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tv   The Kelly File  FOX News  July 30, 2015 9:00pm-10:01pm PDT

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tendentious, and that is devoted or directed to black lives matter. again, thanks for watching us tonight. megyn is next. i'm bill o'reilly. remember, the stops here. we're definitely looking out for you. breaking tonight, with just a week to go until the first gop presidential debate, the battle between more than a dozen candidates is getting tougher than ever. welcome to "the kelly file," everyone. i'm megyn kelly. the gop field has grown to some 17 candidates with the latest national polls confirming donald trump's position at the head of the pack with an edge of more than six points over his closest rival scott walker. but this debate could change everything. the candidates are getting ready with two big concerns, what do they want to say to the american people and what do they want to say about their various rivals? this will be the very first chance for the voters to compare and contrast the candidates right next to each other.
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if that were not enough pressure for the people taking the stage, there is one more factor that may make this debate unlike any the american people have ever seen before. charles kraut ham certificahamm news chapter and has an added chapter on the age of obama. an aide to governor john kasich came out and said it is like a nascar driver mentally preparing for a race knowing one of the drivers will be drunk. you don't know what to expect. >> well, if you want to put it slightly more kindly, you could have said erratic and unpredictable but everyone knows in the leadup to this debate it's going to be all about trump. that will be the story, no matter what happens, otherwise in the debate that will be the
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story that's going to be carried out by the media. that's going to be the sound bite. and the two questions are will trump act like a statesman or will he continue the anger and bluster show? and the second, will anybody take him on, and who will it be? on the first i know he's getting advice from the media that he should play the statesman and that would propel him. i'm not sure that he's capable of doing that but assuming he is, i'm not sure that would be successful. he's had such incredible success with the bluster and the anger that he has tapped into that i suspect he'll continue on that. the question is, will anybody challenge him? if you're a top tier candidate, there's not that much advantage in doing that particularly now early in the race. you get into a mud fight, the others will benefit rather than you. i suspect it could be somebody who is in the middle of the pack
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a number 9, 10, or in the polls, who might want to take him out to be the drag on slayer and perhaps oop the candidate would be rick perry who took him on most strongly after his remarks -- trump's remarks about john mccain. >> and speaking of rick perry, should he make it into the debate? he has a lot to lose and a lot to prove, and it is an example for some of the other candidates in that terrible moment that they all want to avoid, who could forget this awful moment just four years ago when his candidacy began to implode due to one exchange on the debate stage. watch. >> it's three agencies of the government when i get there that are gone. commerce, education, and the -- what's the third one there? let's see. the third agency of government i would do away with, education, the -- commerce and, let's see, i
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can't. sorry. oops. >> poor governor perry. >> well, you know, a moment in american history where one thing happens. ed muskie reportedly or supposedly crying in the snow in new hampshire. he was the leader. he was the presumptive democratic nominee. he was done. or howard dean who was leading, you remember, the famous rant, said everybody's afraid of that. look, you and i who do live television know you're always on a tightrope, always on a high wire and the candidates are slightly less experienced at that. but i think this is a chance for perry if he makes, i don't know if he does the zinger that everybody replays that could be his moment. but, you know, it may not -- it's dangerous for any candidate to go after trump in that sense because he zings back and you never know how that --
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>> how much does it play that trump is the front-runner, and notwithstanding all of the incendiary things he has said, he's still in the number one position. so the gop voters right now seem to like him. how risky is it to the other candidates if they go after him hard? >> i think it is highly risky, the fact that he is in front is remarkable. i haven't changed in my opinion his candidacy but i have changed my mind on his durability. this is a guy who mocked the service of a prisoner of war, was tortured for five and a half years and refused early release and trump got away with it. he not only got away with it, it wasn't even a speedbump in his rise in the polls. so he clearly is tapping into something. he will not go away easily. i think it is a risk. but perry has wanted just to pick an example. he called for trump to pull out of the race after that.
