reviewed. it has to be reviewed in public. >> joining me now is the man leading the fight against the patriot act and the nsa surveillance program and author of "taking a stand." 2016 presidential candidate kentucky senator rand paul. the senator is now asking americans to join his fight against the patriot act. how are you doing this senator, and what are your chances of actually getting rid of this piece of legislation? >> well you know i think public opinion does have a big influence, even washington. people go to randpaul.com we'll help to relay that message to washington and help to let people know that what we really would like to see is that the government has to have your name on a warrant. this is what the founding
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fathers fought the revelation over is that the government shouldn't be allowed to have a blanket warrant or generalized warrant to collect all of our records. and so i think if we have enough influence and enough people go to randpaul.com i think we can have an influence. already they said they weren't going to give us any amendments. now looks like maybe we will get to amend the patriot act. >> senator paul your potential contender for the white house, jeb bush was asked about what you are doing and he intimated that you're operating from a separate set of facts and, of course he is defending his brother's legislation and said there isn't a shred of evidence that anyone's civil liberties have ever been violated. how do you respond? >> well i think the violation of our civil liberties is in the collection of the data. we're not alleging that the people who work in the nsa are bad people that they have bad motives, that they're unpatriotic. we are alleging that the government on occasion has
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historically abused the rights of citizens. we did it in the civil rights leaders and vietnam raera and japanese-american in the world war ii era. the danger of collecting too much information and the fourth amendment which our founders were very proud of writing an individual's name on the warrant and if you write the name verizon and collect all the records of the company verizon that's not a very specific way of doing things it's not individualized and you are not going after people we're suspicious of but everybody's records. and that's an invasion of privacy. >> yeah. and senator paul for me i mean i fear you get the wrong person at the helm in the white house and all of that data not only is it too much for them the comb through so it might not be useful but they could use it against americans if you get a potentially corrupt president. senator paul thank you for joining us. >> even now. >> that's right. good luck with your effort.
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thanks for joining us. >> thank you. and with me now to react is fox news senior judicial analyst judge andrew napolitano. all right, judge. i know you are on the side of rand and you say that he's the only presidential contender faithful to the constitution. >> good evening and it's a pleasure to be with you no matter how far we're apart. >> me too. >> i do say that senator paul is the only person who announced for president who is faithful to the constitution. and i think he demonstrated that yesterday in 11 hours of speaking on the floor of the senate. which you just so nicely summarized for us. fourth amendment absolutely prohibits general warrants. a general warrant is a piece of paper in which a court says admit the bearer to listen to whatever he wants, to go wherever he wants to go and to seize whatever he finds.
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because the fourth amendment says search warrants comes about when the government has probable cause to believe that someone is committing a crime and then the warrant, senator paul is correct, must describe the person or place to be seized or the thing to be searched. and these general warrants of the secret fisa court gives out do not do that. instead they say you may seize all the phone calls in area code zip code or a particular telecom like verizon. that is more information than the nsa can possibly go through. and it is a profound violation of the fourth amendment and, therefore, the civil liberties of everyone whose records have been seized. >> judge, what do you say to former attorney general who's on fox earlier and he said look this has been helpful, this program led us right to the door of zazi? >> he's profoundly incorrect. zazi was discovered by a
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suspicious vendor in times square rather a couple of blocks from where you and i work and taking photographs of locations and e-mailing those photos and the police got on him that way. when general keith alexander who ran the nsa for four years was asked how many plots your spying on all people all the time has stopped and asked under oath he said 53. the next day he amended that to three. asked to explain his reduction from 53 to 3 or describe the 3, he declined to answer. the problem with this andrea is not only that it violates our freedom invading the privacy. it doesn't work. it's far too much information for the nsa to sift through. the framers were right when they said if you present some evidence to a court first you already have an idea who the bad guy is. so if they follow the constitution they'll find more
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bad guys and find them sooner than gathering all information from everybody all the time. >> all right. it is one hot debate and, judge, you always been all over this and we thank you for your time. >> a pleasure andrea. here with more reaction is the editor of "national review," rich lowry. all right. you have been all over this. you disagree with the senator and the judge. why? >> well the next time you see the judge, ask him where the meta data is. he does he hold it in the wallet a file at home. the fact is he doesn't have it because it doesn't belong to him. it is just phone records and phone numbers that have been called and length of call that is are controlled by the phone companies. so to have a violation of the first amendment there actually has to be some expectation of privacy. the supreme court is very clear about this. you don't have wit the records because they don't belong to you. if the nsa invading the home and actually taking away your filing cabinets and the rest of it of
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course it's unconstitutional. that's not what we're talking about and people like the judge and rand paul unfortunately misreport this program. >> what should republicans be proposing if you don't agree with the solution of rand paul putting out there which is they have to go to the phone companies instead? >> reauthorize the program. it is not a threat to liberties. google knows more about you than the nsa. the phone company knows more about you than the nsa does. the credit card company knows more about you than the nsa does. this is a vast repository of phone numbers and records with no names attached that the nsa only taps into when they find a number associated with a terrorist in yemen. then they look for numbers associated with that specific number. and if they then want to go to the content 0 of that well then someone has to go and get a warrant and that's the way the system works and this program works. >> we'll see what happens.
