tv The Five FOX News August 26, 2015 2:00pm-3:01pm PDT
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that appears right now to be the working theory for the motive. >> mike forgive me but i'm coming up against a hard break and i have to leave it there. mike barber, thank you very much indeed for joining us. >> thanks for having me. >> "the five" is next. hello, everyone. i'm kimberly guilfoyle and this is a fox news alert. it's been a very upsetting day. this morning a report and a cameraman from a cbs news affiliate in roanoke, virginia were murdered during a live newscast. n another victim is recovering from the gunshot wound. allison parker and adam ward of wdbj tv were shot and killed by a former anchor at their station who was fired two years ago. his name was vester lee flanagan but went by the name brice williams. the general manager of the news station told viewers more after what led to his firing earlier. >> vester was an unhappy man. we employed him as a reporter,
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and he had some talent in that respect and some experience, although he had been out of the business for awhile when he was hired here. he quickly became -- gathered a reputation as someone who was difficult to work with. would you say, joe? he was sort of looking out for people to say things that he could take offense to. and eventually, after many incidents of his anger coming to the fore, we dismissed him. and he did not take that well. we had to call the police to escort him from the building. >> flanagan recorded himself carrying out the killings and posted the video on social media. he then shot himself after police closed in on him. the sheriff of franklin county was among many horrified viewers
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watching this morning when the tragedy unfolded on live television. >> it is really -- stopped me in my tracks this morning. like many viewers i was watching this morning's broadcast and couldn't understand really what was happening myself at that time. >> [ inaudible ]. >> very emotional. >> for more on the investigation and the victim who survived this horrific attack we are joined by fox's peter deucy at the scene. in moneta, virginia. this is a rapidly unfolding story throughout the day and so much heartache and loss in one moment. what can you tell us? >> reporter: and kimberly, you get a sense of how recently this happened in what on a different day would be a beautiful vacation town. if you look over my shoulder here at bridgewater plaza where an interview about tourism
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turned into a murder scene live on a morning show, you can see a wdbj 7 live truck. and that is sitting now just steps away from the spot where this reporter turned murderer stalked two of his former colleagues and shot them dead in cold blood while they were doing a live shot about something -- talking to somebody from the chamber of commerce. it's a story of great interest to people in the town. it is a story that turned into a great tragedy. and what's really frightening about this is, a reporter would know how a live shot works. a reporter like this murderer would know that if you walk up behind a photographer while a reporter is doing a live interview turn like this, north going to see you. it's great cover and you see that reflected in the video that he shot with either a phone or a go pro as he sneaks up for
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several seconds completely undetected before he starts shooting. so that all happened here. it is really difficult not only to watch the videos but also to come here and to see that it is still a very active investigation. the car that this news crew, beloved by wall in this community, took to what would be their last live report still sits in the parking lot. kimberly? >> such a tragedy. jesse. >> peter, jesse watters. quick question for you. the firearm that was used here looked like a handgun on the video. what do we know about that? and does this guy have any sort of criminal history? i can't find anything anywhere about any history for him that would preclude him from buying the firearm. and then lastly, the final moment, did he shoot himself in the head when police closed in? what happened at the last second there? >> reporter: to start at the end, we know that the final last moments on earth for this
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shooter at a hospital just under a four-hour drive from here. he was driving north on i-66 when the virginia state police used a license plate reader that sits on the side of a state police trooper car. it picked up his license plate, set off an alarm. they pursued him. he would not stop. there was some kind of an accident. we don't know whether he ran off the road before or after he shot himself. we also don't know where he shot himself. but it is being described as a self-inflicted wound. as for the gun, they still haven't said if it was even his weapon. it's probably too early to speculate about whether or not he could have had it. in terms of his background, you haven't heard anybody say anything particularly nice about him. it sounds like he was quite a handful at just about every single stop that he was at, including the stop where he met allison and adam. but we don't know too much yet about any criminal history that would have precluded him from buying a gun if it was in fact