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so he's already out on a limb. if he wants to define himself, remember, trump is way out ahead. it's a field of 16. he's way out ahead but it's still only a quarter of a vote. three-quarters of the republicans out there are not set on trump. >> the other candidates are said to be preparing as you would expect murder boards and standing in front of their teams and doing it the way you're expecting them to. donald trump is not preparing at all. he's in scotland and is enjoying the sports and so on. he says, fine, my plan is to be nice to everybody. what they need is a moment. what these other guys need is a moment, charles, and who could forget this one the last time around that helped newt gingrich win south carolina? watch. >> she says you asked her, sir, to enter into an open marriage. would you like to take some time to respond to that? >> no, but i will. i think a destructive, vicious, negative nature of much of the news media makes it harder to govern this country, harder to
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attract decent people to run for public office. and i am appalled that you would begin a presidential debate with a topic like that. >> that was huge. what are the odds one of these candidates will try for a moment like that? >> well, it's always easier to go after the press, the media. >> this press? what? >> of course. i would exclude temporarily fox. there are going to be other debates and they will be able to play off the media and, you know, newt took off like an at lack rock atlass rocket after that. >> we are having meetings every day now. chris wallace, brett baier and i are merciless when it comes to the content of these questions. they will be as tight and as strong as they can be when we go out there a week from tonight. charles, looking forward to seeing you right after that a week from now.
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>> it will be a pleasure, thank you. >> we also have breaking news tonight on a new challenge for the gop front-runner with reports suggesting donald trump may be changing his position on immigration. howard kurtz joins us after the break on whether that's true and what it could mean for the debate and the presidential race. plus, new outrage with one of america's top supermodels. he know, james, i'm sorry. >> why gisele is being criticized by people around the globe. and we showed you last night the body cam video from a cincinnati cop now charged with murder, but his lawyer says there is much more that we don't see, and he is here live in a "the kelly file" must-see interview. >> i have to figure out if you have a license or not. go ahead and take what to do when you're stranded in a city and you need a last minute hotel?
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breaking tonight, a new challenge. donald trump has climbed to the top of the republican polls in large part by talking tough and refusing to back down on the issue of illegal immigration. even when he traveled to the border last week and was hit with blistering questions from some spanish language media
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outlets. tonight a new column on one of the country's most influential websites is questioning trump's stance suggesting that he, quote, may be going mushy on the immigration issue and pointing to an interview yesterday as exhibit "a." >> we have to bring great people into this country. i love the idea of immigration, but it has to be legal immigration. a lot of these people are helping us whether it's the grapes or whether it's jobs, and sometimes it's jobs. in all fairness, i love our country, but sometimes it's jobs that a citizen of the united states doesn't want to do. i mean, there are jobs that a lot of people don't want to do. i want to move them out, move them back in but they have to be here legally otherwise you don't have a country. if people can just pour into the country illegally you don't have a country. but i would expedite the system. we're going to do something. i've been giving it so much -- you know, you have the
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humanitarian basis. you have a lot of deep thought going into this, believe me. i actually have a big heart, something a lot of people don't under that. it's a tough situation. we're going to do something and one of the things we're going to do is expedite. when somebody is terrific, we want them back. they have to be here legally. if they're with their parents, it depend. look, it sounds cold and it sounds hard, we have a country. our country is going to hell. we have to have a system where people are legally in our country. >> joining me now our fox news politics editor and howard kurtz, the host of fox news "media buzz." good to see you. so i don't really understand exactly what i heard there but it was something along the lines of, you have to move them out and then you have to move them back in and you have to expedite it, at least you have to expedite the dreamers, but it requires deep thought and he's giving it deep thought and wants
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to do something. it's not exactly clear and conci concise. >> well, look, he did say elsewhere in the interview, it's hard to get it all together, he did talk about mass deportation. mass deportation would be necessary of some kind but then people would be expeditiously returned into the united states like everybody is out and then millions get to come back in or something. it was not exactly clear. perhaps he or his campaign will offer clarity. the problem here is he sounds like a politician. he sounds like the stuff that hillary clinton says or that any of the politicians say because immigration is this impossible issue and so politicians just chop up buckets of word salad to get out of talking about it. >> word salad. word salad. but this is -- i'm not exactly sure what i heard there, howie. obviously ben shapiro did not like what he heard. he thought there was a mushiness on the issue of immigration. this is the problem both the
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appeal and the problem with donald trump is that the sweeping generalities with which he speaks are appealing, yeah, he's a winner, right, okay. then when he gets pressed on the specifics, it gets a little meandering at times. >> but this is how donald trump breaks the rules and confounds the prognosticators. he tripped over his own words in that cnn interview. the essence of his position is get rid of the criminal illegal aliens and for the others give them a path to legal status but not citizenship. >> he said they could all come back but on an expedited basis. i think. i'm not sure. >> it didn't compute, as they used to say on an old tv show. journalists are pouncing, he's in over his head, he doesn't know what he's talking about. he's going to implode. what the average voter hears is pretty blunt talk on immigration and if he went off the rails a little bit, well, it's because he's unscripted. they don't parse his words the same way.
