tv The Five FOX News June 23, 2016 2:00pm-3:01pm PDT
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complete coverage, it kicks off an hour from now beginning with my show, "making money" followed by lou dobbs at 7:00 a.m., trish regan at 8:00 and the rest of it for you. in the meantime, here's "the five." hello, i'm eric bolling along with kimberly guilfoyle, juan williams, dana perino and greg gutfeld, it's 5:00 in new york city and this is "the five." we have a fox news alert, it's 10:00 p.m. in great britain, where a vote being watched around the world has just ended. polls have just closed in the referendum to decide whether the uk should leave the european union, nicknamed brexit. the outcome could have a ripple effect across the globe. here some brips said how they were going to vote. >> the economic consequences of a vote out are huge. so that's why i'm voting to stay. >> we have meps, but we don't
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get to see what they do. >> i'm voting to remain. i think we're strong neer in th european union. >> we're taking in so many refugees, that's another reason why everyone wants to vote leave. >> let's go live now to london where fox news foreign affairs correspondent benjamin hall has the latest. benjamin, give us a sense, a lot of people said it was very close. our stock market did very well, indicating that maybe it's a remain vote? your thoughts? what are you hearing? >> well it's been so close over the last few weeks, people decided not to have exit polls. so we vth got those to give you right now. we hope to get them soon. this is the end of such a very messy, complicated long campaign. and at stake is the uk's position in the world. europe's position in the world and frankly, the future of both, 46 million people registered to vote. that's close to 70% of the population. and it will be the highest ever turn-out in uk history. only the third-ever referendum in the country.
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at the heart is whether the uk should cut all ties with the european union and go it alone. or if they should remain part of the european super state, which makes so many decisions on behalf of the uk. today david cameron who has led the campaign to stay inside europe, arrived a the a westminster polling station. he's been accused of scare-mongering throughout this campaign. >> this vote, if we leave is irreversib irreversible. if you jump back out of the airplane, you can't climb back up through the cockpit hatch. >> those who want to stay in, say it would be catastrophic to leave it would cut off the uk from their largest trading partners and it would leave and lead to a slump in the pound and also the economy. those who want to leave say that the uk simply can no longer has control over its own laws, even its own destiny. it's very close. as of last night it was 50-50, with 20% undecided. the only hint here is that the bookies, the people taking money have said 84% likely to remain. waiting for some odds here,
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that's what we're hearing so far. we'll let you know very soon what we're hearing. >> thank you very much, benjamin. we'll come back to you later for another update in a few minutes. now to breaking news at home, a deadlocked supreme court blocked president obama's immigration plan to shield millions of illegal immigrants from deportation and give them the right to work here legally in the united states. big blow to the president and he's not happy. >> i think it is heartbreaking for the millions of immigrants who made their lives here. we're going to have to make a decision about whether we are a people who tolerate the hypocrisy of the system where the workers who pick our fruit or make our beds, never have the chance to get right with the law. or whether we're going to give them a chance just like our forbearers had a chance to take responsibility and give their kids a better future. sooner or later immigration reform will get done. congress is not going to be able to ignore america forever.