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his begun. >> greg? >> peter, was there any sign that he was planning on doing more damage? he was trying to get away? was he heading somewhere in particular? we had security all over the place in new york. was he going somewhere? >> reporter: and we brought security down here. because we were not sure exactly who was out there or if this guy was still out there. no indication on what he might have been planning. but it looked like he was just trying to get as much publicity as possible. because it was from social media accounts that were linked to his on-air name, brice williams, the name that he used basically his fake name that he used when he was a reporter before he got fired. he just wanted the whole world not only to know what his beef was with allison and adam, he was accusing them or discrimination. he was accusing them of racism. he also wanted the whole world to see his point of view video of their execution, of them
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dying and not even seeing it coming. and so we don't know what he was doing. but it is remarkable that basically the entire national press corps from washington, d.c. was heading down this way. it's about a four-hour drive. and the hospital where he died is about four hours in the other direction. so he probably passed by many news crews who were coming down to cover the horrible acts that he committed this morning on his way up before his final encounter with the police. >> dana. >> i was wondering about his psychiatric background. so jesse asked you about the criminal background, if there was any. i'm wondering if there was any sort of psychological problems, background type of thing. and also was he working in between being fired from the station at which he committed the murder and today? >> it sounds like he was not
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working in television anymore. and he might have still been somehow in the area. but we are still trying to figure that out. and in terms of getting in his head, he just, according to the people that worked with him and the people who had to call the cops when they wanted to fire him so that he didn't go completely crazy and hurt anybody at the station two years ago, he just had anger problems. he just had something inside. he was really angry. everything that we have been able to gather also is that he would just look for the tiniest little thing that somebody would say, take it the wrong way, and then file a complaint or sue them or then he would have a serious problem. now, obviously, there could be deeper problems. but nothing specific that's out there yet, dana. >> all right, juan, you have a question. >> so peter, i saw that he tried to say oh, this is the start of a race war and cited charleston, the shooting down in charleston.
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he also made reference to the murders at virginia tech several years ago. he said the shooter there was "my boy" like someone he admired. and he spoke about that shooter as having killed more people that were killed at colombine by dylan klibold and aaron harris. was he studying other mass murderers or killers? >> reporter: nothing -- i haven't had a chance to review the entire i believe it's 23 page fax that he sent. but what is striking about the virginia tech comparison is in this part of virginia, that particular crime shook everybody. just about everybody knows somebody who went to v.t. in blacksburg. it is not that far from here. so that is a very unsettling comparison.
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again still no word on where he might have been going. his social media posts kind of cut off after the police caught up with him. and he ended up shooting himself and dying in the hospital. but no word on who he might have been modelling himself after just yet. but who knows what else is out there. >> unbelievable. >> online. >> peter, thank you for that update. we'll take it around the table now. you also kind of wonder he was sitting there brewing, steaming about the fact he was let go. perhaps no other future employment opportunities for the past four few years. how do you identify somebody like that, dana, two years separate from the incident could still act out like this. very difficult. >> how do you continue to monitor somebody after two years? like if you have a hostile employee and they have to be escorted out of building, you might want to keep security a little tight for 30 days, whatever. there was apparently no indication that there was a direct threat from him against her or against the cameraman
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that he also killed. in addition, it sounds to me like this is somebody who has psychological problems. yet again, here we are, we can do a story like this a week of the psychiatric problems. i know there's the gun issue. and immediately that's where some people want to go and have more gun laws. but we still then skirt the issue about mental health in the country. >> well, we had hillary clinton and josh earnest making a comment. you want to make a comment and then we'll listen to what they have to say. >> yeah. i think we have -- we already kind of -- >> it is another example of gun violence that is becoming all too common in communities large and small all across the united states. there are some common sense things that only congress can do that we know would have a tangible impact in reducing gun violence in this country. >> i will extend my condolences and sympathies to their families and to their co-workers.
