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tv   FOX and Friends  FOX News  June 8, 2015 3:00am-6:01am PDT

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he was married. she has nothing coming. >> mickey on twitter says the mistress has no legal recourse to sue her former lover for not leaving his wife. >> shelly in texas said the wife should sue them both. we'll see you back here in americas newsroom. "fox & friends" starts now. good morning to you, it is monday june 8th. i'm elisabeth hassle beck and this is a fos news alert for you. a massive manhunt for these two killers. it was a prison break scripted from the silver screen. using power tools and coming out of a manhole on the other side a female prison worker may have helped them. was it an inside job? overnight, concert chaos, cops in riot gear facing off crowds in summer jam. a school bus driver goes
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beyond a call of duty catching a couple with a bagful of guns planning to shoot up a school. can you believe that? monday mornings are better with friends. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ let's whisper, new york is sleeping. there's nobody out there. that's one of few times you can actually walk down the street. but look the lights are on even though they are on a dimmer thanks to our mayor. >> they need to be on a tad more. this is a morning where people are on high alert. >> no kidding. let's get to the fox news alert. they can be anywhere police offering $100,000 award in the capture of two convicted killers who escaped from an upstate new
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york prison over the weekend. >> this we learned the dangerous men may have had an accomplice on the inside. we have the very latest. ainsley, good morning to you. what do we know? >> police are now questioning this female prison worker who they believe was wooed by one of the escapees richard mat. they think she wooed her to help him and david sweat in this escape. helicopters, search dogs and roadblocks throughout upstate new york and even parts of canada. >> they can be literally anywhere. we had a rapid response. we're leaving no stone unturned. >> police say these two. here interest their pictures. they are extremely dangerous men. and the public should not approach these guys if you see them. 48-year-old richard matt ruthlessly tortured then kill his 76-year-old boss back in
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1997. then he fled down to mexico where he killed another man in a bar fight. and then 34-year-old david sweat is a cop killer serving a sentence of life without parole convicted of first degree murder for killing a sheriff's deputy back in 2002. police are trying to determine how these two guys got ahold of power tools, cut their way out of their cells, a plan that officials say took a lot of planning. >> the precision of the operation, it was truly extraordinary and unusual and almost impossible to duplicate, but we want to find out exactly what happened. >> so if you know something, call 911 because police are now offering a $100,000 reward for their captures. we read 12:30 in the morning on saturday in the backyard of the house, near the manhole where they emerged. they were spotted. they said what are you doing and
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they just left. >> remind so many people you remember the movie "shawshank redemption," remember that? with morgan freeman. >> i sure do. >> here's a little snippet from that show. >> 500 yards. that's the length of five football fields. just shy of half a mile. >> this is conspiracy. that's what this is. one big damned conspiracy and everyone is in on it including her. >> yeah. and with the news this morning that perhaps somebody who worked at the prison a woman could have been an accomplice of some sort has people wondering how those two were able to escape and this is what they did.
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first of all, they had bed checks at 10:30 every night and they come through every night to make sure you are still in the bed. apparently they used some clothes, including hoodies. >> they used some of their hair clippings as well to check those who would be doing bed checks and they cut a hole in the cell using the power tools. >> they were using power tools at the same time they were working on the prison. >> we do know that once they were able to break through the wall they went through a series of tunnels, up six stories and then look at -- how do you go up those? >> you climb up those pipes and that's the hole they cut. obviously you are going of to have to use power tools. then they left a smiley face
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post-it note reading have a nice day. >> taunting anyone who found it. s.w.a.t. teams, helicopters, dogs all searching and everyone on high alert in this area. >> this murder of richard matt is a real ladies man. he cleans himself up. every lady was attracted to him. you could see how she would try to convince this jail guard. >> he's the guy on picture right. he's apparently so dangerous one of the guys who brought him to justice said initially you can never have enough security with him. they had double guards and they had a sniper. he was wearing a stun belt. they kept him away from the glass because they was afraid he was going to run. >> it was 3,000 inmates guarded by 1,400 guards.
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>> the prison has been around since 1857. no one has ever escaped. one of the schools in the area some people say why do you feel so secure you have a jail so close, no one ever escapes from the super max prison. they coulding in canada mexico. >> people are searching their sheds. the entire team is searching. they have nothing to lose by the way. if you planned your escape with that much detail and precision, you got to think that they have some help on the outside to get them the rest of the way. >> it's not going to be oh, listen i'm out, now what? >> we have dispatched david lee miller to the area. he's going to have a live area. >> not eligible for the $100,000 right, david lee? >> if he finds them. >> he probably would have eligible why not. >> that would be great. you got to split it with the
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cameraman. >> good morning. i've got some breaking news that i want to bring you and this is new information coming in from overnight. an r & b concert turns into a riot scene in new jersey. police trying to calm the crowds. it all started when people tried to force their way into the sold-out show by jumping fences. some paying customers never even made it inside. >> people had their tickets and they are upset that they are paying their money to get into the concert. everybody is here just to enjoy it and they were just -- >> officers making several arrests. crowds throwing bottles at the police. a state trooper was sent to the hospital. a police is on leave now after video shows him dealing with a group of teenagers.
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take a look. so here is what we are learning so far about what apparently happened. police near dallas called to a pool party because there was a fight there. they say that the teens ignored the police officers directions. video shows the officer wrestling a girl in a bathing suit to the ground and pulling out his gun. the police department there says it is investigating. we'll watch the story as it develops through the morning. and frantic moments along the florida coast when a shark attacks a young boy who was there wading in waist deep water. the five-foot shark bit the boy twice leaving his right calf severely injured. a witness says he saw the shark swimming side a wave. >> we heard a group of people in
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knee high water. and there was screaming. >> that boy was airlifted to an orlando hospital. this marks the fourth shark bite in central florida this year. i hope he is okay. barbara bush turns the big 9-0 today. so celebrate that milestone, the former first lady is back in the $7 million challenge to have developers create a mobile app to improve adult literacy. literacy was her big thing when her husband was in office. so congratulations. happy birthday. >> she calls you every year to read to her. >> i am going to their events. texas and florida. happy birthday mrs. bush. she did kind of yell at me a little bit. i was being a pest. >> i doubt that. let's talk about the triple crown. it seems like yesterday we were on this couch talking about affirmed winning in 1978.
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>> seattle slew. >> american pharoah. it was misspelled. back in churchill downs in kentucky going to rest up and do some racing. >> there might be three races they are potentially looking at down the road says the owner and they were kind of soaking up the glory of all this. first time in what -- since 1978 that a horse has won the triple crown here. secretariat is unwith of them. bob baffert, he was cloeg in his victory. how can you tell if the horse is having fun when they are running? you can tell because his ears were forward. there's, you can see it there. it reminds him of michael phelps tiger woods, michael jordan and usaim bolt combined.
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>> they have already filled the breeding rights. they might be racing. the breeders cup. it's a busy year. he's not going to say this is the last you'll see of this horse. he's three years old left. >> all the money that the jockey won is donating it to charity, just as the trainer had donated a portion of his wgs. regarding the jockey did you see they got real close, nbc did either with the correspondent or he had a body mike on and he said what a lot of people were thinking. he said holy -- it wasn't toledo the next word. >> based on that he's saving up money to pay for a fine by the fcc. >> he would have to be by nbc. >> he said it as a joke.
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bob baffert and his wife donated $150,000 to three different charities and this jockey donated his to the city of hope cancer treatment center there. >>. first coming up a community already on edge over possible serial sniper targeting innocent people now has another reason to watch their backs. >> and it's being called the largest cyber attack on the united states ever! all fingers are pointing to china, so what is the government doing to protect american government secrets? mike mccall joining us next. ♪ ♪ ♪
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>> china? >> they are the culprits. it has the hallmarks of a nation state attack. 4 million federal employees. not an attempt to steal credit card information like we saw at target and home depot. this is to compromise the federal government. >> in other words, they got information about different people. they can go ahead and target individuals to try to squeeze them to help them. >> correct. they got their name date of birth, social security numbers, employment history, performance evaluations, financials so they can compromise them either to recruit them as spies or put them in a compromising position. it's really classic espionage but this time over the internet. >> we know it's china, either the state or organizations working with the state. what are we going to do about it? >> i passed a bill overwhelmingly in the house. it's sitting there in the
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senate. i would urge the senate to pass it and have the president sign it into law. it would allow us to share these threat indicators so we can block these attacks coming from china, russia. we know iran is hitting our financial sector every day. this is a growing threat. it's here now and it's one of biggest threats that i see on the horizon. >> well, just like china, though, isis is using the internet as well. >> this is -- you are right. it used to be bincouriers now we have a new generation that are very savvy, that have twitter accounts and individuals in isis in syria that are sending to twitter accounts thousands of followers in the united states in an attempt to activate them to attack the united states both military and police officers un -- not unlike we saw in
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boston. i'm afraidoing to see more of these types of attacks. it's very difficult to stay ahead of the curve. >> we know it's china. our president should get on the horn would get on and tell them to knock it off. >> we're going to have a proportional response and attack you. there are no rules of the game right now in cyber space. it's a new frontier wild west. as time goes on we're going to have rules of the game to stop this but we need to start that conversation. >> absolutely. >> and that dialogue that they know there are consequences to those types of actions. >> chairman thank you very much for joining us today. nice to have you here in new york. >> thanks. coming up a warning to parents, a dangerous new drug is catching on with teenagers and they can buy it right on the internet. there's that darn internet again. florida attorney general pam bondi here with the dangers
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♪ ♪ quick look at the headlines right now. the u.s. air force on the hunt right now for this man, david helm he's a technical sergeant scheduled to be court martialed. he's believe to be traveling on a black yamaha motorcycle. u.s. coast guard called in for a suspicious package in the water near central america. instead of drugs. they found two sea turtles tied up in a fishing line. both turtles were set free after
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extensive questioning. there's a popular new drug making the rounds and now teens are home from the summer they could be getting their hands on it more frequently. it's called flakka. our next guest is working to combat the problem. she's known to do it before. attorney general from florida pam bondi is here. this is called flakka. >> it's called flakka it's skinny girl in spanish. >> why is it dangerous? >> the side effects is raises your body temperature and it makes you do absolutely crazy things. we had one man thinking he was being chased by dogs, impaled himself on a fence. another young teen took off all her clothes and jumped through a plate glass window to her death.