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it's just, it's not a matter of if, it's a matter of when. >> and of course once again, it's all the republicans' fault. >> this is part of the consequence of the republican failure so far to give a fair hearing to mr. merritt garland, my nominee to the supreme court. they are allowing partisan politics to jeopardize something as fundamental as the impartiality and integrity of our justice system. and america should not let it stand. >> or -- it's the way the process works. i mean it was a 4-4 tie it goes down to the fifth circuit. is that what it was? >> well this is american jurisprudence at work. the charges that he exceeded his authority by engaging in executive action and this was of course to combat the idea by a lot of immigration activists that have not been happy with president obama, because so far 2.5 million immigrants have been deported under his watch. some have called him the
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deporter in chief. this was a strike back at thamt to say let's find a way to have a citizenship, essentially vengsly by allowing these people to be in this conversation. but it did not go over well. given the complexity of the court right now, with the passing of antonin scalia, that was pretty much a done deal. it was going to be a 4-4 split. it's a big blow to the president. but it's the right thing. no matter who's in the oval office, to engage in that type of executive action, circumvent the action is no the what the founding fathers intended. it's the right move. >> dana, the political process going on, donald trump or hillary clinton. you don't like donald trump, so you won't vote for him. republicans need to think about this. if there's going to be one supreme court justice appointed, two or throw, you could have have a very liberal-leaning court. and this is in action, guns and immigration are two of the things that could be decided. >> a lot of conservatives who would be inclined no the to vote for trump say we should have thought about that during the
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primary process. however it is very motivating for republicans, but also for democrats. because they understand the stakes of the game just as well. think about president obama being so unhappy. he should have not voted for that poison pill in 2007. he wanted a political issue to run on. he got a political issue to run on. a lot of people. there's a lot, a school of thought that said he shouldn't have push obamacare first, he should have pushed immigration first, there was a former president who advised him of that. do your immigration first and then try to do obamacare. that's not the decision that the president made. and what happens is this is not the first time that the president has been rebuffed on executive orders. could you go to the eeoc, the employee -- equal opportunity commission, on energy. just yesterday he could actually find himself in another position with this, the fracking rules that the president put forward that was rebuffed by a district judge in wyoming yesterday. so a lot of things at times in administration, you get two
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terms, the first term you spend trying to fwet through legislation and the second term you spend it solidifying it by depending it in court. >> that anger that this look on his face, the way he presented it, is it because merritt garland isn't the ninth supreme court justice? or is it theater. >> it's the tone of casual sp r superiority, it's like, getting turned down on a prom date. like your loss. it's your loss and you will see when i am emerge victorious, he always casts himself as the thoughtful sage that bear those responsibility to the consequences. >> or the constitution. >> or the process. >> he overstepped it.
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>> it's very hard to take him seriously when for the last eight years, identity has trumped security. we're all for hard workers. i love hard workers. i want all hard workers to come here. i also want process, if you think that safety is being compromised in the process, then you become suspicious of the president, you don't feel that he is addressing those other things, therefore we go enough, stop and he goes -- that's so uncool. >> juan, how is the process? did it work today? >> no. because obviously you have, in fact the process is that the president should nominate and the senate should advise. on his nominee. but you don't have a vote, they refuse to abide by the process. >> the president has it in an election year. >> i don't care if it's an election year or not. the that's what the constitution says. he was elected president, the american people elected him twice. but the process didn't work -- >> in lieu of the ninth judge, did the process work today? >> it's 4-4, so i guess it's
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stalled. obviously the government is not working. it's really sad. >> they just issued a decision, it's basically -- >> they issued a nondecision, they allowed the lower court ruling to stand. >> they made a ruling, correct, the fifth circuit court ruling stands. there wasn't a sir couple vengs of justice here. >> they didn't even really rule on the key issue here, which is did the president overstep his authority. what they said basically was, this is the procedural thing, it wasn't done properly. and in terms of getting to court. >> what you have is -- >> you break the tie. you break the tie, a direct kick. you get the four, you get -- you get the eight supreme court justices in froth of a net and obama has to kick the ball past them. how's that? >> if it was a golf ball, he would be the winner for sure.