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i know mitch mcconnell is proposing another freedom act, usa freedom act and republicans are split down the middle. democrats joined as well. you have been covering it. we'll keep reading. >> thank you. >> thank you. next right here on "hannity" -- >> we are not only failing, we are, in fact losing this war. i can say with certainty that this strategy will not defeat isis. >> that was general jack keane testifying earlier in washington. he joins us next. plus another day, another scandal surfaces regarding hillary clinton. this time it's e-mails relating to the benghazi terror attack that left four americans dead. i take prilosec otc each morning for my frequent heartburn. because it gives me... zero heartburn! prilosec otc. the number 1 doctor-recommended frequent heartburn medicine for 9 straight years. one pill each morning. 24 hours. zero heartburn.
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plan is fundamentally flawed. the resources provided to support iraq are far from adequate. the timing and urgency to provide arms equipment and training is insufficient. as such we are not only failing, we are, in fact losing this war. moreover i can say with certainty that this strategy will not defeat isis. >> that was fox news military analyst general jack keane testifying before a senate committee earlier today on the administration's failing isis strategy. joining me to explain the comments further is the general. general, welcome to the program. >> good to be here. >> good to see you as always. why do you say that we're losing this war? >> well you know the president designed a strategy nine months ago, and we all had some general reservations about it at the time. but when you get right into it
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when i say the concept is flawed what i mean by that is that isis headquarters all of its resources, its recruiting its training its logistics, its expansion in syria, there is no plan to deal with syria whatsoever andrea. you cannot defeat isis in syria without some kind of ground element and we do not have a ground element. so that's center stage is a flawed plan. isis is expanding as you know into the region. it's expanding in yemen, afghanistan, in the sinai and also significantly in libya. no plans to counter any of that expansion. and then what's got everybody's attention, of course is iraq itself. and what i say about that is the resources that we're providing are just not enough. they are inadequate to what's necessary to assist the iraqis. certainly there's problems with the iraqis.
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military there's problems with the iraqi political leadership but nonetheless our support for them politically and militarily is significantly inadequate. >> general, we have a president who he doesn't seem to have the appetite to do more. and as you point out, the iraqi military not very strong. it's a pretty dangerous situation over there. do we really want to be sending our men and women into warm'sharm's way with a commander and chief that arguably isn't fully in it? >> there's no doubt you have to question the commitment and the resolve. you know, war, andrea is a test of will. if we don't have the political will then it's very difficult to win any contest like this. when you compare us to isis what are you looking at? isis is a new organization with new leaders. they're ambitious, resourceful. they're competent. they have a vision to change
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dramatically the regional landscape as well as the global landscape using a religious war and a basis for it is ideology. they are totally committed and they are totally all in to that. and when you look at our actions, it tells you that our resolve and our commitment is not anywhere near that. and that has to change. if we don't change that if we don't change the resources, if retruly don't make the commitment then it will be what i suggested in the testimony, that we're not going to defeat isis. isis is a threat to the united states and to our regional interests, andrea. >> yeah. and unfortunately, i don't think they wake up until something tragic happens here at home and they're successful or until we get a change in administration. general keane, thank you so much for your time. >> good seeing you. >> here with reaction is lieutenant colonel david hunt and foreign and domestic author
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brigadier general tony tata. you have said flat out iraq is gone. so there's no getting it back. we heard the president say that uh just a minor thing. we can get it back. you don't think that we can? >> no. one third of it is gone. to isis. the government of iraq has -- didn't pay their cops in ramadi for six months. the cops were buying bullets on the black market. the iraqi military ran away the first time in mosul. five divisions, 50,000 guys. currently they have 50,000 soldiers they call go soldiers who actually paying their bosses not to play. the problem i have with general keane and others is seems the only solution is americans back in. there's no appetite mere for it. the arab world has to get bloody. saudi arabia jordan egypt, they have got to get in there first.