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>> in 2014 that increased to 228 cases involving flakka. so this is an epidemic right now. you were strong on k 2. i remember your stance there. >> and the pill mills. >> you are doing the same right now. this is a life and death matter right here. >> it sure is. that's why we have to get out ahead of it and that's why you tell the whole country about it. parents be listen. it's horrible. you can buy it in little bags. kind of like little white rocks basically and parents look at it and don't know what it is. >> ohio texas, tennessee, and florida, this is where some of the cases have been known and made aware of here to parents here. the symptoms when someone is using it you said their body temperature increases, they feel like they are being chased. >> because of the hallucinogenic side effect of it. >> what would you suggest to parents? >> get it away from them.
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tell them this isn't a high. they are going to die if they use this drug. it looks like little white rocks and they can smoke it snort it they can put it in a liquid form or they can smoke it in those ecigarettes that are not tamper proof. >> would you be aware of it if they were smoking in ecigarettes? >> no, you would be the -- you wouldn't. it's odorless. they call it the $5 drug now and that's what makes is to scary to me because it's so easy to get and kids are out for the summer. they are looking for something to do. they think it's a quick, cheap, easy high but it's not. it's a death trap. >> i want to thank you for being here. i know this week has been an emotional one for you. you lost a dear friend beau biden. thank you for joining is us now. thanks with a warning about flakka. tpg again -- it happens again, a shocking scene where a
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bounce castle floats with a toddler inside. the students are so far left it's scaring him. the new trend in america's youth coming up next. ♪ ♪ only nexium 24hr gives you nexium level protection for frequent heartburn all day and all night. try nexium 24hr, the #1 prescribed acid-blocking brand, and get all day, all night protection. nexium level protection.
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♪ miranda: ♪ i got red dirt stains on my boots and jeans. ♪ ♪ calloused fingers from my guitar strings. ♪ ♪ wild like the wind in the tall pine trees. ♪ ♪ i got roots and i got wings. ♪ ♪
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welcome aboard folks, you are watching "fox & friends." we've been telling you for years that on american campuses they tilt to the left but there is an item on vox, the website today, where a self-described liberal professor says i am terrified of my students because now everything has changed on campus. >> he does say -- it's a mid-level school. he does not tell us the school. he said i've got a few minor awards teaching. >> he doesn't reveal himself because he's terrified of students. >> he's not a great teacher, he's not a bad teacher. he's right in the middle. >> he says my students sometimes scare me particularly the liberal ones. the state of the union teacher dynamic has been reenvisioned along the line sma simultaneously consumerist and hyperprotective giving every student the ability to do grievous harm in all
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circumstances. >> he was showing some info graphics about the wall street collapse and some kid said what about fannie and freddie, they make houses available to people who can't afford them. he said that's not how it all worked out. a couple of days later, he's call into the dean's office and she says look you got this complaint. from that point forward, he realized wait a minute any little complaint by any of these kids can destroy my career so now -- >> and they know that. the kids know that. >> now he calibrates everything. he doesn't want to rock the boat because it's not about facts, it's about the feelings of the kid. >> that tilt is interesting too because jerry seinfeld was actually bashing liberal colleges as well saying the kids these days are clueless. they use words without knowing what they mean and they use the word sexist too often. they don't even know what the heck that is. >> i don't play colleges but i hear a lot of people tell me don't go near colleges they are
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so pc. i'll give you an example. my daughter is 14. my wife says to molecular -- my wife says to her, in the next couple of years i think maybe you are going to be wanting to hang around the city more on the weekends so you can see boys. you know my daughter says she says that's sexist. they just want to use these words. that's racist that's sexist that's prejudiced. they don't even know what they are talking about. >> does it hurt comedy? >> yes, it does. >> so no ph.d. on funny on campuses anymore. colin quinn has a book about that. that's one of his best friends. he's going to be in our studio in a week. back to the professor for a second the reason why he's really concerned, let alone the welfare of the united states of america. he says teachers in colleges are not tenured. faculty members don't have contracts. they don't get due process, just one year you find out you are
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not coming back. why would you take a risk? why would you push the envelope? you have a career. you have a family. >> he said one of the teachers, an addjunt teacher was not asked about because one of the students accused him of having a dangerous text that was written by mark twain. >> these kids are worried about how it affected me emotionally. >> i had no time to be emotionally affected in college. i was too busy studying. >> you were very kals back then. let's talk to heather right now. i've got a couple of headlines. developing this morning, the lone suspect in the d.c. mansion murders could be thrown out of the utilizes. u.s.d united states. u.s. customs and immigration
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just flagged darron wint. the native was charged in the deaths of the savvalopous. he could be deported after he served his sentence in the united states. a colorado community already on edge fearing a gunman targeting random people as they drive and now they have a new reason to worry this morning. a highway driver just had his car window shattered and he thinks it may have been shot out. police are not sure what broke the window just yet. they are trying to figure out if this is link to three random shootings we're telling you about. killing two people. a sudden gust of window sends an inflatable castle right here with a toddler inside. it lingered in the air five seconds before it tossed the three-year-old to the ground. the three-year-old did not
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survive. this happened in southern china. officials say the operator was using it without a license. thwarting a potential school shooting. alice bradley spotted a man walking around with a gun in the parking lot of the school. when she confronted him, she drove right at him sending the man running for cover. police caught the guy and the female partner. they had five pistols on them. they told police they had planned on killing students. those are your headlines. stopped by the school bus driver. >> what a story there. >> good quick thinking. >> tell us about this seemingly cool week we've had on the east coast. is it going to warm up? >> it's going to be warming up especially across parts of the southeast and that's all in advance of a storm system that's on the move. this storm system produced
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severe storms across colorado and portions of the plains and into the midwest yesterday and it's still on the move this morning. we have heavy rain across parts of indiana and illinois isolated severe storms possible. it's later on this afternoon and tonight we could see severe threat across the central plains and northeast. the tornado threat is not greater across the plains today. it's greater across parts of the east pennsylvania upstate new york kentucky and southern parts of ohio. we'll keep watching that again. an isolated tornado threat. large hail and damaging winds. heating up across the southern plains farther west also eating up across the pacific northwest, 93 degrees over in missoula. back inside to brian. ♪ ♪ all right. huge news. if you went to bed last night, you missed a huge game.
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will he brn james -- lebron james proving he may be the best ever played. watch. james, settles for three and nails it. >> on the road with two super stars on the bench, the cleveland cavaliers, one game apiece. kevin love not there, irving not there. golden state drops the one at home thanks to australians point guard, his name is matthew delatanova. he clinched the free throws. they go to cleveland, all tied at one game a piece. a spectator finds himself in the rough. shanks the ball. up a bunker hitting the man in the head. watch. >> that came out low. was that a shank? >> dangerous. it hit somebody. oh no.
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>> holy smoke. >> good thing he said holy smoke. i thought it was something else. the hole in one head hit somebody in the head at the memorial. he apologized. guess what today is? the u.s. women's soccer team enters the world cup. team usa taking on australia in the first game. the ladies looking for revenge this year after losing to japan in penalty kicks four years ago. here's what they think about game one. >> they could have put us in the group with the top four in the world, we still feel the way we feel right now. we're ready to go. we're going to bring our best. >> i think everyone at this point in time feels ready and confident. we're ready to take home the world and bring it home for us hopefully. >> they are taking on australia, sweden and nigeria. >> so great to see female
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athletes right now, so young and strong ready to take on their competition. i love all the girls watching as well. >> good luck america. >> you got a lot of moms on that team too. 19 minutes before the top of the hour. coming up presidential candidate senator rand paul still taking heat. he says leaving these programs could leave us in danger of a terror attack. when do you think is better for you? regular soda or diet? >> diet right? >> it might not be what you think, steve. the answer could mean a huge difference in your health. coming up next. >> that's why it was not a quiz. it was a tease. ♪ ♪ this allergy season, will you be a sound sleeper, or a mouth breather. well, put on a breathe right strip and instantly open your nose up to 38% more than allergy medicines alone. so you can breathe and sleep. shut your mouth and sleep right.
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♪ ♪ it's just about 50 minutes to the top of the hour. it's time now for some quick
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snacking headlines. if you've got a sweet tooth, this one is for you. taco bell's latest new ingredient is captain crunch. they are rolling out captain crunch doughnut holes. brian is over the moon about this. don't wash it down with soda. a new study says just two cans of carbonated drinks a day can increase your risk of liver disease. scientists find people who drink sugary sodas have more fat in their livers. there's no link between liver disease and diet sodas. your move. 15 minutes before the top of the hour. serious stuff now. one of the architects of the patriot act speaking about curtailing the program. he said the original law was never meant for collecting metadata. >> there was a specific prohibition on data mining in
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the patriot act. the problem is that the secret fisa court turn the word relevance on its head and authorize the nsa to go data mining and to have bulk collection. >> is that how you see it? our next has a different view. he says limiting these programs could leave us in danger of a terror attack. general michael hayden is back. general, your reaction? >> brian, i'm a bit confused because nsa is not doing data mining. now, nsa did get the authorization to do bulk collection. but what it does with all that metadata information is simply ask a query from a foreign terrorist phone number whether or not that phone number has been in contact with any number inside that database. data mining just doesn't take place. brian, with regard to bulk collection jim clapper wrote to congress twice.