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>> this is the way it happens. when you have a tie -- >> you should have -- >> it goes back to the lower court. the process therefore did or did not work in the affirmative action case today. >> in the affirmative action case, they had a clear ruling. >> no, when we -- when we lose, eric. that's not true. come on, they had a majority in one. here you had a 4-4 tie because the senate refuses to act on garland's nomination. i would say the people who get hurt here are the four million people who are in our midst, they're not a security threat -- >> you know what obama would say, you know who's getting hurt? the people who have their beds made, peethe people that have tr food delivered. he said this is a cyclical thing. we see the fear-mongering, this anger. but it always happens after you let in millions of people. then you create the anger and you hope that the anger leads to
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a solution. which is amnesty. that's what he's referring to. >> remember when president bush tried to have immigration reform guess what, it was the republican base that blocked that. when you have the senate in 2014 pass immigration reform, again, it's the house and the republican imagine orlt in the house that blocked that. so when you said, eric, i president obama just blames republicans. the fact yeah, republicans don't want immigration reform. >> isn't that immigration reform, trying to follow the law. a definition of immigration reform may not be declaring amnesty. >> what i was going to add, in terms of the tie on this particular case, it does show how political immigration is. because in those other court cases that i mentioned when the supreme court ruled against the administration on executive action and said no, you cannot do this, those were overstep. those are usually 9-0 decisions,
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or 8-1. this being a tie shows how political the situation is. in the next 18 weeks before the general election you're going to hear a lot more of this. >> she's right. because if you look at the consistency across the court and their ruling this should have been a unanimous decision with the court saying executive action overstepping the bounds. the separation of powers. so there you go. >> remember, elections have consequences. supreme court consequences for a long time. lifetime appointments. much more to come on the fief. next, a sit-in ended after 25 hours, we'll bring you up to speed on that wild showdown, when we return. ♪
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joint resolution. >> let us vote. we came here to do our job. we came here to work. >> rise up, democrats. rise up, americans. this cannot stand. we will occupy this floor. [ chanting ] >> barf. sensing opportunity, democrats attempted a sit-in to push a gun control agenda. admitting it's pretty much for show, to raise awareness and of course, fupds, the next step in this slummer better, they'll do each other's hair and prank call the nra. after 49 people are killed, this is what we do now, we divide, shout and then perform. on cue, celebrities immediate call this action historic. you know if this were republicans sitting in over fighting terror the media would spasm in outrage and scream oh my, where's the decorum?
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compare this occupy opera to post 9/11. we fought the enemy, not ourselves, we hardened soft targets, cockpits, air marshals, airports became fortresses, why not pursue that plan as well? terror is like water. it seeks the path of least resistance, block one area, they seek another. leaders should seek and secure those areas. like say, awards shows. at starlets tweet away on gun control, flexing their naive outrage, what's happening behind the curtain? the "hollywood reporter" notes that red carpet security is under heightened scrutiny. who knows what that means. i doubt it means less security. fewer armed guards, fewer police, fewer dudes with earpieces and trunk-sized next. you can bet those events will be hardened even more. because we need to protect our stars. so they can continue telling those of us who are less secure and less important, that our lives mean less than theirs.
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>> kg, the irony of ironies -- >> that was good. >> i liked it a lot. >> what are you doing later? >> dream on, baby. >> that's what i'll be doing, dreaming. aye-yi-yi. i got a little off-track. i had a rough day. >> you know how this ends? >> how? >> this whole thing ends tonight at the congressional baseball game. the annual congressional baseball game where republicans and democrats come together in unity for an annual fun, traditional event. >> i think they should do a game show like "family feud," or something. >> they, it was already planned, they were going to do that. >> they were jealous of ted cruz, green eggs and ham. they're show-boating, like check me out. it's attention-seeking, what did they accomplish. why aren't they protesting and upset about the 49 lives lost in orlando that could have been prevented? you know that's the problem i have here. because they're just trying to
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demonize guns and you know, tear apart the second amendment and they're misguided and misfocused. you can get things like this on both sides of the aisle. this isn't government at its best. >> i haven't seen republicans do that. in fact that's the first time we saw that. >> they did it with -- >> with fracking. >> offshore drilling. >> drill, baby, drill. >> we make fun of those banana republic governments, look what they do in parliament. they're beating the crap. that's what democrats, congratulations you brought the house floor to that level. it's all theater. it's all theater. because none of the gun legislation that anyone has proposed would have any effect on frankly the last two really, really bad terrorist activities here. san bernardino and the 49 in orlando. used the timing of orlando to create their theater and then they honestly they looked like the wall street, ducati park.