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i will also reiterate we have got to do something about gun violence in america. >> okay, greg was asking to make a comment on that. >> well, to me that's silly. it's basically after seeing a fire going don't play with matches. that's the mentality here. we actually have a fairly -- we have a body of science that suggests a real solution. spree killers, as juan had mentioned, always refer to earlier spree killings. they are obsessed with it. they are enamored by those that succeed at this. whether virginia tech or columbine or norway. who cares about his past job experience or intent. this is about infamiliy. the only thing we can do refuse the infamy that they desire. losers when they see losers lose fame you deny them in the fame. you can marry ville to
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technology that's accessible to all of us. which means for example today when you turned on twitter you had video auto play which actually just comes up and you see this. even when you don't want to see it. >> right. >> we have to stop this. don't talk about these losers. let them be forgotten like the tools that they are. because we just make losers emulate losers. they do this with other crimes. they don't cover teen suicides because they don't want to have copycat teen suicides. we have to do that with this. >> the question is it news. the thing is i thought today was remarkable, kimberly, because of the way america experienced it. which is jesse and i were talking. it's on the internet, right? it's on his facebook page. as greg was saying it comes up as a live feed on your twitter account. >> auto play now it comes up whether you like it or not it will roll. >> yeah. so it's like -- and then of course, don't forget, with a live shot of going on a live broadcast when the woman was
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shot, when the cameraman is shot. so this guy played to our world as it is in terms of advancing his crazy ego. i mean, i don't think there's any question about it. he wants to be known. he wants to be in with the guy who did the killing at virginia tech. >> when i saw the video today i felt like i was watching a snuff film. it was absolutely disgusting. it was probably the first social media murder we've ever seen in this country. it was very racially charged. it was a black journalist who shot two white journalists in cold blood and filmed it. so disgusting. i know tomorrow we can talk about motives blaming it on a youtube video or a flag. today we realize all lives matter. lastly on the gun thing, gun sales in virginia over the last ten years, way up. gun crime in virginia? way down. so there's a correlation there. so when hillary is saying we
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need gun control, i'm not sure what gun laws she's talking about. >> i can tell you. how about closing loopholes that let people like this guy who's mentally nuts go and buy a gun. >> we don't even know the facts, juan. just to say this guy shouldn't have bought a gun we don't even know that. we should close loopholes. you guys want to obsess on mental health issues. >> you want to make up a fact pattern that doesn't exist. you have to have the evidence and facts to support it to say he has a history of mental illness not just somebody who was a jerk at the network. you can't strip people of constitutional rights in the aftermath bus you don't like the outcome. >> i'm not trying to strip anybody's rights. we should close loopholes so we know who's buying guns. >> and make mental health counc counselling available for people like this. [ overlapping speakers ] >> there's a lot to talk about on this show as usual. the good news is, greta van susteren will be down in virginia tonight for special coverage for "on the record"
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so another day, another video from the center for medical progress exposing the selling of intact dead babies. >> what would keep your lab happy? what would make your lap happy? >> another 50 livers a week. >> what would keep your lab happy? >> another 50 livers a week. >> so you can handle that? >> yeah. >> okay. >> yeah. i mean, you know, volume for us. >> volume price. so should the center win a pulitzer for this work? after all, ralph nader was lie onized for exposing the dangers of certain cars. rachel carson was sainted for demonizing ddt which actually saved lives. documentaries on dolphin cruelty win worldwide acclaim. president barack obama snagged a nobel prize for winning an election. al gore won one, too, and an oscar for fomenting the apocalypse. 60 minutes won emmys for its
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ambush journalism. movies get made about the first rap renegades. but really in terms of guts, nwa holds no candle to the cmp. they did what the mainstream media would never do, piercing an iconic organization that media hacks spent careers covering for. the cmp dedicated years to this project, exposing the service that most people never knew existed because most journalists chose to ignore it. that's real reporting. yet after exposing the unspeakable, no accolades. if only republicans were sending the dead babies by mail instead it would matter. instead you have funny or die defending or those who butcher for the greater good. whether you like planned parenthood or not, you cannot deny these videos are true bombshells, the kind that would stir the envy of today's woodward and bernsteins if they actually exist. perhaps their absence of just one of many in this pro-choice world. >> so dana, this is not a newspaper or a blog.