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>> polls after polls show conventional wisdom is wrong, wrong, wrong, and he had this exchange today. he's over there in scotland for the -- you know, i don't follow sports. golf? >> something with knickers. >> a sports situation and women. that's good. in any event, he was pressed once again on his relationship with hispanics and whether he would get hit in the polls. what he said about the polls is true, watch. >> what section of america do you represent? >> i think i represent a big question. i guess the polls have me with 16 or 17 candidates had me at 25%, and the next person was at 12%. we represent a very big section. >> not the immigrant population? >> oh, no, i did well. the hispanics, a poll came out two days ago where i'm number one with the hispanics. i know you're surprised to hear
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that. i'm number one with the hispanics and i said if i get the nomination i will win with the hishispanics. >> and you know what? he's right. you look at the poll that came out he had the highest favorable. >> that is not a poll i look at. i avert my eyes from that poll. we're not -- >> all the more reason -- if they are going to skew, aren't they going to skew something negative for him? >> i don't look at them when they're early, when they're late, when they skew right, when they skew left. i avert my eyes and suggest you avert yours similarly. the truth is donald, nearly one in five say they like donald trump. nearly one in five. that's a lot. look, they like him -- not because of who his wives were. they don't care what his policies are particularly. i agree with howie on that. i don't think they care
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particularly that he's not politics. they like it when he's brash and a little crass. but, here's the big but. the big but is as he is there at the front. as he gets closer to the finish line and he starts putting the club a little bit, starts worrying about, gee, maybe i can be the front-runner, i can be the guy, we saw this with gingrich, you get to the top, you want to stay there and you start changing your game. >> i don't know. he is unlike any politician we've ever seen before. i think it's fair to say. >> correct me, megyn, he goes to scotland for a golfing tournament and still gets 100 times more coverage than all the other republicans back here in the states. >> that's right. his mere celebrity causes people to want to see him and follow him and report on him. >> and when the press attacks him, voters say we don't like the press anyway. >> that's true. speaking of crass, i'll forgive you for that big butt comment.
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isn't it like 12:30? a rough 24 hours for the democratic front-runner just got worse with the release of new polls and a new report that's raising serious questions now about her private e-mail server. it went from bad to worse today. ed henry and mark are here on that. plus, new evidence suggesting search teams may have found flight 370 missing for more than a year now, that malaysia airlines flight. what's turned up, just ahead. >> it would not surprise me if more debris would be washing up in that part of the region.