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occupy the rotunda. >> you saw some great civil rights leaders there. do you think this is a fair comparison? by having that visual, that helps this cause. do you think that's fair to the civil rights movement that this is about gun control? or -- >> sure, i mean look, the abortion rights movement has absolutely followed the playbook that was set by the civil rights movement in terms of how you bring attention and build support for your cause. >> right. >> i think this is american politics and this is tremendously effective. by the way, eric, in going back to '08, the republicans did exactly this. they did exactly this, and -- >> but everybody hated it. >> well guess what, you are able to rally your base. if you have john lewis, who was beaten until his head was bloody, you have this
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opportunity. i will say you have people even now, you were saying what, there's nothing, susan collins, the senator from maine is trying to get a compromise that would work in the senate because there's something very real. eric says, this wouldn't have stopped what happened in san bernardino. wouldn't have happened, stopped would happened in orlando. guess what, eric, people are thinking forward, they're trying to prevent future action like this they're saying if you can't get on the no-fly list, you shouldn't be able to buy a gun. >> which he wasn't. >> paul ryan, i thought really kind of summarized everything, roll it. >> we are not going to allow stunts like this to stop us from carrying out the people's business. they are sending out fundraising solicitations. like this one. >> house democrats on the house floor. your contribution will go to the dccc, $15. if this is not a political stunt. why are they trying to raise money off of this? off of a tragedy?
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our focus needs to be on confronting radical extremism. terrorism is the issue. let pea say it again -- terrorism is the issue. >> how offensive is it that this, an act of terror is being used to make money? >> oh gee. how offensive is it that these guys all take big money from the nra and therefore won't act on a major american problem. >> you can't connect the nra to terror. >> they are acting. >> the nra is not a cult that preaches sharia law and says gays must die. that's something else that president obama cannot name. >> it's a rare thing when you have the aklu on the same side. it's a stunt but a funding thing, now they have the pictures and the view. we don't have this, but if we did, the corporate -- annual meetings and stuff like that, they have the team-building exercise. people do that for a reason.
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because it helps unite the team. they're going to need that going forward after the primary that they had. >> they tried to do that with "the five," every time they do the team building it makes it worse, like putting us on a bus. >> close your eyes, eric, i'm going to catch you and i ran to the bar. >> anywhere. bathroom, snack tray. ahead, former secretary of defense, donald rumsfeld reveals on fox news, who he's going to vote for in november. stay tuned. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ geico motorcycle, great rates for great rides.
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a fundraising event. another big name is throwing his support behind the candidate. prominent member of the bush administration. former defense secretary donald rumsfeld. >> have you decided who you are going to support for president? >> yes. i could not vote for mrs. clinton. >> are you endorsing trump or supporting him? voting for him? >> i don't know that there's any difference. >> this is an endorsement? >> i no one asked me for my endorsement. but i'm clearly going to vote for him. i just can't imagine not. >> so prominent member of the bush administration. and to another one. dana what do you think? >> dick cheney had announced he was going to support and vote for donald trump. so cheney and rumsfeld are very close, that's good for donald trump. he had a really good week. he had a bad monday. well, but getting better, right? he announces a campaign change, gets rid of lewandoski. puts in mannafort.
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he had a big fundraising day. it's better than what he had before. he has a great speech by all accounts. so now you also have the president on the defense when it comes to immigration, one of trump's best issues. you have hillary in trouble with her server because now there's more information about the server was in trouble, the i.t. department tried to fix it. nobody could get in touch with it and her former staffer pleads the fifth 125 times. the democrats assault on second amendment. if he wants to show a pivot and capitalize on what started as a bad week and is ending as a pretty good week for him, please, cancel the trip to scotland, show that you are willing to be flexible. turn on a dime and come back and say i'm going to be here to press his advantage. because he's going to leave and then all that's going to go away and evaporate. >> you want him to capitalize on the momentum, have him here. eric, how do you see that?
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the trip for scotland has been planned. he's gone before, he's had work responsibilities to do. >> i said i hate when he's on prompter, on the teleprompter reading the speech. he did that speech. i think the speech was a necessary reboot, reset. i think he did. i also think when he ad-libs, he gets the base fired up. i think the donor, the money people don't want to hear that. they don't want to hear donald trump, crooked hillary. want to hear the policy stuff. they want to hear where he is on trade, immigration, guns. when he reads the prompter and he did the 38-minute speech, he makes the peel, the big donor, adelsons, the kochs, maybe a little more comfortable to write a check, they wouldn't be when he doesn't do. when he's the mexican judge stuff. put that aside for now, maybe stay on that. i hate him on prompter. but i think for the money, he's going to need the money.