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the first time in 2009 in a letter admittedly top secret but a letter intended for all members of zbres -- congress to make it precisely clear that nsa was indeed getting this kind of information from the telephone companies. >> so they had the information. claimed they didn't have the information perhaps because they aren't reading their email. interesting twist of events. since the phone companies are collecting this that the supreme court already ruled on this and it is indeed allowed. you go back to a certain case in 1979 smith versus maryland. >> that's right, brian. the court ruled look when we set this up we had the task right after 9/11 how do we best key -- detect the most important kind of terrorist communications one end of which are in the united states and we hit upon the metadata acquisition effort as the lightest possible touch we could have on american privacy and still accomplish our mission. we based it on smith versus
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maryland which says you and i, brierng all of us, we don't have a reasonable expectation of privacy when it comes to information that the phone company has to create a phone bill. >> so now with this new usa freedom act, the phone company keeps the metadata. if you don't need it to catch the next terrorist, they could get rid of it at any time. they have to give you notice that they are going to toss it out. how do americans feel about these phone companies keeping our phone records which by the way that's how they bill us? >> right. look the phone companies keep it anyway brian. they just don't keep it as long as nsa kept it. in fact the new law, the usa freedom act, doesn't require the phone companies to keep the data at all. so we'll see what action they take. i have a great fear here brian, that we may have a race to the bottom where different phone companies say we're going to keep it less than the other guys as a competitive advantage, i guess. >> and general, you say nice
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things about senator rand paul you think he's sincere, but you just think he's wrong. do you think he did a disservice to the country? >> brian, i'm puzzled. yes, the patriot act going dark for more than two days is a disservice to the country. what i'm puzzled about is that senator paul didn't seem to be able to take yes for an answer. the usa freedom act ends bulk collection and yet he still delayed the vote on that. >> makes you wonder if this is all politics. >> brian, this is a valuable program. is it a silver bullet? of course not. but it's part of that effort we put together after 9/11 that's been successful in keeping us safe. >> general michael hayden thank so much. you were there. coming up straight ahead, a teenager on a camping trip fast
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>> the new detection technology is looking to wipe out this danger by using breath centers and touch points right in your own car. with more details on how this works, kurt thanks for being here. when you say the car would actually detect whether you've had too much to drink, how would this work? >> two alcohol way that is blood alcohol censors. you see it there on your dash. when you touch the wheel, it could pick it up or it sense it is on your breath. if you touch it to start the car car, censors inside whether you have alcohol in your skin. light travels differently through our body when is there's alcohol in our bodies. >> if you have alcohol in your body the car simply wouldn't start? >> that is it. >> it would turn off? there are concerns it's a great idea. it would prevent drunk drivers from killing people.
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other people say the last thing we need is for more regulation. >> true except 15 car manufacturers are now embracing this. this is something that will be part of our reality in the future. how far it goes in terms of being a mandatory sensor that shuts the car down or remain ace massive system that simply alerts you that you shouldn't be driving is a big question. >> who is behind the push? >> mothers against drunk driving, coalition of auto manufacturers. then you have people who really want to sell the technology who are behind it. >> of course. what's your main concern about it? >> i don't like government telling me to do anything. i love your idea. elizabeth has a so smart idea. numerous censors are available for us that we can voluntarily use. you, yourself decide i'll blow into my own breathalyzer. i'm safe to drive.
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>> this may be a tool for people to use. >> 25 states right now offer -- not offer but mandate if you're convicted of a drunk driving charge you have an interlock system that won't let the car move unless you pass the test each time you get into your arcar. that is a smart move for those who have decided to ed tod to violate the law. where do you draw the line? >> what is the line? .5 .6 .8? >> restaurant groups bar groups would like to lower the alcohol level to .05 from .08. they're opposing all of this. i think it's going to happen. >> interesting with that steering wheel technology. can kurt thanks for being here. >> for more information go to cyberguy.com. republican field for the 2016 heats up one potential candidate thinks jeb bush is the
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good morning to you, this monday june 8th. this is a fox news alert. massive manhunt under way this morning for these two killers on your screen right now. a prison break right from the movies after tunnelling out of their jail cell crawling to a sewer pipe and coming out of a man hole on the other side. authorities say they may have had help from the inside. >> wow! a pool party erupts into chaos, forcing officers to respond with force. the video is really hard to watch. >> on your face! [ bleep ]. >> drawing his weapon on the kids who seemed out of control
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to some. did the police respond the right way? we'll xwiv you the video and let you decide. switching gears, republican field for 2016 heats up one potential candidate thinks he knows who the front-runner is. >> governor bush is probably still out there, just because he's going to have more money than just about all of us combined. >> what does potential candidate donald trump think about that? we'll talk to him live. live from new york city this is "fox and friends." ♪ that song is from sister hazel "all for you." fox news alert is all for you. listen to this they could be anywhere. police now offering a $100,000
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reward in the capture of two convicted killers who escape friday an upstate new york prison. >> this is not a movie. this actually happened. these killers may have had help on the inside. david lee miller is live in new york with more information on an overnight interrogation. david, tell us what you know. >> well it is a rainy and gray day here in dannemora. the prison and how it's situated in this relatively small village is the length of nearly four football fields. you see the very imposing wall. outside the prison you can see a number of people in those orange ponchos, employees of the department of correction. as you mentioned, it is now believed that this may have been an inside job. troopers here that we talked to say it is very likely that the inmates who escaped got some
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help obtaining the power tool that is made it possible for them to cut through the steel walls as well as brick walls and they also may have had help to get a schemeatic of the prison and shimmying through the 24-inch pipe emerging through a man hole about a block from the prison and just removing that man hole was not an easy task. it had a steel lock on it. that was removed and they were sighted, it is believe now, doctor as early as 12:30 saturday morning, which would place them outside the prison hours before they were officially determined to be missing. a published report now that authorities are questioning a woman who worked at the prison. it is possible she may have offered these two inmates, richard matt and david sweat,
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some type of help. right now, though that is only speculation. authorities say they do not know where the men are. they could be a few yards from the prison or now literally hundreds of miles away. back to you. >> david lee miller live upstate new york with the very latest. we heard somebody perhaps helped them with the power tools but he's absolutely right, someone probably gave them the schematics the plans. once you get through that wall then what? >> questioning the female worker at the prison right now. >> there's an elaborate plan once they got on the outside. somebody was waiting. >> think of it as a movie. >> it's not a movie. >> the pothole cover was unlocked somehow. >> the man hole cover? >> the man hole cover. >> can you lock them? >> in new york city when there's motorcades and stuff like that they will weld them
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shut. i think they are pretty much open. >> do you know? >> manhole covers? not his department. anyway -- >> sorry. >> five minutes after the top of the hour they're looking for them. >> heather joins us with news on police in texas. >> a lot of people will be talking about this story later today. a texas police officer is on leave this morning after a video shows him pulling a gun on a teenager forcing a 15-year-old girl to the ground. take a look at this. [ screaming ] [ bleep ] [ bleep ]. >> those are police in mckinney, near dallas, texas. they were called to a pool party. there was a fight going on. they say the kids ignored the police officers' directions. holding a girl in the bathing
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suit down, pulling out his gun. the police department there says it is now investigating. we'll follow that story for you. the man charged in the disappearance of hannah graham now goes on trial for the 2005 attempted murder of another woman. jesse matthew is accused of attacking then 26-year-old woman as she walked home from a grocery store one night. last week she identified matthew as her attacker in a pretrial hearing. prosecutors say they have dna evidence tying matthew to that attack. the same sample that linked him to hannah graham's murder. teenager on a camping trip dragged from his tent by a bear? the teenager was in the great smoky mountains when the bear attacked. four trails and six camp sites are now closed. the boy remains hospitalized in stable condition. the tampa bay lightning apologizing to an army captain after trying to ban him from
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selling his stanley cup tickets. the captain has season tickets he can't use because he has military training in kentucky. he sold two game tickets on ticket master and the game told him he had to pick up tickets for another playoff game in person because they didn't want chicago fans to buy them. now reversing their decision and letting the man sell the tickets and apologizing as well. >> they're his tickets. heather, thank you very much. join inging us right now on this monday morning, 7:00 as he always does, the only man perhaps running for presidency who also has a beautiful neck tie line donald trump. >> good morning. how are you? >> scotland? >> at turnbury in 15 minutes we're dedicating a brand new gorgeous clubhouse. women's british open in august end of july and august t will be great. we're just dedicating in a few minutes a really spectacular, brand new clubhouse. that's very exciting.