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it's a group. but wouldn't you call this investigative journalism that's freelanced in a way? >> it's citizen journalism. when blo bloggers first came on the scene people would make fun of the guys in their pajamas in the basement. they would start breaking news. i remember when a "new york times" reporter called me to follow up on a rumor that started with one of these bloggers. and i said, aren't you embarrassed you're following this story? he said the last time i didn't it was a blogger and it was rob louie who now works at the heritage foundation who actually revealed that dan rather's documents about george bush's national guards service were forged. that was news. and it wasn't done by anybody who was sanctioned by the press as being like a card-carrying member of the press corps. the other thing is, technology has improved the ability for citizen journalists not only in this country but all over the world. it is celebrated when you can get technology like a phone into the hands of somebody in south sudan to do reporting for us
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that we can't do ourselves. >> that's true. somebody could tape us. >> and they should. >> no, they shouldn't. >> it would be a blockbuster. >> it really would. but we don't do this. k.g. your head was about to explode. >> right. because when i listen to her language in talking about i'd like to have 50 more livers a day? i just want to say you're the hannibal lector of family planning. you're a butcher, you're a murderer. you have no heart. and hell will be waiting for you. that's how i feel. it is so disgusting. i don't know how this isn't the lead on the news and the cover front page of the paper every day until this is stopped and this butchering is shut down. it is disgusting. they are using science to be able to make an excuse and just fight murders that they are committing. to me it's reprehensible. and not to get into all the details of the video, people that care to learn about it can click on it and watch it so you understand where we're coming from. because we have so we know what's going on. it's very disturbing. >> juan, you've been around.
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that's a compliment. do you remember geraldo got famous, it was willow brook. do you remember the mental institution? he went there it was a state-run institution for mentally disabled. and the horrors behind it. that changed everything. that's old school journalism. investigative journalism. it seems like this would fit that perfectly. >> yeah. well, no, i don't think it fits perfectly. but it's the same model. so i'll acknowledge that. but these guys are having trouble even today because apparently they used a picture of a still birth and made it seem as if it's what was being talked about. so people are questioning whether or not they have a strong political agenda and questioning their earthics in terms of journalism. i think this is really an argument about abortion and if you support or oppose abortion and is being done under the guise of this kind of -- >> that's an excuse. i can contradict that. i'm not doing anything about abortion. i realize it's here to stay.
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this is barbaric and wrong and has to be stopped. >> is it barbaric if they crack open my chest to do heart surgery on me? >> that's life-saving. >> hold on. just saying if you stop and talk about what doctors -- >> basically you're building health benefits on the dead. people who didn't even have a chance to be alive. >> that's infanticide and that's their business model. they're delivering the baby through partial birth abortion on purpose so they can pluck out the body parts like mr. potato head. this is what they're doing, juan. have you seen the videos? this. >> this is pleasing to you. why is it pleasing to you? >> because it's a political agenda here. >> to protect babies. >> a minute ago you said this wasn't about abortion, kimberly. [ overlapping speakers ] >> saying to you they shouldn't be butchering babies. >> juan, you're having the political argument. >> i'm not having --
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>> you're defending planned parenthood as a political angle. >> if i wanted to defend planned parenthood i would tell you in fact they don't do many abortion. mostly they prevent abortions through contraception. >> i'm sure that's all they do, juan. but they're making a ton of money off dead baby body parts. >> citizen journalism breaks down because you have your own agenda. >> what's the agenda? saving babies? >> no, abortion. you are opposed to abortion. >> isis chops off baby's heads and you're not okay with that but okay with planned parenthood doing it. >> they're not chopping off any baby heads. >> do you know what an intact specimen is? >> you're talking about stopping fetal research in this country. >> that is not true. >> that's legal. this isn't. >> this story will not go away, obviously. thank god. all right. i mean the investigation will not end. new e-mail excuses from hillary clinton today.
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today hillary clinton once again addressed the scandal she can't make go away. >> my use of personal e-mail was allowed by the state department. it clearly wasn't the best choice. i should have used two e-mails, one personal, one for work. and i take responsibility for that decision. >> i'm confident that this process will prove that i never sent nor received any e-mail that was marked classified. >> but there were classifieded e-mails, and there are concerns some messages may have put lives in jeopardy, including
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ambassador chris steve whoephend in the aembassy attack in benghazi. two were updates from stephens himself. one mentioned contingent plans to evacuate american diplomats by sea. the other detailed safety precautions his team was taking at their hotel. fox news also identified two benghazi-related e-mails that prompted the fbi's investigation. so kimberly, her window for nailing this answer down is closing pretty rapidly. >> it sure is. i think this spells big trouble for her. she can only kind of rely on sort of the clinton teflon ability to be able to deflect this. but i think this is significant. because it also tells us some very important information about benghazi. you have the situations where people say if only we had known. if only we had had an idea things were so dire and so serious over there. it shows the amount of information she has on that. one, two, it shows she's sort of been changing her story along the way in terms of what she knew, what she had access to.