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unfavorable opinion of mrs. clinton. look at that. and it comes as new reports suggest classified e-mails from her private server contained information from five different intelligence agencies. a development experts suggest at best shows why she never should have used her own personal e-mail system and at worst may be a crime. we'll speak to mark in a moment. we begin with ed henry in washington. ed? >> reporter: megyn, the state department releases 30,000 official e-mails hillary clinton turned over though, remember, she also deleted around 30,000 e-mails she claimed were personal. we may never see. two inspectors general have now said there is, in fact, classified information on her server though they have no knowledge of classification markings allowing clinton to maintain she did not know it was classified. today mcclatchy reported among the e-mails in her server there's information from five different intelligence agencies including material from the benghazi terror attacks that
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clinton today used in a news conference to point a finger at the state department for the slow pace of e-mails' release. >> this is a question for the state department. they're the ones bearing the responsibility to sort through these thousands and thousands of e-mails. >> reporter: clinton on defense, not picking up new information tonight that her camp is getting nervous about vice president joe biden getting in. when they learned biden's chief of staff met with sussman. sussman confirmed there was a breakfast but it was a personal meeting and he's not planning to help biden. in the wake of his son's death, the vice president and family are going through a tough time. any speculation is premature about his political future. >> so what does this mean for hillary clinton? a fox news contributor and former speechwriter for george w. bush. let's start with this. they found five e-mails with
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classified information about it. we knew that yesterday. now we find out they come from five different intelligence agencies, the big ones like the soo i sigh and the dni and the list goes on. and now her critics are saying this may be a crime and one worse than general petreus was because the fbi raided his home in part because classified information was not being properly stored there in a way that would protect it. hers is on her personal server in chappaqua. >> and she's not in office anymore. you're not allowed to retain classified information once you've left office. those five e-mails were from a sample of only 40 e-mails that the office of inspector general was allowed to look.
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five out of 40 is about 1 of 8. if you extrapolate 30,000 e-mails you're talking thousands if it continues at that rate. that is a serious issue and it is, quite frankly, a crime, a crime to remove and retain classified information from its secure government facility. >> and the clintons know that because they've been in a similar position before. >> exactly right. in 2003 bill clinton's national security adviser sandy berger was investigated. he removed five classified documents from the national archives and he had to plead guilty to a misdemeanor, removal and retention of classified information, fined $50,000. he was sentenced to two years of probation, 100 hours of community service and had his security service cleared for three years and gave up his law license to avoid disbarment.
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that was five documents. we've already reached the threshold of five documents with hillary clinton based on just 40, a sample of 40. if you go through 30,000 e-mails there could be hundreds or thousands. >> that won't necessarily save her. in the meantime, the polls, mark, she is now under water by 11 points with just 40% approving of her. 51% disapproving and her unfavorables, honest and trustworthy, only 57% of the people believe she is not honest or trustworthy. >> that's really bad news. the really bad news is when quinnipiac asked people what is the number one issue you're looking for in a president? honest and trustworthy. 57% say she is not honest and trustworthy. her numbers have dropped 16 points in the last year so it's
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a direct result of this e-mail controversy and it's not going away. >> all the gop-ers are out there bashing her every day. >> i don't think they've shown her not to be honest and trustworthy. she's done that by saying i don't have any classified information on my server and now we find out she did. the state department is releasing this, so there will be a bunch of e-mails released tomorrow and then a few weeks later more. the inspector general will see how many agencies' information was on that. we'll get to the point this could be a criminal investigation. >> we're talking about the intelligence community inspector general who went through and said there may have been potentially hundreds of classified e-mails on her private server. we'll continue to follow it. new video from a traffic stop that ended with a cincinnati cop charged with
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murder. his lawyer says there's more than what we see on this video. he is here next in a must-see interview. also, new outrage with one of america's top supermodels. yes, i know. it has nothing to do with what she's wearing in this picture. but brian wanted us to put that up and talk about how this guy missed the memo. remember tom ranks' memo? there's no crying in baseball! there's no crying, sir. >> so i went down and said, listen, i don't know what's going on. we have a game to play. let's go play baseball. you owned your car for four years. you named it brad. you loved brad. and then you totaled him. you two had been through everything together. two boyfriends. three jobs. you're like "nothing can replace brad!" then liberty mutual calls. and you break into your happy dance.