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>> congratulations. >> i bet. many taking a swing at a potential run for the presidency yourself included. just this weekend governor scott walker was asked about who is taking the lead. and he said jeb bush is probably the one who is doing it. listen to this i would love your reaction mr. trump. >> i think governor bush is still probably up there out front because he will have more money than all of us combined. we're feeling good. i hope people republicans, independents and some democrats will strike a contrast with hillary clinton. we're a new, fresh face taking on someone from the past. >> if it's about money, no one has more money than you, mr. trump. >> i actually have a lot more money than he has, to be honest with you. it's interesting. we'll have a big announcement on the 16th of june and we'll see what happens. i will tell you, i disagree only in that he has some problems. he is very weak on immigration, bush. he's also in favor of common core. those two things make it very
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very hard for him to win in the primary. he is very very strong on common core very very weak on immigration. i think that's a real problem. it's a problem with me in terms of voting for him. that i can tell you. we'll see what happens. >> you now said he's going to announce on the 15g9. is your date strategically placed after his? >> i said the 16th of a couple of days days ago. he went the 15g9. maybe he's strategic. who knows? i actually went first. >> senator jody ernst had an event where people were barbecuing scott walker was there, a number of other candidates. when asked who she thought would win the caucuses this is what she had to say. listen to this. >> we have to have somebody that will express conservative views, of course. and i'm looking for somebody that is very reagan-esque
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someone that can reach all aspects of our voting population here in america. >> reagan-esque someone who can reach anybody. what do you think? >> she's right 100%. she invited me also. i was doing the key note in north carolina for the republican party. i would have loved to have been there. we had a tremendous crowd in north carolina. we need to bring bri back reagan that attitude that spirit that thinking. we need the toughness of reagan. we need somebody like that absolutely. >> all right. i want to change gears and talk about mayor diblasio. intrigue conversations over the weekend. here he's talking about voting rights and how we're losing democracy on "face the nation." >> we a democracy flob this country, declining voter turnout. secretary clinton put out the notion we need a national strategy to energize voting to get people involved address the
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many efforts made by republicans to repress voter involvement. >> did you take his diagnosis as accurate? >> well we want to get people out to vote. on that everybody agrees this whole concept of voter i.d. where a person can walk in and vote right off the street. maybe they vote ten times in one election. it's ridiculous. you have to have a concept. i think a strong concept of voter inchtvote er i.d. i'm sure you agree with that. most people agree with that. the concept of people walking in and voting without identification is absolutely insane. you wouldn't even believe it. you go on an airplane anywhere you need identification no matter where you go yet you're supposed to go to a polling booth and don't have. i don't know why the republicans aren't fighting this harder. it sounds to me like an issue you can't lose on. >> republicans are being accused by diblasio and clinton trying to repress voter turnout when it comes specifically to minority
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voters. what do you say to them on that? >> i see so many losses with this. it's inconceivable that you could lose on voter i.d. yet the republicans seem to be losing so many times. one of the problems all talk no action. that's why the country is sick and tired of politicians. how do you lose on this issue? you can't lose on this issue. >> in some states they charge to have an i.d. which i don't get that. >> you know without charging without anything you need voter identification. it's got to be strong. a person could, in theory go in ten times in one day and, i guess more than that if you're talking about voting. the other side would not mind it if they see the same person coming in again and again and if they want that person to come in little more honorable than people tend to be nowadays they'll let that person vote over and over again.
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they need voter idea. >> diblasio has a lot of nerve. the fact that he says there's a democracy problem, the only day you can vote in new york is on election day. >> it's very unusual. and then hillary criticized others for having something. it's a very unusual thing, that's true. absolutely. >> have a great day. have a much more relaxing entertaining day than us. we're always intrigued to have you. >> scotland is beautiful. lot of places are beautiful. we have to make our country beautiful. we have to get jobs in our country. we have to do it fast. i'll talk to you next week and i'll see you on the 16th. it will be very interesting for a lot of people. >> big day will start right here. donald trump, thank you very much. >> thank you very much. coming up on this monday, more on the massive manhunt for two convicted murderers in a prison break right out of the movies. our next guest says this isn't hollywood. the danger is real.
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the citi double cash card. it earns you cash back now and cash back later. with 1% when you buy and 1% as you pay. with two ways to earn on purchases, it makes a lot of other cards seem one-sided. . this is a fox news alert. massive manhunt under way at this hour for two convicted murderers who escaped from a maximum security prison in upstate new york. >> use power tools to drill a
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hole in their wall before fleeing from a manhole cover. female prison worker officials say, may have helped them. >> how could this have happened? could this be an inside job? his deputy was the one gunned down by david sweat in 2002 and his department is now assisting in the new york state police manhunt. sheriff, did you think this was a bad dream when you heard the word? >> definitely. it was devastating when the incident happened in the first place. >> tell us what happened that day to your officer. >> you know that day, deputy with his on patrol headed home around 3:00 in the morning to have breakfast. he lives on grange hall road about one mile from the pennsylvania border. and on grange hall road is a very small park. he noticed a couple of vehicles parked there and pulled in to see what was going on. he got out of his vehicle, he walked in front of it. and the headlights lit him up and these people opened fire on
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him and shot him in cold blood right there. 18 rounds in his bulletproof vest. he was still alive. they took his gun and shot him and drove over him with a car. what he didn't know is they had just drove a stolen vehicle down to pennsylvania, smashed into a building loaded it with guns and drove it to that park unloading from the stolen vehicle into their own. >> what can you tell our viewers right now about david sweat and how concerned should everyone be that these two men right now are on the loose? >> i think there's a terrible -- what has david sweat got to move? you see the way he killed kevin tarcia had no remorse for it. the other gentleman escaped with him, is also a murderer of two different people. >> sure. >> i think if there's any guns involved it will be one hell of a shootout. >> no kidding. >> it does sound like they might have gotten some help on the inside. they interviewed a woman who
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worked at the prison because they got power tools, sheriff. and they also had to know their way around inside the prison. >> yeah. i mean that's all up to the department of corrections to figure out on that end. i don't know all the ins on that side. i'm sure people are saying the same thing. how could they do this without help from the inside? >> does he have a lot of resources in the area? >> no. >> people family, anybody? >> there's family that still live in our area. officers have been out and have interviewed them involved in the case. from our area alone, 50 officers including sheriff's deputies state police fbi and u.s. marshals. >> let's hope they get them and get them today. thank you very much for joining us today live. >> thank you for having me on. >> you betya. >> 7:21 here in new york. one state trying to take back
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control of its welfare program by capping atm withdrawals by just $25 a day. >> we live in the greatest country in the world but you wouldn't know it by the current history our kids are being taught in schools.
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first $25, starting next month in kansas people who collect welfare will be limited to a single withdrawal of $25 a day. they'll be prohibit friday spending welfare cash at tattoo parlors and other place. how much a man claims a new york fortune teller scammed him for, for nearly two years. the psychic, priscilla demaro
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facing larceny charges. the man claims she told him evil spirits were keeping him and a woman he loved apart. building in harrisburg pennsylvania gone in a flash. 120,000 square foot building was demolished to make way for a bigger parking lot. and it wasn't that old. top u.s. history professors from around the country are speaking out against the a.p. u.s. history exam. next guest, along with our scholars 55 strong wrote an open letter to the college board saying the new exam focuses only on america's shortcomings while highlighting conflicts between other groups sgroups. is there a buy as here? professor, what brought this to your attention? when did you realize other people were concerned? >> really, for the past 50 years, the most exciting thing that's been happening in american education is just a lot of start-ups.
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you have a lot of charter schools, home school curricula, parent-led co--ops, independent classical and christian academies. there will be very little independent thinking at these independent schools if they submit to a government monopoly in the teaching of history. and people have been realizing this really from the 1970s, that the a.p. u.s. history exams and courses are a private company that has a government monopoly. but in the past two years, the new guidelines have made it abundantly clear that there's buy bias in the teaching of u.s. a.p. history courses. >> things like the constitution for a different interpretation. >> absolutely. absolutely. if you look at the -- just look at the index of the 70-page guide, there are three references to the constitution. and the references talk about the postponement of dealing with
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the slavery issue, the fact that the constitution didn't deal with the question of tribal lands of the native americans and the fact that because it left so many loose ends that divisive political parties rose. no discussion of limited government checks and balances idea of natural rights law of nature and nature is god. there's a real gap in the teaching of american history. >> it's important to point out for people listening at home there's no agenda here. these 55 people these scholars are just concerned about what's going on in history and what's taught to the next generation of american citizens. >> absolutely. and what's happening here is that there is kind of a pervasive anti-patriotism being taught in schools. martin luther king was very patriotic. he was critical of the fact that america wasn't living up to its highest ideals but he was very
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patriotic for american ideals and institutions. what we're now teaching the younger generation is cynicism about america's founding ideas and institutions. that will be very damaging. >> i don't know where that school of thought comes from. usually people are pulling for their home team and have to be pulled back. we're cheering against the home team and have to be pushed back to the correct truth. i understand your frustration. thanks for doing something about it. >> thank you very much. two minutes before the bottom of the hour. straight ahead, a flight attendant would not allow a disabled woman's wheelchair on the flight. she was forced to crawl to her seat in front of all the passengers. now she wants the airline to pay. and a driver can't believe his eyes when he sees a little boy behind the wheel of another car in the middle of rush hour. >> you're going to get someone killed man. >> is this just an innocent driving lesson with dad or a serious danger to drivers? we'll try to debate it but i'm
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one shot. brand new beemer. does he get it? yes! yes! yes, he gets the bmw! >> yes. your shot of the morning. and shot of a lifetime golden state warriors fan sinks a half court shot to win a brand new $40,000 bmw. >> cause for celebration. crowd going wild at last night's game too, at the nba finals in oakland, california. >> the warriors tweeting. the man saying this your friends will never question your long range game again. enjoy your bmw. but we went on to lose to the cavalier. >> but he made the shot. sign of the times, by the
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way. "in style" magazine actress zoey said her husband is actually marco saldano. that would have been big news when they got married. he took her last name. she tried to talk him out of it. this is what she said. i tried to talk him out of it. if you use my name you will be emasculated by your community of artists, your latin community of men, by the world. his response? ah zoe, i don't give a -- >> do you think at any point tim hassle hasselbeck would be -- >> no. tim was vocal that he wanted me to take his last name i was honored to do that. i wanted to take his last name.
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>> did you ever just going by elizabeth like cher and madonna? liz. >> no. >> it varies state by state but it's very hard for guys to change their names. if you are a man, you get married and want to change your name to her name you have to pay a fee of $300, go in front of a judge, print it in the paper. >> would you have taken your wife's name? >> it's not considered related to the marriage but just a name change. >> identity change? >> would you have taken -- >> not a chance. >> we could have been brian vigatano's brand new book. >> could have been. >> what do you think about zoe and her husband, where he took her last name? do you think it's a good idea bad idea? e-mail your comments in at friends @foxnews.com.