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i'm guaranteeing you there's no shot that hillary or huma or cheryl that they all get off scot-free on this. somebody's going to have to take a fall on it. it's very obvious they're complicit in this and there's problems. >> remember when benghazi was happening and one of the things the state department did to protect hillary clinton is to say, oh, how could any secretary of state keep up with all the cables? she's actually getting the e e-mails to her private server and e-mail. >> benghazi is the toilet paper stuck to her shoe she's never going to get rid of. because it reflects her incompetence and arrogance. >> double ply. >> benghazi is a microcosm for our great security. she misidentified the threat intellectually blaming it on a video which says a lot about her ideology, brazen political nature. and she treats classified information like a co-ed would on snap chat. we live in an age where most
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violence these days is performed by nonstate actors. people who can do basically anything they want to. you need to have somebody in the white house that takes national security seriously. she sacrificed national security for her only personal privacy. that's wrong. maybe she shouldn't go to jail. she shouldn't be in the big house, but she shouldn't be in the white house. but she should worry about the big house. >> and forget about the white house. >> she had to pay her lawyer a lot of money it looks like. think about this. her ambassador is in libya on the anniversary of 9/11. and she has on her unsecured server evacuation plans. she has hotel logistics. she has the tactics that the militants use. now, mike morrell the former cia director says he assumes that the server was hacked. so let's assume our enemies know this information. did hillary put our ambassador at risk? that's what this is all about.
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and that is what trey gowdy is sniffing into. right now we're right up to the edge of what's really going to happen. >> right up to the edge of your crazy conspiracy. >> what's crazy about that? i'm not the cia director. >> not "politico" that reported it. >> you can report. look. it wasn't marked -- her point was it was never marked that stephens sends along this is our -- >> every intel agency that sends an e-mail is automatically marked classified. obama actually signed that. >> you can scream all you like. but facts are the facts. >> sometimes the truth is loud, juan. >> you must be the truth, then. that's what you are. >> do we have time for the next one? >> let me say this is again you guys going way over. and again, this was supposed to be about benghazi. there's nothing there that indicates somehow that she is to blame for benghazi or somebody was negligent in protecting our assets or ambassador. >> she was negligent. she denied him protection.
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>> how many hearings have we had? >> she denied him protection. >> she didn't comply with or provide the information. that's the thing. you say there's nothing there. really? >> really. >> they had security issues. she knew about it. they died. she denied it. >> she testified and case closed. nothing was found. >> juan, you're carrying more water than an alhambra truck. >> i don't even know what that means. >> bottled water. >> maybe that's west coast. >> do we have time for this or what? i'm going to go for it. so you heard that joe biden might be deciding to run. she actually responded to this with this incredible response. take a look. >> i have a great deal of admiration and affection for him. and i think he has to make what is a very difficult decision for himself and his family. and he should have the space and the opportunity to decide what he wants to do. i'm going to be running for
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president regardless. i always thought this would be a competitive campaign. i don't think anybody should have thought otherwise. >> greg, quick. do you think she always thought it would be a very competitive campaign? >> no. she thought it was a coronation. the great thing is her husband bill is upset that hillary is getting poorly treated by a man that she trusted. that's like bill cosby being upset that charlie sheen treats women badly. >> he wants to be the first man. biden is getting in the way. >> that's true. we'll be talking about that more i'm sure in the days ahead. coming up, though, the -- has a lot to say about the incident today and so does donald trump. you'll hear from both of them next.