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our air campaign failed because we are not allowed americans to be in combat. so less than 25% of the air that's flown for nine months has not dropped a bomb. they haven't dropping it. the issue is we have done more than we ever should have. there's more than time for the arab world to step in and they're not. >> general, i do agree with the colonel. i don't favor putting american boots on the ground and i do think the international community should be more involved. how soon before iran invades? have we essentially ceded the region to iran? isn't that down the road the real debate? >> in a subliminal way they already have. they're fighting in tikrit and with the forces and penetrating into iraq. and that is part of the overall strategy. they're shooting on -- at our forces. their special forces are shooting at american forces as we fight on the ground there.
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what isis has done in the neglect of a wholist approach where ground and air power syncedsync synced they have ramadi and mosul and they control the lines of communication. and as controllonel hunt was saying we have to get the points at play and getting the egyptians and syrians and jordanians and all capable armies on the ground like we did in the first gulf war. there were some 38 nations on the line ready to go to re-establish the borders of kuwait. >> what i find interesting is that that was the one thing president obama said he would do is get that coalition because he's a community organizer and organize the international community. that hasn't happened until we
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saw one of their own killed in jordan and then stepped up but the debate is not going anywhere anywhere soon. and i do think we have potentially ceded the region to iran and shouldn't have let iraq fall in the first place. i think everyone can agree. thank you. >> thank you. coming up hillary clinton's newly released benghazi e-mails may show why she blamed the attack on a youtube video. later -- >> you want somebody who's going to be in control. you want somebody who's confident. you want somebody when's not afraid to fail. i think those qualities that made him such a good pitcher probably helped to make him such a good pilot. >> just in time for memorial day, fox sports put together a very touching tribute for a fallen hero. it's really good stuff. stay with us. tipated? .yea dulcolax tablets can cause cramps but not phillips.
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welcome back to "hannity." new information tonight into what may have caused hillary clinton to blame the terror attack in benghazi on a spontaneous youtube video. earlier today "the new york times" released e-mail of benghazi and showed that sidney blumenthal allegedly working with companies trying to do business in libya at the time sent a memo to hillary clinton a day after the benghazi attack claiming he had intelligence saying it was caused by a random video. joining me now is jonah goldberg and penny lee. all right. jonah, so we have been wondering where the video idea came from? could have come from blumenthal or someone else. here's what troubles me. hillary is not getting the intelligence from the dni or the cia or the dhs. she is getting it from a guy named sidney. what could go wrong? >> well look.
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i belong believe that sidney blumenthal is a really terrible creature. i mean i'm half convinced he has hooves but the simple fact is i don't think hillary got the idea from blumenthal. i think hillary got the idea because it was a political strategy from the beginning and it was an administration wide political strategy. the interesting thing to me is even blumenthal by the next day saying oh no no. it turns out that it was a pre-planned attack and we now know also that defense intelligence agency told her within four days of this it was preplanned and the guys stayed on the original message all about the video because they that's how to frame this and nothing to do with the intelligence. >> whose fault is it? hillary clinton with intelligence from the buddy sidney and the cia telling her that this is a preplanned attack and we knew she knew this is al
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qaeda, why didn't she speak up and let the administration continue on with the narrative? is it president obama's fault? >> because she was secretary of state and president obama -- it is his overall he is the president of the united states and it is his team that was putting together what happened and assessing what was happening on the ground. she is one part of that. along with the secretary of defense. along with the cia director. along with defense -- the national intelligence officer. so it was a full group of individuals that were part of the discussion about what was going on what was happening, so it was not an isolated person and to go after hillary and say she should have been the one front and center that is not following the chain of command as we know -- >> but penny, at the hearing, she was screaming -- >> hysterical? hysterical? >> yeah. >> she was not hysterical. >> she was rude. she came unhinged. >> what are you talking about? >> the world saw her throwing
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the hands up and lose her temper. >> one question by senator johnson. she acted strongly. >> riddle me this. >> she was not his tear call. she was thoughtful. methodical. >> let me ask you a question. penny, let me ask you a question. she paid attention to friend sidney's e-mail about intelligence in libya, they want near that state department. why no e-mails of friend christopher stevens asking for security? >> she did. >> why? >> andrea that is not true f. you look at the e-mails she forwarded many to chris and took his position. >> she didn't get him security and he died. >> she was -- andrea that is just not true. >> it is absolutely true. >> she actually went to ambassador stevens and asked for his opinion. she asked him. he said on many occasions -- >> penny, she didn't give him the security he needed. and his team needed and he died.