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simmering debate. a police officer and 43-year-old samuel debose. mr. debose was killed instantly by a single gunshot to the head during a routine traffic stop that went horribly wrong and was captured on the officer's body camera. here is part of that. >> i'm still trying to figure out if you have a license or not. go ahead and take the seat belt off. go ahead and take your seat belt -- stop! >> today he appeared in court pleading not guilty to charges of murder and manslaughter when the judge set a high bail the victim's friends cheered the decision and the judge was not having it. >> the possibility of life in prison, it is the court's duty to ensure his appearance, the bond $1 million. [ applause ] >> ladies and gentlemen! this is a courtroom. you will conduct yourself at all
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times. appropriately. >> a million dollar bond. the person representing the officer. thank you for being here tonight. so the d.a. came out and made a forceful statement one day after he made the first forceful statement against your client saying this was a no-brainer, saying cops had come up and why they didn't release the tape at first. listen. >> we wanted him to keep talking, so we didn't want him to couch his testimony around what he saw on television. and he was not dragged. i mean, he intentionally shot this man in the head and anyone who has any common sense knows the foreseeable result of shooting one in the head is to
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kill them. that's why he's facing a murder charge. >> your reaction to that? >> well, i like to try my cases in the courtroom. but the reason i am here tonight and have appeared in other places is because of statements like that. this case has been -- ray has been run over by a bus or a train since the day of the shooting by officials here in hamilton county, ohio, to the point where it's going to be very difficult for him to get a fair trial in my opinion especially when the prosecuting attorney of the county is making statements like that just all the time. >> it's extraordinary. we saw this in the baltimore case with mosley. >> i agree. that's why we're trying to mount
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some type of response to it because the d.a., the hamilton county prosecuting attorney, the city manager and others have -- and the police chief of cincinnati, they've all -- the city manager -- have said how terrible this tape is, some without having seen it made that pronouncement. and now the entire country and here where we are going to attempt to pick a jury believe that ray tensing murdered sam debose without having seen any other evidence or heard the complete story. >> we do see the tape, and what it appears -- what it appears to show is that the officer shot this man because he decided to speed away and he decided to stop him or maybe he was fearful, i don't know. all the man did was try to speed away and he shot him in the
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head. my apologies. hold on. our guest has lost his ear piece. i'm going to stand you by because we do have our lawyers here. fox news' legal analyst. we'll get back to the other lawyer if we can. the problem is that the tape does not support what the officer said repeatedly after the shooting. and let me just play to the audience what the officer said after the shooting. here us defending his single gunshot to the head of this man. >> he was dragging me. he was dragging me. i thought i was going to get run over. the tape, i don't see it, mark. i don't think it supports it. >> i disagree. i think the defense has a great chance to win this case if they can get david copperfield onboard to make this tape disappear.
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short of that, they've got a really difficult challenge ahead. the tape does not appear to support what the shooter is alleging. >> arthur, what do you see? they're going to argue that debose started the car and started to leave and that the officer was in fear for his life. he thought he was going to get run over and that's why he shot him. >> i think we need to understand, this is not a regular police officer. he is but he's not a cincinnati local police officer. he's a university police officer and that's something the district attorney made clear in his statement yesterday that the university should do what they do best, educating people. and not being involved in law enforcement, let the police departments handle that. so you have an inexperienced cop with a gun who reacted to a certain situation in a horribly tragic way.