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he has to start raising money. that will make them a little, more at ease to sign the check. >> so greg, what do you think? >> wi the way, lewandoski just got a job at cnn. i guess he had a lot of pull there. or maybe it was up for grabs. >> now the campaign doesn't have to pay for it. >> i want to make a point about the convention, because somebody brought this up earlier. 1.3 million people showed up for the cavalier parade in cleveland there were were no problems. so if there's going to be any unrest at the rnc, it will likely be imported. should not be blamed on cleveland, i thought that was an interesting point that somebody sent me in the mail. trump has a very high negtative, so we don't want to get dick morrised on this. blinded by belief. one going for him, that's hillary, who is as popular as gout. >> the feedback coming back even from people lukewarm about trump, people were like wow this
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was a good speech, they liked the specifics. he did cover it all. >> yeah, the critics said you know, there's a lot there that was not true. the fact-checkers went crazy. but i thought it was an effective speech and i liked that line about you know, are you with hillary? well i'm with america. i thought that was a memorable line by trump. the money thing is what dana said, even if he was to raise millions every day, he would still be behind her billions. in terms of the comparison plus the lerl i tides especially in swing states. the bigger story i think is the one that ran in the "wall street journal" today that said gop business leaders are backing clinton. i mean this this is amazing to me. we talk about rumsfeld. brent scowcroft, big guy? he's with hillary. jim secconi, at&t, as used to be with reagan and then bush.
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he can't back trump. he wants someone with judgment, temperme temperment, experience. >> trump is still tied in ohio and pennsylvania. >> he retired a $15 million loan to himself. a lot of people are wondering who donald trump is going to pick to be his vice president. jimmy fallon came up with an interesting theory last night. take a look. >> 14 years ago, i created a clone of myself. allow me to introduce your next vice president, little donald. >> thank me, thank me. >> we have the same brain. >> we think exactly alike. we even finish each other's -- >> walls. >> let's prank-call hillary. >> you pretend to be bernie sanders. >> hello secretary clinton, this is senator bernie sanders!
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is your refrigerator running? well, so am i! and i'm never, ever dropping out! >> i love it. that was talented 14-year-old jack aiello from chicago, who delivered his graduation speech as trump and other presidential candidates, he's nailed down what, bernie, he's nailed down hillary. >> he's got a future. >> that's it, all we have time for, next, we're awaiting the results of a landmark vote in britain on whether the uk should leave or remain in the european union, the count is under way. we'll go back live to london. won't you join us? what the outcome could mean for you at home.
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from the european union. the uk is deciding whether to stay in the union or break away. joining us now, again, from london, is foreign affairs correspondent benjamin hall. mr. hall, i know that it's against the law in britain to report anything that could impact the voting, but are we getting some indication of what the results might be? >> yeah, we're getting a little bit coming out. as soon as the polls close, everyone can rush to report on it. the first polls suggest the remain camp, stay in europe has a slight victory. 52 points to 48. the currency has risen and the markets feel confident immediately on the back of that. so indications that the uk will be staying in europe. but it's close, it's op a knife edge. >> given that it is on a knife edge, i was curious if you think the cameron government has a plan going forward. because in the aftermath of a decision to remain with the european union, obviously there's a lot of concern across the uk and problems with dealing with brussels and the uk feeling
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like it's being stifled, do you know if they have any plan to try to get things back on track for the country? >> yeah, well a lot of people asking why he brought this referendum in the first place, it's torn the country apart, it's torn europe apart. the first thing is to unify and unite europe and the rest of the you country. does he have a plan? i think he wanted to get over the hurdle before he went further. but he will address issues with europe and europe has said we acknowledge we are at fault. too many laws, too much bureaucracy. so do expect some change, a lot of sigh of relief from the cameron government at the moment. >> ben, our local economic expert, mr. eric bolling has a question. >> a lot of people may be watching wondering what this is all about. why did the brits say we need to pull out of here. some would say economics are to do with it, we put a lot into the european union and we don't get much out. kind of like if texas were to pull out of the united states, they add more to the economy