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president obama is in germany to meet with world leaders for the g7 summit trumpeting one of the biggest threats facing the world today. climate change. >> not surprising. and a meeting of this many powerful people certainly can make for an awkward moment or two. >> joining us live from austria near the g7 summit. what's the inside scoop on all this? climate change? >> reporter: climate change yes. they'll talk about that at some point. this is a relatively big day. i have to admit, sometimes the objects can overshadow that which is said. within the hour the president with the so-called family photo. the president never acknowledges him in any way, much to the embarrassment of the iraqi prime minister. we'll see later today how the president tries to finess that snub. as for what's on the agenda here is the commander in chief. >> we'll discuss our shared
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future. global economy that creates jobs and opportunity, maintaining a strong and prosperous european union, forging new trade partnerships across the atlantic standing up to russian aggression in ukraine. combating threats from violent extremisms to climate change. >> clearly, there is a long laundry list of items to cover. i will be very curious to hear how the president sort of tries to get around the snub that was seen around the world. guys back to you. >> could he have talked to him before the cameras were rolling? could he have been like this and then like this as he shifts? could we just have caught him at the wrong time? >> reporter: it's possible. i don't think there's any clean way to get out of it. someone sideaddles up next to you. >> the president probably didn't want to talk to the iraqi
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president because he doesn't want to talk about climate change. >> no he doesn't. >> we want to talk to heather, who has headlines. >> doesn't it look beautiful there in austria? good morning. concert chaos in new jersey. a wild scene there. people without tickets to a concert tried to force their way in to summer jam at metlife stadium. crowd of people trying to get into a sold-out show by hopping fence there is. some paying customers never even made it inside. >> people had their tickets. they're upset they're paying money to get in the concert. sv everybody is here just to enjoy it. >> fights breaking out and people throwing bottles at police. state trooper was sent to the hospital there. jaw-dropping aftermath of a deadly crash in southern california. a car flips on a freeway before plummeting 100 feet off the side of the cliff, killing one person
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and injuring four others outside of los angeles. witnesses say that the vehicle rolled over about five times before the fall. three children and one adult were rushed to the hospital. that accident is now under investigation. disabled woman now suing american airlines after she says she was humiliated. theresa purcell said she was forced to get out of her wheelchair and crawl to her seat on that plane because the agent said it was simply too late to lower the ramp to get her on the plane with a wheelchair. she is now asking $75,000. >> you wouldn't want to watch your family member crawl on to a plane. come on. there's always a way. >> she's right about that. american airlines has since apologized. we'll watch that story and see how it develops. >> she wants money. 22 minutes before the top of
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the hour. apple giving its fans an eyeful today. unveiling brand new products at today's worldwide development developer's conference in san francisco. >> that's where fox & friends co-host clayton morris joins us. the question every morning like this before apple has a big announcement is what could be in their bag of tricks today. >> reporter: well you know steve, brian and elizabeth, we all want those shiny new gadgets all the time new shiny little objects, new iphone. this event is not about ganlts at all. it's all about the software all those apps the software that drives all those gadgets. it may not be super flashy. these are all the developers. there are developers in this line that are 12 years old who have sold millions of applications. these are the people driving the future of the gadgets we use.
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some of the big tricks we'll see on stage, tim cook will take the stage to talk about apple watch. arguably one of the biggest launches in apple history, undeniably his company now. we'll see the future of apple watch. what will that look like? first launch of the apple watch had some software bugs tweaks where developers said we want to get our hands on the watch and get access and start doing interesting work. we'll see that. big question whether or not we'll see apple tv today. some rumors suggesting at the last minute some of these content deals they were trying to make may not have been solidified that may have been pulled from today's key note. we might not have developer ss getting their hands on the tv to make that device. tim cook another number of big apple executives taking the
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stage. these guys need food coffee and have been out here for nearly 24 hours camped out. i was 17 i was in the backyard playing with gi joes in the dirt not making applications being downloaded by millions of people. >> checking out eagle eye. >> if you're a 17-year-old these day s days, you can come up with an app, software, become a millionaire and have your parents work for you. >> 12 years old. >> i saw one guy ryan -- no i wish i did. one guy ryan he created an app. we featured him on fox & friends three years ago. one of the youngest developers ever. he's like the old guy now. he stopped by to say hi to some of his younger friends. it's a whole new world. >> no kidding. >> i saw your instagram post with your smart watch. thanks for giving us a peek of
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what's in store. >> here it is guys. able to check in the hotel just like that. >> really? my family got me an apple watch. they're not d it's supposed to arrive in july. >> congratulations. >> but i just get stressed every time we come up with something new. >> why? >> i don't get the old stuff. and i get the new stuff. i'm not intrigued about invention. >> you're comfortable. >> i'm comfortable now. >> if you're ever driving through new york city and at 48th and 6th avenue and look in the car and see the eight track tape machine, that's brian's car. 18 before the top of the hour. coming up big money liberal backing democratic efforts to fight voter incht d. laws. is this the 2016 equivalent to the war on women? eric acreerickson is up next butb why you should be concerned about george sorros.
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hillary clinton ripping republicans over voter i.d. law. >> i call on republicans at all levels of government with all manner of ambition to stop fear mongering about a phantom epidemic of election fraud. >> but if you follow the money, you'll discover liberal billionaire george sorros is bank rolling that actual fight, pledging $5 million to contest voter i.d. laws in the courts. fox news contributor eric erickson. thanks for being here. as a former election attorney i
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know this is near and dear to your heart. what should we be pointing out here to our viewers? >> most of the people who went to the clinton event had to show their photo i.d. she doesn't want them to show their photo incht d. to get into the ballot. owning a gun is a right under the bill of rights yet we have to show an incht d. in states in order to get a gun in most cases. seems like we should do that -- very popular, more than 70% of americans think if you have to show an incht d. to get into a courthouse or cache check you should to get into the ballot box. >> we hope to see these unfair laws often disproportionately affect the most vulnerable in our society repealed george sorros june 5th, saying exactly that. is this the war on women we'll be dealing with in this election? >> it is. barack obama built a coalition to get barack obama elected not to get democrats elected. we see that evidence in 2010 and
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2014 they have to rebuild the democratic coalition. hillary clinton in 2008 she and bill clinton, accusations in south carolina they were racist coming out of the democratic party. still bitter memories for bill clinton, matter of fact. they have to rebuild their coalition. they want to convince minority voters poor voters millenials that they'll fight for their right to vote whip them into a frenzy in the same way that the democrats tried to use the war on women in 2014. it didn't work then and it probably won't work now. >> not that they're just saying that but they're accusing republicans of sabotaging votes and repressing the votes of those minorities and those going to the polls here. that's a huge accusation to make. >> oh, it is. and there's very little evidence for it if any at all. in georgia, where i am we passed voter i.d. law and brought people to court. they don't have an i.d. they should have a right to vote.
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turns out it was very easy for them to get photo i.d.s. they continue to make these accusations trying to make people scared. >> eric erickson thank you for your time. >> thank you. >> this coming up. a driver can't believe his eyes when he sees a child driving a car during rush hour a kid. >> dude you're going to get someone [ muted ] killed man. >> i got my brake right here. >> is this an innocent driving lesson with daddy or a serious danger to other drivers? we'll debate that for you next. >> first on this day in 1965 back in my arms again by the supremes was the number one song in america. ♪ ♪ ♪ at chase, we celebrate small businesses every day through programs like mission main street grants.
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no laughing matter caught on camera driving his family around in downtown phoenix. >> dude you're going to get someone [ muted ] killed man. >> i have my brake right here. >> confronting a man, the man laughing it off saying he had his hands on the emergency brake. is this as bad as it looks or a family just having fun? here to debate is mother of two and freelance author carol markowitz. we're not tapping into your professional life but parental life. >> that's okay. >> do you have a problem with what you saw? the kid looks about 6 or 8. >> we don't know how old that kid is he could be 15. possible young-looking 15-year-old who looks 10 or 11. we don't know what we're seeing. >> very late growth spurt? >> absolutely. he could have a learner's permit. absolutely. >> you have a problem with this? >> i know exactly what ooirmi'm
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looking at brian. a 4,000-pound weapon. when the vehicle is not used as a vehicle, it's used as a weapon endangering the people on the street welfare of a child. this process has to be stopped and can't be laughed at. >> you must be 15 years or old, depending on what state you're in or six months older than that a permit for about six months. the parents did say they had their hand on the emergency brake. >> that's irrelevant to me. the bigger thing is the guy filming the video. how concerned is he about the safety taking a video while he's driving. >> stopped at at light. >> still they're stopped at a light. you're in the car. you're still driving. you're taking this video. are you really concerned? call the police. you're not worried. >> more people should take videos. when you see injustice on the road reckless driving an 8-year-old behind the wheel, take a video. everyone should use their video cameras, send it to the police.