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>> stu is back with us now. how are you going to argue his statements he was dragging me, he was dragging me with factual when we see no dragging on the tape? we see t car turn on and he shoots the guy in the head. >> megyn, i have received called from across the country since that tape has been released, from university professors and from citizens who have spent time going over that tape over and over and they have pointed out and e-mailed t various things they have seen in that tape that confirm that ray tensing somehow ended up some 20 to 25 feet beyond the point where he was talking to sam debose at his car door. >> even if that's true he shoots him before that. even if he ultimately gets dragged, he appeared to shoot him before any dragging might take place. >> i can't sit here and banter
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back and forth about what the tape does or does not show. everybody has their own opinion, their own interpretation of it. hopefully at some point after we get further into it we will be able to retain an expert to break the tape down. >> before i get back to the other guys, the d.a. said something yesterday that caught my eye which is there was something in this officer's history that led him to believe he never should have been allowed to be a cop, that this is going to come out but he found something in tensing's background that would support the belief he never should have been a police officer. >> he hasn't shared that with me which is part of the issue in the case. the prosecutor and other people have shared a whole lot of things that i don't know whether they have evidence to support that or back it up or not. they've tried this case in the press, and part of it, i think, is because of the fear there may be a repeat ferguson, missouri, or baltimore, maryland, here in
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cincinnati, ohio, and they're attempting to keep a lid on it by throwing my client under the bus. >> stu, thank you. bark to mark and arthur now. what do you make of it that it's being overcharged and the d.a. is being overly vocal? >> we need to be consistent. if we are going to come down on mosley, i would put this district attorney in the same category. that was not the way i was rais as a prosecutor. the prosecutor has one press conference where he gives the facts impassionately not this is the most poshl thing i've ever seen but these are the facts and this is what we're going to pursue and the counts we're going to pursue. we'll see you in the courtroom, thank you. walk away. i criticize him the same way. >> the question is, mark, in the same vein, and i'm not defending this police officer. i admit this tape looks terrible. >> right.
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>> but many are asking how he gets a murder charge here as opposed to a manslaughter charge. >> because in that state all it takes is a purposeful shooting. there's no first, no second. it's if it was deliberate. the only thing that would argue that, i had my finger near the trigger and it happened to go off. i didn't intend to do it. that's not what he's arguing. it's purposeful and unless he has the defense and it doesn't appear based on the video -- >> a better defense here, arthur, where he could say i thought he was going to run me over. i believed. >> obviously in the situation we can't say the cover-up is worse than the crime. it's horrible. his statements from the little that we know so far are horrible and the other two officers say, yes. i saw him getting dragged by the
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car. they charged the higher count to give defense attorneys the ability to plea-bargain. okay, he's charged with a murder. we'll give him 20 years and the case disappears. >> megyn, his lawyer talked about experts. you'll have jurors who aren't robots make their own determination about whether he was being dragged and it doesn't look good. >> we'll see what happens. good to see you both. new evidence turned up late today that may be turned to flight 370. that missing malaysia airlines, missing for more than a year. what investigators are now looking at tonight, plus, brian kilmeade is here talking about how a super mmodel angered a lo of folks today. a young and attractive nanny could be between jennifer garner and ben affleck.
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tell your doctor right away if you have these, new, or worsening depression, or unusual changes in mood or behavior. or swelling, trouble breathing, rash, hives, blisters, muscle pain with fever, tired feeling, or blurry vision. common side effects are dizziness, sleepiness, weight gain and swelling of hands, legs and feet. don't drink alcohol while taking lyrica. don't drive or use machinery until you know how lyrica affects you. those who have had a drug or alcohol problem may be more likely to misuse lyrica. now i have less diabetic nerve pain. and i love helping first graders put their best foot forward. ask your doctor about lyrica. tom brady has been in the headlines all week, but now it is his wife creating controversy. gisele reportedly donned a
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traditional islamic burka if an attempt to sneak into a plastic surgeon's office unnoticed. brian kilmeade heard there was a story and decided to report on it. >> that is not true. >> she was going in for plastic surgery? >> she retired, you know, as supermodel. >> she still wants the maintenance. >> because she wasn't happy, this is according to a source, her breasts and eyes were sagging, and if you look at her -- >> at 35, i mean, she has had kids. >> that's imperfections, we're all screwed. she decides to go in in a burqa, not glasses and a hat, a burqa. that insults many in a time of ramadan. >> it is a religious garment, not for hiding. >> but there's a problem with gisele's plan, much like her husband. >> this is her on the left going
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into the same clinic weeks earlier. >> the problem is everybody evidently in the paparazzi world knows the chauffeur who is not wearing a burqa so as soon as the chauffeur turned up, why is she here, he is there, and people who know the muslim religion, you're wearing an open-toed shoe, you may be a brazilian supermodel. >> not allowed to show the open toes. the sister had the same back pack seen on one of the women leaving the same clinic july 15th. they department cover their tracks. she got plastic surgery and insulted islam in one fell swoop. >> i like the way we've gone over this. this is the way you're breaking this down. >> i don't understand why you can't understand any bad news about gisele or tom brady is welcome because we are jealous. we want their lives and beauty and money and fame and they seem
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like nice people. >> they have everything. >> including great breasts and great eyes now. >> and i was just going to say now that you're retired, gisele, fix yourself up. up. please. >> we have to talk about this guy who he cried -- we only have one minute. hold on. no. take that down. we're going to do this after the break. forget him. right now i want to talk about ben affleck. he is dating his former nanny? did she split them up? >> us magazine and "people" magazine say a friend of the nanny say they had something going on. these are two sources. ben affleck denies it. and the woman says she should not have been terminated because evidently jennifer garner acted and fired her right away.ne now they are claiming this nanny tipped off. so they would see ben affleck and get photos at the right time. is she media and wants p.r.? >> she was also neil patrick harris's nanny where there is much less danger.