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than they take out of it. talk to us about the immigration side of it. that's the one that probably a lot of people here are watching, what's the group, the faction that says leave the european union? what's their problem with the immigration policy of great britain? >> these are the two main camps. the ones who want to stay in europe said look, the economy will falter, recession if you leave. those who wanted to leave said the immigration problem is our major problem. at the moment any person from the 28 countries in europe can come to england, they can work, they can get benefits, that's having a huge drain on the benefits system on the social reforms here. the people here said look, we cannot have immigration without a top limit and that's really affecting people here. peer are losing their jobs because of it and the terrorism threat who are we betting into our country and how do we close it off? immigration was the maim point of the people who wanted to leave europe. said give us back our sovereignty, give us the right to control our borders. at the moment that's decided by
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the people in brussel who is are uneliclecte unelected, and they have control over laws. >> what about the proponents that were advising that it's important for the uk to remain in the union? >> well they said first of all if england leaves if the uk leave, that means the sb disintegration of the whole european plan. they said it's essential for security that we have to be one bloc in the developing world. as we go forward each little country won't have any power, so we need to be singular. i spoke to ambassador bolton just yesterday and he said tryinging to come together in one big group has back-fired. it means too many people in the pot. too many things taken away from being able to deal with america. so people say unity
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all-important in the changing word. but also that's detrimental. so mixed views there. >> well ben, greg says he doesn't have a question but he has a thought. >> i was saying the reason why england wants to pull out is they don't want to be pregnant with terror. so look, i want to make, i want to compare the way america looks at issues in england and the way england looks at issues in america. this is the first time we've talked about brexit, right? but whenever something happens in america, it gets piers morganed. brits, whether it's the "guardian" or the british media in general will always comment in a superior fashion about how america is screwed up. we have never said anything about brexit until now. >> the president did. >> the president did. >> of course he did. >> what does this mean, benjamin. we don't, we mind our own business is what i'm saying. >> well we get piers morganed, too, by the way. this issue only came up over the
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last few months, ever since that it's been a growing issue. only recently did they think that the leave side had a chance. which is why it became an issue and the u.s. obviously very involved once it started to appear that might happen. but it does appear now that if remain may win. who knows, we have until 7:00 a.m. before we find out. >> ben, you danced with greg, system people just get thrown off by gregory. but you answered the question. that was awesome, benjamin. thank you so much. thank you for tolerating all of us. another verdict was reached today in the trial this one the third officer charged in death of freddie gray in baltimore. you're going to hear about it, next. think fixing your windshield is a big hassle?
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suffering a spinal cord injury in a police van. the officer driving the vehicle, caesar johnson junior was found not guilty of all charges, including the most serious count, second-degree depraved heart murder. the judge rejected the prosecution's claim that goodson gave gray a rough ride intentionally putting him at
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risk. that makes him the third officer tried without a conviction. three others are awaiting trial and one is awaiting a retrial. kimberly, i'll go to you first, when the district attorney filed these lawsuits, i remember you said this will never pass. it will never, they'll never be convicted because of the way that she did it i wonder about the police officers and what they've gone through for what was a rush to judgment political decision. >> these cases should not have been filed to begin with. anybody who has been a prosecutor or tried a case, either on the prosecution side or on defense knew that. this was definitely based on a political movement, and that is supposed to be the last thing that justice seeks. you're supposed to be seeking out the facts, the truth, the evidence, evaluating it. she didn't even wait for that. she doesn't deserve to have the job that she has, it was such a miscarriage of justice, it's horrible to what she did to these families, these officers. in order to have a depraved heart murder, it's the
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equivalent of like throwing a loaded gun in hallway, and it goes off and there's tons of people there. it's likely that somebody is going to die or have great bodily injury from it. you have to say did they intentionally did the specific act, that they knew would result in great bodily injury or death. they acted in a conscious disregard with known risks and a disregard for human life. it doesn't meet that standard. the judge that has presided over these caseses is outstanding and we've been talking about it on greta's show. >> obviously right now, it's a strong racial divide in the community. most of the white community i think never was backing marilyn mosby, the baltimore state attorney that kg is talking about. what you have in the black community is disappointment to some extent and you have a feeling like did marilyn mossby bring this effectively? if so, how do you hold police accountable when they do something wrong? there's all of these questions.