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>> just talking about before the segment started, there are a lot of people in rural communities who drive a tractor at 8 years old. >> absolutely. >> used to being behind the wheel of vehicles. even a truck at a certain time. i don't want to get anybody in trouble. on a certain reality series. he laughed they were so uptight about free range parenting. i was driving everything. >> i was wo actually say take fewer videos. let's not try to make everything go viral. we don't really know what we're looking at here. the police haven't identified this driver or the family. he could be 15. he could be younger. we really don't know. >> this is not a tractor on a farm. this is a city street. you saw bicycles going by. pedestrians were walking. the idea that an 8-year-old or 7-year-old could be driving this car and put everyone else in danger it's putting your own life ahead of the others. and it's not fair to society. >> is it safe to say with your kids at 14 12 11 if they want
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to drive with you in the car it's okay? >> as long as it's legal, absolutely. >> no, it's not. >> again, we don't know how old this child is. we haven't found this family. and the sooner the police do i'll be willing to say if he's under 15 absolutely he should not be driving. >> you're not that worried about it? >> i'm not. i absolutely think driving safety should be paramount. i would like to say calm down. don't rush to conclusions. and definitely don't be filming while driving. >> there are kids in the backseat. >> crazy. >> i'm terrified by this. absolutely terrified. it's illegal and can't be done. >> carol and david, thank you so much. now you can talk amongst yourselves. coming up straight ahead, exam testing basic knowledge to our teachers is being tossed out saying it's discrimination. shouldn't all teachers regardless of race be able to answer simple questions and teach your kids regardless of
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their ethnic background? and model kate moss not showing model behavior being escorted off a flight. it wasn't about the food. across america people, like basketball hall of famer dominique wilkins, are taking charge of their type 2 diabetes... ...with non-insulin victoza. for a while, i took a pill to lower my blood sugar but it didn't get me to my goal. so i asked my doctor about victoza. he said victoza works differently than pills and comes in a pen. victoza is proven to lower blood sugar and a1c. it's taken once a day, any time. and the needle is thin. victoza is not for weight loss but it may help you lose some weight. victoza is an injectable prescription medicine that may improve blood sugar in adults with type 2 diabetes when used with diet and exercise.
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it is not recommended as the first medication to treat diabetes and should not be used in people with type 1 diabetes or diabetic ketoacidosis. victoza has not been studied with mealtime insulin. victoza is not insulin. do not take victoza if you have a personal or family history of medullary thyroid cancer multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 2, or if you are allergic to victoza or any of its ingredients. symptoms of a serious allergic reaction may include swelling of face lips, tongue or throat fainting or dizziness, very rapid heartbeat problems breathing or swallowing, severe rash or itching. tell your doctor if you get a lump or swelling in your neck. serious side effects may happen in people who take victoza including inflammation of the pancreas (pancreatitis) which may be fatal. stop taking victoza and call your doctor right away if you have signs of pancreatitis, such as severe pain that will not go away in your abdomen or from your abdomen to your back with or without vomiting. tell your doctor about all the medicines
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you take and if you have any medical conditions. taking victoza with a sulfonylurea or insulin may cause low blood sugar. the most common side effects are nausea, diarrhea, and headache. some side effects can lead to dehydration, which may cause kidney problems. if your pill isn't giving you the control you need... ask your doctor about non-insulin victoza. it's covered by most health plans. there's something out there. it's a highly contagious disease. it can be especially serious- even fatal to infants. unfortunately, many people who spread it may not know they have it. it's called whooping cough. and the cdc recommends everyone, including those around babies, make sure their whooping cough vaccination is up to date. understand the danger your new grandchild faces. talk to your doctor or pharmacist about you and your family getting a whooping cough vaccination today.
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good morning to you. it is monday june 8th. i'm elizabeth hasselbeck. fox news alert for you. inside job? overnight interrogation revealing new clues about who may have helped the two killers pull off a movie-style escape from prison. live on the scene with breaking details for you. police officer caught on camera slamming a teenage girl anyway bikini to the ground. the video, hard to watch. >> on your face! [ bleep ] >> that officer even pulls his gun at one point, as the girls' friends jump in to help. this hour we hear from that teen about what she says happened. >> i saw that whole thing, man. that's disturbing.
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putting a price on a broken heart. this man's ex-lover suing him for millions because he wouldn't leave his wife. >> wives hate that. >> will that suit hold up in court? we will debate it. we'll try. >> no we won't. >> give it the college try. you're with "fox & friends." ♪ >> do you think just a little she's freezing. >> is that cold? we forgot to bring the heater from home. >> that water at 48th and 6th avenue here in the crossroads of the world, right out of the hose. so it's really chilly. we've got a pool check -- >> chemicals, though right?
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didn't we put chlorine and everything in that? >> it's already in the water. >> sure right through the hose. june is national safety month. we'll tell you some of the things you need to know so that your friends, family and particularly your children are safe around swimming pools. by the end of this hour one of the three of us may be in that pool. e-mail us right now. which of the three of us would you like to see in that pool? me brian or elizabeth? >> brian. >> heather, did we forget our suits? i don't know how we did that. >> right. >> you can have mine. >> if you buy me a suit i'll get in that pool. >> there's a gap across the street. >> did i just say that? >> can someone please bring elizabeth hasselbeck a swim suit so she will be in the pool? we better get to that fox news alert so i can get my mind off being in that pool. they could be anywhere.
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police now offering a $100,000 reward in the capture of two convicted killers who escaped from an upstate new york prison. >> we just learned they may have had help from the inside. >> david lee miller is in dannemora, new york with new information on an overnight interrogation. david? >> reporter: good morning. there is growing speculation that these two inmates may have had some type of inside help. short time ago i talked to a new york state trooper who said there's growing concern that someone assisted these two men and there is now a published report this one from the new york post which says authorities overnight have interrogated a woman, not a guard, who works at the prison. she has been relieved of her post. there is concern these two men received power tools and possibly information about the
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blueprints of the prison that made their escape possible. as for the manhunt, it is very intense. this morning, listen to this in the 12-mile drive from our hotel to the prison, our crew was stopped by police and department of corrections at three different checkpoints. lastly now, one other thing to note this is the first workday since the prison break took place. authorities are now concerned that if something sinister happened over the weekend because of these two escapees they might now for the first time learn of it when someone perhaps doesn't show up for work. back to you. >> david lee miller, that's an eerie fact. thank you. >> if you were stopped in 12 miles three times, they must have a pretty good supposition that they're still in the area. >> reporter: i don't think they know. i think it's an abundance of
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caution right now. each time there was a very thorough search not a superficial search. we were searched making our way to the prison. not only searched when you leave this area but if you're heading to the prison's front door you're also searched. they're leaving nothing to chance. i don't think they know where these men are. could be a few hundred yards. could be a few hundred miles. >> 12:30 in the morning on saturday an eyewitness said they popped up in someone's backyard and said what are you doing? and they just left. i don't know too many men popping out of manhole covers at 12:30 in the morning. but had hours of lead time to get way. >> 45-minute car ride to montreal. that could be the direction they may have gone. we spoke with the sheriff at the time. one of his deputies was gunned down by one of the escaped killers. >> i think there's a terrible risk there for anybody.
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what has david sweat there got to lose? you saw the way he killed kevin tarcia had no remorse for it. the other gentleman that escaped with him is a murder of twoerer of two different people f there's any guns involved it's going to be one heck of a shootout. >> it is like out of a movie. these are things we've all seen in movies. last time they were seen in prison was at 10:30 at night. they did a bed check there. at 5:30 in the morning, wait a minute, they're not moving. wait a minute. they used hoodies, filled them with clothes and hair. >> that was the easy part. how did you get out? >> cut a hole in the jail cell using power tools. without any detection of noise there? >> look how perfect those holes are cut out. series of tunnels six stories up. they had to climb up.
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they left a smiley face -- ultimate in your face smiley face note on a pipe that was cut open that said "have a nice day" and there's a symbol on it as well. and then at the end of the line they climbed up through a manhole cover. what is puzzling about this whole story is -- you saw the hole in the cell sawed open with power tools. how is it possible they never heard that? you can see the bed legs from the cell's bed right there. how could somebody saw a big hole in their cell wall and nobody heard it? >> where they came out, where that man hole cover was, in the age of technology and cameras, interestingly enough that street corner no camera. >> that is interesting. i wonder if you can google stuff like that. >> the schematics to the prison online? are the schematics to the sewer
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system of that town online? i don't know. >> so much like alcatraz looking as if they're sleeping. >> the movie? >> yeah and then "shawshank redemption." are these giving these people ideas? it's basically a how to manual. >> the big question too, who is giving them help. the investigation now pointing to a female employee there. >> who may have had a relationship with them. >> who may have. >> they're bad guys. be on the lookout. eight minutes after the top of the hour heather joins us with a story out of texas that is tough to watch. >> and this one is getting a whole lot of attention this morning. teenager forced to the ground by a texas police officer in a starting new video is now speaking out. take a listen here. [ bleep ] [ screaming ]
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[ bleep ]. >> we're talking about that young woman and video from mckinney shows officers responding to a fight at a pool party. they say the kids were ignoring officers' directions. one officer is then caught on camera pulling a gun on the crowd and shoving that 15-year-old girl to the ground. that girl is now telling her side of the story. >> he told me to keep walking. and i kept walking and then i'm guessing he thought we were saying rude stuff to him. he grabbed me and he like twisted my arm on the back of my back. >> that police officer is now on leave. more as we get it. >> fox news alert, united airline s airlines right off the runway in new york. trying to land in buffalo, new york when strong winds blew it 300 feet off the runway and into the grass safety area. >> when we hit it just didn't seem right. the braking seemed very erratic.
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looking out both windows, it was pretty clear we weren't on a runway. >> strong winds there. no one was hurt. happy birthday to barbara bush former first lady turning 90 years old today. she's backing a $7 million challenge for developers to create a mobile app aimed at improving adult literacy. in maine she will be honored. so wonderful to see she's still involved in literacy after all these years. >> in a very big way. and the festivities are a great big fund-raiser for the cause. thank you very much heather. sign of the times, actress zoe saldana revealing her husband took her last name when they were married two years ago. the father of her two twin boys marco perego is in fact marco saldana. >> i tried to talk him out of it. if you use my name you'll be
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emasculated by your community of artists, your latin community of men, by the world. his response? ah zoe, i don't give a -- as a woman, i was honored to accept my husband's last name. >> can we do anything the way we used to? butch, everyone should use that. i think if a husband chooses to take his wife's last name it is a personal decision between themselves. think outside the box. >> we used a hyphen. he did it to honor my father who passed away when i was 17. nice story. >> coming up a teacher's exam testing basic knowledge is being tossed out here in new york
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because it discriminates. shouldn't all teachers regardless of race be able to answer simple questions like what is a primary source or be able to read a graph? >> no that's out of line. >> we'll report and you decide. >> way out of bounds. triple crown win. is it enough for the trainer of american pharaoh. he says this champion horse is not done yet. this allergy season, will you be a sound sleeper, or a mouth breather. well, put on a breathe right strip and instantly open your nose up to 38% more than allergy medicines alone. so you can breathe and sleep. shut your mouth and sleep right. breathe right.