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donald trump's been answering a lot of questions about his stance on immigration. but when jorge ramos from univision tried to ask him one last night, this happened. >> okay. who's next? yeah, please. excuse me. sit down. you weren't called. sit down. sit down. sit down. go ahead. >> i have the right to ask a question. >> no, you don't. you haven't been called. >> i have the right to ask a question. >> go back to univision. go ahead. >> you cannot deport 11 million people. you cannot even make a -- [ inaudible ] deny citizenship to children. >> sit down, please. >> you weren't called. >> i'm a reporter and i have the right to ask a question. >> trump did eventually invite
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ramos back in and sparred with him again for several minutes. both of them reacted to last night's fireworks on the morning shows today. >> he was totally out of line last night. i was asking and being asked a question from another reporter. i would have gotten to him very quickly. and he stood up and started ranting and raving like a madman. and frankly, he was out of line. >> i've been a journalist for more than 30 years. i've been all over the world. and i've never been thrown out of any press conference from any interview. this is not cuba or venezuela. >> so greg, i think ramos acted like an illegal alien got treated like one. he cut thewatters. >> the thing is he was rude. and here you have a reporter that is obsessed with our immigration issues. had he believes if you're not for like porous borders somehow you're bigoted. he should be asking the questions why are people fleeing his own country.
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he should be very passionate about the corruption and infrastructure, how come you can't drink the water? i asked that before. i'm trying to figure out how a world power you can't drink their water. but he made a mistake. you can't make a spectacle in front of another spectacle. it's like lighting a firecracker next to a roman candle. that's what he did. and by the way, trump did let him back in. >> that's right. he did cut in line. he cut in line. he interrupted. he was rude. he should be polite. that's my motto. >> hillary ties up reporters. obama spies on reporters. trump can't kick a reporter out? what's wrong? >> i actually think that trump was right to say, look, it's not your turn yet. the one thing i would advise him to do he needs to work on a look, right? like a little bit of a sit down, buddy, i'll get to you and then he could move on. it is interesting he's got security to be able to toss somebody out and bring him back in. the spectacle actually worked for both of them. jorge ramos was being like
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donald trump in doing as much as he could to get as much attention for himself. it worked for both of them because they have dominated the news. actually we know nothing more about the actual immigration policies we did 24 hours ago but we know a lot more about the style. i think you notice all the reporters were right behind mr. trump saying that's right. we're here, waiting our turn. >> that's true. but you dealt with this and the press corps. >> no one acted like that. >> my point simply is, there's meaning to the process. and to have some civility, to ask a question, wait until you're called on. because otherwise it's disrespectful to the other colleagues. >> you could ask a question at the end of a press conference, not the beginning. >> i was just kicked out of deblasio's press conference. and i didn't grandstand. i respected decorum. why can't ramos? >> why do you have to be like so dismissive and rude about illegal immigrants? jorge ramos was acting like a journalist. >> he disrespected the other
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journalists by cutting in front of them. >> jorge ramos had asked for an interview from trump, been denied. he goes to iowa, sits there, feels now i wasn't there. but he clearly felt like you know what? i'm going to push to the front of the line. and he was aggressive. we don't get punished in journalism for being aggressive. >> no. you get called on, juan. [ overlapping speakers ] >> what trump did -- slow down. what trump did does remind me of some kind of dictator or some kind of totalitarian society whereas greg said the henchmen come and throws you out. >> then he lets him back in and lets him ask a question? >> come on, dana. >> i don't like either one. but do you think putin would have invited the reporter back? [ overlapping speakers ] >> he'd be dead in russia. >> he would have given him palonium poisoning instead. >> he let him back in which was
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appropriate. he said listen you were out of order but now i'll let you come back in. >> he put this guy's phone number on the internet. this is bully tactics because he doesn't like the fact that jorge ramos stand up and says this is biassed discrimination against people who are mexican. >> trump answered more questions in five minutes with ramos than hillary has in five months. >> what is the most honest or dishonest city in the country? the trust of americans put to a test. a new experiment. the results are next. did you know that meeting your daily protein needs s to support your muscle health? did you know that meeting your daily protein needs boost® high protein nutritional drink can help you get the protein you need. each serving has 15 grams of protein to help maintain muscle, plus 26 vitamins and minerals including calcium and vitamin d to support strong bones. boost® high protein is the #1 selling high protein complete nutritional drink and it has a great taste-guaranteed! help get the nutrition you need everyday with boost® high protein. join the club at brandpower.com.