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>> he being a gay man. >> absolutely. robin williams had the same issues. joe piscopo. >> i'm happy to say i actually have an incredibly beautiful nanny, and i have no fear, because she is a good woman, and doug is a good man. we'll be right back. believable! toenail fungus? seriously? smash it with jublia! jublia is a prescription medicine proven to treat toenail fungus. use jublia as instructed by your doctor. look at the footwork! most common side effects include ingrown toenail, application site redness, itching, swelling, burning or stinging, blisters, and pain. smash it! make the call and ask your doctor .
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that's when my parents drove all the way down to mexico to see me play the game. and did i cry? >> no, no, no. >> do you know why? >> no. >> because there is no crying in baseball. there is no crying in baseball. >> that was one of the best clips ever. that movie is great. apparently there is crying in baseball. tell who did it. >> what happened is shortstop wilmer flores, 23 years old of the new york mets found out through social media, not through proper channels, that he was traded in the seventh inning.
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>> how? he has his iphones out there? >> he's been the team since he was 16. >> 16? >> 16. and all of the sudden he gets word he is traded to the milwaukee brewers. he comes back. terry collins, his manager says he is not traded. why are you crying? if you are traded, stop crying. i need to you play the next inning. so they send him out there and he's crying even worse the next inning. >> aw, it's sad. >> see what i like about this? this shows it is not just a game. it is somebody you feel passion for. i like that he cried. >> i do too. but they were so mean. the announcers are like, he's crying, he's crying. >> they were. >> they're terrible. he is a young kid. >> right. but a lot of times you get traded, they pull you off the field. and when you get traded, you cry in your locker room, you cry to yourself, you cry in the car. he was forced to cry on the field because it is social media. again, we should forget about the internet, forget about social media and this wouldn't happen. by the way, the trade blew up. it didn't work. he is still on the mets. he got a beautiful ovation for crying. usually they cry because they're on the mets. not when they're leaving the mets.
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so this is a big moment for mets fans. we're all happy that someone is crying that was sent away but he's got to stay now. >> i'm on his side. >> wilmer flores. >> bye, wilmer. i mean welcome, congratulations. i don't know. we'll be right back. >> we're glad you're saying.
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breaking tonight, that piece of the airplane wing found yesterday off the coast of africa will now be flown to france to see if it's from
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malaysian 370, missing for over a year. investigators also found battered luggage today that washed much the same area thousands of miles from the path of this plane. final note. facebook.com/the kelly file for what life is like on the set of the kelly file. see you tomorrow. tonight, they see what's happening. there is a movement going on. >> people are tired of incompetent politicians. >> despite attacks from the media, donald trump continues to surge in the polls. then a shocking new undercover video shows a planned parenthood executive negotiating prices for fetal parts. the creator of these videos will be here. >> this is the most asinine act i've ever seen a police officer make. >> and a cincinnati cop is charged with murder after killing an unarmed man during a traffic stop. >> stop, stop! >> our panel tonight reacts. and a new book claims that bill clinton is cheating on hillary with a shapely bnd