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there's some facts about seaworld we'd like you to know. we don't collect killer whales from the wild. and haven't for 35 years. with the hightest standard of animal care in the world, our whales are healthy. they're thriving. i wouldn't work here if they weren't. and government research shows they live just as long as whales in the wild. caring for these whales, we have a great responsibility to get that right. and we take it very seriously. because we love them. and we know you love them too.
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a teacher's exam in new york being thrown out for being discriminatory after only half of black and hispanic applicants could pass. shouldn't all teachers regardless of their race be able to answer simple questions? what is the primary source? that seems pretty easy. the author of "the big black lie," kevin jackson, who join ss us live from st. louis. good morning kevin. >> good to talk to you, steve. >> let's get this straight. here in new york what they've done is judge kimbal wood has thrown out a standard test. you had to pass the test to be a teacher. but she threw it out because it
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was discriminatory because not enough people of color are passing it. how is that discriminatory? >> hands up. don't teach, steve. it's not discriminatory. if the teachers can't learn themselves then we just change the rules and we cry racism. if they can't teach the students then they'll change the grades and if they do that somebody cries foul then they'll cry racism. we have a system in place where, at every level, it checks itself. it's not accountable to anybody. so the teachers aren't teaching. the kids aren't learning. they're just doing what they need to do to pass them through and america is getting what it deserves quite frankly. >> and you make a good point right there at the end. and that is we're talking about the dynamics with teachers and unions and stuff like that. but at the end of the day, it's all about those kids sitting in a little desk. if they don't get an education -- you only get one
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crack at t you only sit in schools when you're a little kid. if you don't have knowledge, you go through life handicapped. >> right. i'll tell you, i read a report steve, that said something along the lines that there's a disturbing trend in s.a.t. scores. all the other ethnicities are going down except the asians. the asians are going up. and they call it a disturbing trend. the disturbing trend is that our education system doesn't teach the way aerobe the way those asian moms or home schoolers teach in america. knowing what we know about a system that isturing system that manufactures the minds of children and is not doing it successfully because we're failing 30 to 50% of these kids they still want more money. >> sure. >> and they want to standardize around things like common core. we should not be investing more money into teachers cheating on tests, cheating scandals of teachers paying people to take
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these tests. when they can't pass that or they get caught with that we end up with a scandal like what you're talking about today. oh these guys can't learn because it's discriminatory. it's ridiculous. >> it is ridiculous. kevin jackson joining us from st. louis today. thank you very much. >> hands up. don't teach. >> i'll be thinking about that all day. thank you, sir. 19 minutes after the top of the hour. coming up it's like the plot from a movie. >> hold it. >> oh, my god. >> oh, my god. >> oh, my god. >> oh, my. can you put a price on a broken heart? this man's ex-lover that happy guy right there, suing him for millions because he won't leave his wife. wives don't like that. will it hold up in court? a debate will ensue. liberal college professor says his students are so far left it actually scares him. and he's liberal. the new trend he sees in
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america's youth. it's all about feelings.
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23 minutes past the hour top
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of the hour. in north jersey people without tickets forced their way into summer jam concert at met life stadium. fights broke out and bottles were tossed at officers. one state trooper was sent to the hospital after that. not so model behavior from super model kate moss escorted off a plane in turkey after police say she was being disruptive. witnesses claim moss cursed at the pilot and was drinking vodka she had stowed away. >> like the plot of a bad divorce movie. >> i want a divorce. >> oh, my god, is there someone else? >> of course not. this is about us. >> but -- >> it's really not you but -- >> dave? >> oh, my god. >> oh, my god. >> oh, my god. >> oh, my god is right. listen to this story. former mistress is suing him for $2 million. he promised he would leave his
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wife and did years of work for him because of it. so can this hold up in court? try to debate this trial attorney specializing in matrimonyial law. is there a case here? >> because we don't have enough frivolous lawsuits. $2 million for getting dumped. promises of a romantic nature made in the course of a relationship do not create a binding contract. that's way under new york law, for example, you're explicitly forbidden from suing someone if you break an engagement. her attorneys decided to get creative. this is like a de facto contract. >> the favors she did was try to get him out of being sued by another mistress. he was trying to take care of helping sell an unpublished book he was doing. does this matter at all, the fact that she was working with for him? >> sure it matters.
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she could be seen as a personal assistant. we don't really know the inside relationship that they had here if it was, in fact professional. he did promise to pay her for service s services. there was talk it would be in a will. the fact that this is a mistress suing maybe all of the agreements they had aren't enforceable. he isn't required to marry her, isn't required to get a divorce. but certainly is required to pay for services. look this is an 88-year-old man, 67-year-old woman. she worked with him for six years. where else would she be -- >> you do favors for your buddies, right? under the law those are the equivalent of gifts. generally speaking absolute and irrevokable. if you and mr. ducci have a falling out and end your relationship -- >> does marriage matter? in other countries, you say, it
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does. this would have much more stronger leg to stand on. >> in other countries, australia, can darks defacto couple. >> you have another relationship. >> even though one of the people can be married they will enforce this relationship and offer compensation. they're offering it for the mistress being a mistress, fulfilling those kind of services. >> should you get it caught on an iphone she might have a stronger case. right? >> in the course of all relationships you assume the risk get involved with an 88-year-old married guy you're probably assuming more risk than usual. >> you said it. if i did the work for a friend legal work for a friend and say i'll cover your services i'll cover this you probably expect them eventually to pay. this woman did rely on that. they were friends. they were -- >> very strong and very weak case lisa. i'll give you that. elliott, good job. thank you very much. in the final 33 minutes caught on camera. you have this cop slamming a
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teen to the ground. the video is hard to watch. >> get on your face! [ bleep ]. >> he sits on her for about 15 minutes, even pulling his gun as the girls' friends jump in to help. we're live from texas with the latest. and have you heard what jerry seinfeld said about the influence of the police on college campuses? >> just want to use these words. that's racist. that's sexist. that's prejudiced. they don't even know what they're talking about. >> that's true. have our kids turned into pc police officers? your e-mails are next. ♪ to you, they're more than just a pet. so protect them... ...with k9 advantix® ii. it's broad-spectrum protection k ills fleas ticks and mosquitoes too.
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♪ >> look how cold those children are. >> we may be one of them. suiting up. >> she's getting out. >> doing a story today on pool safety because june is safety month. the producers have determined in the last hour it would be great if one of us would actually get in the pool. we asked you to vote on it. elizabeth, bad news. you are winning by a landslide. >> it better start warming up. i'll cold looking at them. it's a great cause. so many kids will be swimming. it's for a great cause. if someone can find me a suit i'm in. >> are they close to finding you a suit? >> one block away.
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>> working on it right now. >> we should get a pool heater just for the children. >> yes. i would second that. >> it's almost summer. >> let's talk about older children. let's talk about college kids. >> let's. >> liberal college professors on campuses. even they in this case rrks, are stunned by this story. >> yes, they are. he calls himself edward shlosser and says my students sometimes scare me particularly the liberal ones. the student/teacher dynamic has been reenvisioned along a line that sometime tansly consumerist and hyper protective giving every student the ability to claim grievous harm in nearly any circumstance. this kid felt emotionally harmed by this. associate professor was in the same situation where they were called in and removed for a while. >> forget about facts. it's all about the feelings now.
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these days if a kid in college, his feelings are hurt it winds up in your personal record and these guys don't want to lose their jobs just because the kids -- the guy writes that these days the students have the ability to claim grievous harm in any situation. >> and changing the way he teaches because of it. >> doesn't want to rock the boat. someone else in observation about what's going on on college campus that man right there, jerry seinfeld. he had this observation about the atmosphere on college campuses. >> i don't play colleges. i hear a lot of people tell me don't go near colleges. they're so pc. i'll give you an example. my daughter's 14. my mother -- my mother. my wife says to her, well you know in the next couple of years, i think maybe you're going to want to be hanging around the city more on the weekends so you can see boys. you know what my daughter says? that's sexist. they just want to use these
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words. that's racist. that's sexist. that's prejudice. they don't even know what they're talking about. >> chris rock also said he does not play college campuses anymore because of the pc correctness. he said they're too conservative and potentially people have lost their sense of humor. >> how did anyone book don rickles? this is what you're saying. ron's on facebook. it's time for thick skin to replace phony outrage. enough pc already. >> tony weighing in on facebook. amazingly to the point. we live in a world where people are walking on eggshells afraid to say anything that may offend the few. >> i think jerry could point a finger at hollywood, too. >> he was never comfortable in hollywood. >> he was comfortable enough to make billions of dollar. >> right but wasn't as happy as he could be. >> no. maybe not.