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can americans be trusted? as part of an annual experiment, just like gregory's comment, a company called honesty filled iced tea bottles in 27 cities. they charged a dollar per bottle. payment was based on the honor system. the result? 94% of americans, good guys, put a buck in the box. 6%, well, they just helped themselves. the most honest people were in atlanta! the least honest, providence, rhode island. people only took money out of the box in one city, my city, washington, d.c. >> shocker. >> so gregory -- >> picking our pockets, too. >> women are more honest than men. >> this is the most p.c. baloney
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ever. you know what they did? they tracked observable characteristics. meaning the only characteristics that wouldn't get them in trouble. so they did gender and hair color. they found the least trustworthy were bald people. so that was their lead. bald people are the least trustworthy because bald people don't have an activist group. what if they had done race? what if they had done it in specific parts of a city? they would be crucified. instead they went after hair and gender. >> like luther and dr. evil. >> what if it were like a bald woman and she had some disease. it would have been terrible. dana, what about atlanta? why atlanta? >> i'll tell you why it's atlanta. it's not a study it's a p.r. stunt for the company. why atlanta, georgia? it's hot there. so they're drinking more iced tea. it's a big thing. you're going to sell more iced tea in georgia than you are in rhode island. >> but you think they're honest because it's hot?
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>> no. i think it's about selling iced tea. >> good value. >> juan, they actually caught the person on camera who stole the money in d. krchc. you know who it was? >> no. >> hillary. >> one more thing up next. ♪ every auto insurance policy has a number. but not every insurance company understands the life behind it. those who have served our nation. have earned the very best service in return. ♪ usaa. we know what it means to serve. get an auto insurance quote and see
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it's been a wild one. time now for one more thing. i'm up first. i love the military. i love big bad you know what vehicles. so guess what. this is going to save lives and whit the butts of our enanies. the new jltv osh kosh read out lockheed martin to get this contract $6.75 billion to be able to protect our military. it's lighter, provides superior protection against mines and road side bombs. less injuries and fatalities to our precious troops. greater range and durability to transport the troops and the gears. i'm telling you, feast your eyes on that one. it is a beauty. >> hopefully they'll be allowed to use them. >> it's going going to be fantastic. there you go. that was mine. what is yours? first i got to wish happy birthday to my wife. >> happy birthday. >> yea yea. and now this.
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>> i hate these people! as you can tell, i have more emotion for hate than i do for love. all right. first it was gay marriage. >> we got that memo. >> then it was cats and dogs hanging out together which i don't like. now burger king has asked mcdonald's to collaborate to create an mcwhopper. and the profits of this franken steinian awful just monstrous. the profits go to a u.n. sponsored event called peace day, which we know is wrong. anyway, mcdonald's, got to love mcdonald's said no, thank you, burger king. by the way, burger king burgers, eh. your chicken sandwiches, done. >> why don't we have a food act that tonight. it's been a rough day for a lot of people. one thing people have enjoyed is it's national dog day. you know i got to love that.
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there's a picture this morning of jasper. i got a whole bunch of them. some pictures of rufus and edgar, buddy, lily and rose. look at these three. they're pretty cute. there's somebody named sergeant jasper. check him out. pretty cute. and sky. and also i have an update. the sock monkey has been replaced. jasper got it last night. within minutes he ripped a hole in it. >> now i feel more comfortable. jesse. >> do you like to get sloppy and wet? well, people in spain love it. at the annual tomato festival. people throwing tomatoes all over each other. real disgusting and juicy and everybody loved it. there was one fan who had an especially amazing time. let's hear what he had to say. >> all summer i'm excited! yeah. i like tomatoes! >> okay. >> the guy loves tomatoes. i do, too. >> juan. >> here's a note that was left by a vacation visitor to
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yellowstone park. very unhappy they didn't get to see yogi boo boo. it said our trip was wonderful but there were no bears. please train your bears to be where we can see them. it's an expensive trip. a brutal double murder live on tv. and posted on social media. a 21st century crime in real time, unlike any we've seen before. this is "special report." good evening. welcome to washington. i'm bret baier. journalists are supposed to cover the news. but tonight they are the news in tragic fashion. two young people in their 20s, alison parker and adam ward, a reporter and a photographer working for a tv station in roanoake, virginia were gunned down this morning. and it happened on live television. the shooter, a former colleague later posted his o
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