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right now there's concern about making sure that everybody feels like they're being heard. everything remains quiet. that's where it is at the moment. >> we got to be quick. very quickly, kimberly called it from day one. overcharging. >> actively overcharging and now she's disappointed the african-american community. because she led them down the path, thinking that this was outrageous and that was disservice, now they're confused and frustrated. overpromised and underdelivered. >> do you think the cops got a bad rap based out of this? >> i think so. there's gd news, you can get justice, even if you are prejudged by the media and by the prosecutor. this guy got the right, got justice. and the second part is do the looters even care? are they following the story? >> new york city they've moved on. >> this wasn't juries this was a judge. i think it was better to take the hype out of it, the emotion. you can put it it to a jury in cases like this, you never know how it's going to turn out. for . for . even if you're not good at it now, that's okay.
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did your 22-page insuranceand you nepolicy say, "great news. you're covered?" no. it said, "blah blah blah blah..." the liberty mutual app with coverage compass makes it easy to know what you're covered for and what you're not. liberty mutual insurance. time for one more thing. yesterday i was out because i had a very proud moment. here he is, eric chase getting his diploma. official high school right there next picture, you know when they throw the caps up in the air. there it is. they're still allowed to do that. no one gets hurt. and the next one, here's the family dinner after. tlets uncle marcus, gabby, his girlfriend, eric, grandpa,
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adrian, adrian's brother eric and the other eric. >> and congratulations eric chase. >> that's a big moment for a dad. ? it takes a village. and o'reilly factor tonight, 8:00 check it out. >> i'm awesome on it. >> she's your favorite number one guest i've decided. >> and you are next. >> this is so important, so many families are struck by cancer and this is an example of how valiant and courageous parents are. this is a picture of a little boy who was stricken with brain cancer, he had a tattoo, he was very afraid. and for a rare, malignant brain tumor. he thought he looked like a monster. and i had dad got a tattoo done. shaved his head exactly to resemble the scar of his son. so it's pretty amazing when you see that the love and the devotion, the dedication and it actually won a prize for nabbing the first place in best bald dad
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contest? >> i would vote for him. >> very sweet and nice family. good man. another good man. >> a good recovery for gabriel. something interesting. greg's secret to happiness. with more unicorns. what do you do when you take something awesome like cheetos and you mate it with something even more awesome, which is macaroni and cheese, you get this, the new burger king mac and cheese, a deep-fried stick of macaroni. dusted in cheeto covering sauce and spices so it's like, it's like donald trump. it's orange and delicious. >> greg -- are you speaking from personal knowledge? >> megan mccardell, she's a columnist. she said she loves those. >> must be nice. >> dana, you're up. >> check out a website called flowing data.com. there's lots of information you can find on there.
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this is the most poisoned name in u.s. history. the biostatistics p.h.d. candidate is hillary parker. her own name was on the list. she's saying why is my name on the list. it turns out the name hillary was very popular for a while and boom. what happens? straight down when bill clinton was elected president. so the name died a quick death. that's what she says. >> as opposed to barack, which became a very popular name when he was elected president. >> lying. >> it looks like your fear of robots. >> it's the dogs. >> not too far-fetched. >> a russian robot has escaped its creator, not once, but twice and once got away from the lab and got into traffic. then its battery ran out. it sat in the street for 40 minutes, some people think it was a pr stunt because the robot's creator is going to be in a tech conference this fall. but they say no stunt.
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they're going to dismantle the robot because it has escaped twice and they don't feel comfortable. >> it shows too much personality. they'll never take over. >> that's it for us, "special report" is next. a split decision that handed president obama a major defeat on immigration. this is "special report." good evening, welcome to washington, i'm shannon bream in for bret baier. in a 4-4 split, the eight justices on the bench blocked president obama's effort to stop millions of illegal immigrants from being deported. 26 states challenged the president's executive action on immigration, saying he overstepped his authority this was just one of the big cases the high court ruled on today. fox news senior judicial analyst judge napolitano is here with his take on the two big decisions out of the supreme court today. we begin with correspondent kevin corke at the white house, where the president
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