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>> it's about feelings again? oh i'm not happy here. >> i'm just saying i have sources that tell me he couldn't wait to get back to new york. although i've never -- >> do you know what i can't wait for? i can't wait to hear from heather. i'm friends enough with you to not ask you to join me in that pool. >> a lot of people have written in saying they want to see you in a bathing suit in that pool out there. fox news alert. "shawshank redemption" type prison escape. female worker is being questioned as a possible accomplice. cutting through walls and climbing through tunnels, cutting through pipe, eventually getting through a nearby man hole cover to ce are offering a $100,000 reward for their capture. they say these men could be anywhere. the olympic blade runner convicted killer oscar pistorius
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could be out of jail in a few weeks. south african officials say he may be moved from prison to house arrest in august. last year a judge sentenced him to five years behind bars for shooting and killing his then girlfriend reeva steenkamp. prosecutors will challenge the decision to acquit him of murder in november. screening police for steroids? this is about to happen in albuquerque, new mexico. 54 steroids are now being added to the list of drugs that the city randomly tests for. police officers association says it supports testing for any illegal substances. victor espinoza riding into race horse history by winning the triple crown and the hearts of millions. >> american far american pharoah
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is finally the one. >> nice. breeder's cup takes place in october. espinoza will donate his $80,000 in belmont winnings to city of hope a california-based cancer research center. american pharoah's trainer, bob baffert, will give $150,000 to three separate charities and those are your headlines. that was quite a race to watch. i love how short it is. you don't have to invest six hours like with golf or another kind of sport. >> unless you see the four-hour pregame, which just goes on and on and on. it's short for a long race. necessary force or over the line? [ screaming ] [ bleep ]. >> that police officer in the
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foreground now on leave after video shows him pulling a gun on teenagers at a pool party. >> and reporter dan gunman is live in mckinney, texas, where all of this happened. this is tough to look at i have to say, dan. >> yeah. the cell phone video has gone viral. the mayor of mckinney has issued a statement saying the city and the police department are investigating this incident and appropriate action will be taken. city leaders expect the police department to act professionally and with appropriate restraint relative to the situation. as you mentioned, one mckinney police officer is now on leave. the trouble at this pool party began friday when a fight broke out between two females. as a result of that fight, police were called to the scene. officers were told there were
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teenagers who were refusing to leave. corporal casebolt responded along with the other officers. the corporal can be seen taking down a 15-year-old girl to the ground. the corporal then can also be seen pulling his gun on several teenagers. that teenager initially taken down to the ground gave her perspective on things. >> he told me to keep walking and i kept walking and then i'm guessing he thought we were saying rude stuff to him. he grabbed me and he like twisted my arm on the back of my back. >> now the department's actions, the officers they are getting support from a number of the neighbors in this area who say, given what the officers were dealing with the circumstances, the behavior of the teenagers
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and the fact that the police officers were greatly out numbered many of the neighbors are saying the police behaved correctly given the circumstances. there is a protest march against police brutality scheduled for tonight starting at an elementary school here in mckinney. reporting live in mckinney, texas, this is dan godwinn. back to you. >> sounds like just the one guy. the other officers seem to be doing it totally different. >> and given what the neighbors say, it would be interesting to see what does happen. we'll keep you posted. next up on the rundown, presidential hopefuls are charging up early voters in key states like iowa. which campaign messages are working and which aren't? frank luntz up next. and keeping your children safe at the pool. why experts say you shouldn't trust floaties to do the job. plus one of us getting in the pool with the kids.
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some who entered the race already and some who are thinking about it are out in full force, trying to make their messages clear. s who message is the most powerful so far? >> we have a lot to choose from. busiest season ever. first one you want to go to is governor walker? >> yes. he's doing great in iowa and he's surprising people by his popularity. this is one of his best so far. let's take a look. >> what makes america great? what makes us exceptional? what makes us arguably the greatest country in the world is that in moments of economic and
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fiscal military or spiritual, men and women throughout our history who have stood up and made decisions that think more about the future of their children and their grandchildren than they did about their own political futures. >> it's amazing. short sleeves rolled up no coat no teleprompter. casual. the languages he uses the reason why he's doing so well. >> it's not like he has an earth shaking policy movement there. talking in generalities. democrats responded. >> that's a smart point. in the first six, seven, eight months it's who you are. then gu into policy. walker starting off the campaign by explaining who he is. >> okay. people think about rand paul here he is in action. >> we've come to take our country back from the special interest that use washington as their personal piggybank. the special interest that are more concerned with their personal welfare than the
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general welfare. the washington machine that gobbles up our freedoms and invades every nook and cranny of our lives must be stopped. >> amazing. it's amazing because it's the best anti-washington message of any of the presidential candidates so far. it's why rand paul is doing so well in new hampshire. each of these presidential candidates have a specific statewide -- marco rubio does so well. that anti-washington messages plays with the most solid conservatives and independent and even some democrats. >> i saw the green line go high. ted cruz is the third one you wanted to take a look at. let's take a look. >> imagine a president that finally, finally, finally secures the borders and imagine a legal immigration system that welcomes and celebrates those who come to achieve the american dream. >> red way up.
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green way down. >> ted cruz himself. his performance is perfectly attuned to republican conservatives. you really want someone who is going to fight for them stand up to the white house. democrats aren't quite as supportive. it's why he had an initial jump for cruz to do well he will have to do well not just among solid republicans but also among some dependents who vote in republican primary. >> if you're a republican should they care that much about the green line right now? >> it depends. new hampshire, independent voters. south carolina even democrats can vote. yes, it does matter in certain early states. >> it is early. frank, always a pleasure. thank you so much. >> you don't think about it in the huge republican field and how hard it's going to be for you. >> don't have to get into that swimming pool. >> you don't want me in a swimming pool. i can assure you. >> let's do the dials on that next hour. next on the rundown, we've got a pool. we've got kids and one of us is jumping in the pool.
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frank has come up with the anchor that he says america wants in the pool. we're not wearing a leotard yet. woman: it's been a journey to get where i am. and i didn't get here alone. there were people who listened along the way. people who gave me options. kept me on track. and through it all my retirement never got left behind. so today, i'm prepared for anything we may want tomorrow to be. every someday needs a plan. let's talk about your old 401(k) today. ♪ ♪ [ male announcer ] you wouldn't ignore signs of damage in your home. are you sure you're not ignoring them in your body? even if you're treating your crohn's disease or ulcerative colitis an occasional flare may be a sign of damaging inflammation. and if
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america's newsroom president obama fielding questions from reporters. we'll take his news conference live this a claim that isis has been stalled. is that credible? we'll have the latest on that daring prison break in new york. did they pull it off by watching a movie? all that top of the hour. now back to "fox & friends." well june is national safety month. and one place safety should always be a top priority is the
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water at the pool. by the way, they're yelling as if we're not on camera. here are some tips with every parent must know for national safety month. director of pool management at the imagine school of swimming. >> you mentioned parents. we have a parent in there. elizabeth hasselbeck. >> how cold is that? >> it's so cold i can barely get my words out. when the kids get in the pool you have to get in with them. we're doing okay in here, right? it's freezing. this is all about safety for a great cause. you know how much i love kids. >> we had dinner with her last week remember? >> and brendan is from swimming school imagine swimming. >> yes. >> parents should think about investing in swimming lessons for your kids right? >> yes. they're so important. the earlier you start, the easier it is to learn. and if your child knows what to do if they ever accidentally fall into a backyard pool kind
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of like this one, then that can save their life. >> we're getting a pool this year. i have to pay attention. drowning is a silent act. >> we see bay watch clips where everyone is splashing, screaming for help. if you're drowning you're not going to be able to call out for help. parents need to know how to recognize when a child is in trouble. >> one thing parents do particularly if the children are small, they go to the store, buy the wartd wings and think that's going to help them right? >> it gives a false sense of security for parents. a lot of times parents think they can relax, go talk with their friends, not pay attention to the pool because their kids are in the water wings. they can fall off, deflate. toddlers especially if they're used to jumping into a pool. >> what about this detection when something goes into a pool. >> splash alarms are very important. you can know the instant someone falls in. you need a four-foot barrier
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fence. >> you have a pool. >> i do have a pool. we took a deep rescue class, both the kids and myself. you talk about ratio, not having that 3-1 ratio is key. this is one of the most important segments i think, that we could do this summer with so many kids swimming. you also say that when -- adults should be present within ten feet. if a kid can't swim 25 meters. >> exactly. >> you should be within ten feet. i have a noodle or rescue tubes when i'm around the pool. >> if your child can't swim 25 meters continuously you should be within ten feet. anything can happen at any time. >> brendan, what is the minimum temperature you will go into a pool at? right now the water is 45 degrees. you would not go in there, would you? >> i've swum in 48 degrees. i wouldn't make my students get in anything below 78 or so. >> in the pool or at the lake the water is cold.
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if you are afraid of getting cold when a kid needs you, you won't be willing to jump in. you have to be willing to get in there and help them. >> yes. >> the important thing is that you realize there's no substitute for supervision. barriers and splash alarms are great layers of protection. you have to be watching the water all the time when your kids are in there. >> thank you. thank best way and walmart for the swim pool. it's terrific. just got hit in the head. all right. more information on the swimming pool and imagine swimming visit fox & friends.com. we'll step aside.
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there's something out there. it's a highly contagious disease. it can be especially serious- even fatal to infants. unfortunately, many people who spread it may not know they have it. it's called whooping cough. and the cdc recommends everyone, including those around babies, make sure their whooping cough vaccination is up to date. understand the danger your new grandchild faces. talk to your doctor or pharmacist about you and your family getting a whooping cough vaccination today.
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boy: once upon a time, there was a nice house that lived with a family. one day, it started to rain and rain.
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water got inside and ruined everybody's everythings. the house thought she let the family down. but the family just didn't think a flood could ever happen. the reality is floods do happen. protect what matters. get flood insurance. call the number on your screen to learn more. ♪
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well elizabeth, congratulations. you're tougher than i. >> i'm just doing what every mom does. get in a bathing suit you don't want to in a pool you don't want to all so the kids can have fun in the summer. fox news alert what's being described as a major haz-mat situation in pennsylvania. crews are fighting a fire at a major warehouse and telling those in the area to stay in place until it's under control. heather: the fire broke out at the miller chemical plant shooting huge flames and plumes of smoke into the sky near hanover. gregg: eric shawn is live from our newsroom.

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