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>> it is -- >> actually, the security drawn down. they reduced, jonah. >> in benghazi. >> looking at the -- >> jonah? >> mike -- >> penny, let jonah get in. you are not answering the question. >> no. he will absolutely -- >> why did she -- >> absolutely say that was not the truth. >> pay attention to sidney blumenthal and ignore the request of someone who worked for her? blumenthal sort of did for the foundation. why did she do that? >> why she ignored or allegedly ignored the security request, it's a perfectly legitimate thing. i think in her testimony she essentially stonewalled the issue. it seems to me that penny's position is the reason why hillary clinton participated in a deliberate lie about the role of the video is because she was simply being a good soldier for barack obama. that is not the most powerful exoneration for hillary clinton saying she should be the commander in chief and involved
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with sidney blumenthal at all in this he is basically the equivalent the stealth human equivalent of the stealth server. even the obama administration thought was too sleazy to be on payroll. thank you. coming up next, right here on "hannity" -- >> you want somebody who's going to be in control. you want somebody who's confident. you want somebody who's not afraid to fail. i think those qualities that made him such a good pitcher probably helped to make him such a good pilot. >> fox sports put together a touching tribute for one of our fallen heroes just in time for memorial day. that's next. did you know your brain has a wake system... and a sleep system? science suggests when you have insomnia, the neurotransmitters in your wake system may be too strong, which may be preventing you from getting the sleep you need. talk to your doctor about ways to manage your insomnia. [ man ] used to be pain kept me in bed all day. [ man #2 ] finally i said enough's enough.
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welcome back to "hannity." in honor of memorial day, our friends at fox sports are paying honors to the troops and paying tribute to major steven reich killed in june of 2005 in afghanistan during a mission to rescue the stranded navy s.e.a.l.s depicted in the film and book "lone survivor." take a look. >> he set several school records in single game year season record. what stands out to me when the
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stakes were the highest, steven performed the best. >> steven said what should i do next? his commander said you need to think about special operations. think about the 160th. once he saw about the 160th. once he saw 160th he saw a higher level and jumped at it. >> the 160th regimen provides s helicopter support. green berets special forces navy seals. >> you want somebody in control, somebody who's confident, somebody who's not afraid. i think those qualities that made him such a good pitcher, probably made him such a good pilot. >> steve was a natural leader. natural stick and rudder kind of
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guy. he could fly the airplane gracefully. we first deployed september 2001. steve was the battle captain, ran the missions we were conducted into afghanistan in the early days of the war. steve was very instrumental in controlling and leading those missions. >> i was cleaning the house, and i stopped to take a break. i turned on the television set is. >> good morning everyone. military officials telling the news it was a rocket propelled grenade that brought down a u.s. helicopterer in er inin a remote area in afghanistan. at this point their fate is unknown. >> in my heart i knew that it was my son. >> we knew the helicopter was down lives were lost.
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we knew we didn't get a call. and we were just one of the many many families waiting. >> i was talking to my sister on the phone, and a car pulled up. an army captain in a green uniform got out of the car. >> came down the driveway -- >> i knew then. >> joining me now is major stephen's father ray. what is going through your mind? i saw you get choked up. >> me too. tell me about your son. >> well he to us was just a son.
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he did very nice things. after he died we started noticing how many people really valued him for a variety of reasons. not the least of which was baseball but he was very good. a very good officer and his troops followed him. he loved to fly. he would seldom tell us where he was other than mom, there's a lot of sand over here. the extraordinary response to his life. >> it is a beautiful tribute. talk a little about why your son loved baseball so much. >> in part i have to say because from day one we played baseball when he was just a child. he would come and watch me play softball. when you get older you play softball. he just loved the ball bat and
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glove. he was a lefty. it was his passion. i didn't have to work at it. he just took off and thought it was a great thing to do. >> he was good at everything he did. i'm sure it was very bittersweet for him to be playing for the orioles and have all the fanfare but be called off to duty. you must have been so proud of him and must be so proud. >> we had a ceremony at the high school today we recognized one of the high school students who reminds his faculty of certain characteristics. to hear them described, it was very heartwarming. it is every year when we go through that. >> we're grateful for his service. when one serves the family serves. >> exactly. coming up more after the break. be sure to watch that on fox sports over the weekend. stay with us. their #1 choice for pain relief. more than the medicines in tylenol or aleve. use the medicine that pharmacists
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left this evening. thanks for being with us. be sure to catch "outnumbered" everyday at noon. catch me and andrea harris. have a great night. you take action to protect your ship keep your crew safe. it's duty, so too with climate change. >> president obama speaking to coast guard academy talking to graduates climate change must be addressed by the what? senator ted cruz fed up with liberal tv reporters. tonight we'll show you amazing q&a. >> do you have animosity against christians? scouts can use them to
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