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tv   Justice With Judge Jeanine  FOX News  February 12, 2017 9:00pm-10:01pm PST

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that's it for us tonight. follow me on facebook, twitter and instagram. justice with judge florida gentleman nine reporter: 130,000 people are being told to get out of their homes in roroville, california. thousands of people western ordered from their homes. many were told to go north to the town of chico where an metropolitan shelter has been set up. oroville has 16 thousand
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residents. the 770-foot dam is the tallest in the nation. officials say that oroville lake levels are decreasing as they let waterfall from the heavily damaged spillway. but water is still spilling over the dam. california officials say the cities of oroville, marysville, yuma city, and pumas lake and olive hurst are all under evacuation. that includes 130,000 plus people. there is a plan to plug the hole by using helicopters to drop rocks into the crevasse. engineers spot a hole that was eroding towards the top of the spillway. authorities wanted to get all the people moving quickly to save lives in case the worst case he their question were to
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unfold and come to fruition throughout the night or overnight. we have crews going to the scene. adam housley will be there soon to give us an update. hundreds of cars have been spotted in wall-to-wall traffic as they were seen leaving the area on highway 99 as people streamed out of oroville away from the dam. ed the california department of water resources says it's releasing 130,000 feet per second from the heavily damaged spillway to drain the lake. it's going into the emergency spillway. and they were able to spot the hole and acted quickly in every degree of caution to make sure that 130,000 people could be evacuated. you can see that a lot of work has to be done to possibly plug that hole in. it's nightfall out there now, and obviously at 9:00 p.m. in
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the evening on the west coast, 12:00 a.m. here on the east coast, we are going to have to continue the developments of this story. we'll be with you every half-hour. we'll join you again at 12:30 up with updates. then we'll continue at 1:30 and throughout the night. we are told if this dam does the devastation could be worse than what we saw in 2005 with hurricane katrina in new orleans. we remember how devastating that was and how much it caused to wreak havoc throughout the entire region. everyone is watching what's going on in oroville. california authorities are on alert and doing what they can to possibly plug a hole in the oroville dam it's the tallest dam of its type in the nation and it could impact 8 cities near sacramento. people have been told to evacuate.
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130,000 people getting out. and many are being told to go to the northern part of the area known as chico. i'm kelly wright, stay with fox news throughout the evening for updates on this story. we'll bring it to you as it develops. but what i can tell you is that overall, ivanka's brand revenue is up 21% from 2015 to 2016. and pray tell, if her brand wasn't selling well in nordstroms, why did they order more products for the spring 2017 season? but now to the woman herself. to say that she is accomplished is the understatement. she has been winning awards and honored for empowering women since she started her brand a decade ago. "fortune" magazine named her
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one of the 40 under 40 of the most influential young people in the business world. she won the ace breakthrough award for excellence in accessories. she helped found the girl up initiative foundation at the united nations. fab, the fashion accessories council awarded her for her innovative brand. she was described at the woman's national summit as a woman with a drive to support other women. she won the good award, educating individuals in african diamond producing nations, even ivanka trump.com is about one of her favorite subjects, teaching women, including high schoolers, about advancement in economic empowerment. ivanka is not political. even admitting at the republican convention she was neither republican nor democrat. she frowned on being a political surrogate.
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instead her role was about women, what her father taught her, how he advanced the women in his company and what he would do for women in the country? her focus, always on women. >> he will fight for equal pay for equal work, and i will fight for this too, right alongside of him. judge jeanine: and after her dad wins, she leaves the family business, the one she was groomed to run from the time she was a little girl. yes, a woman groomed to run. what most see as a male dominated business by the very men these hashtagging women despise, so she can continue to advocate for women in the workforce, leaving her own business, working with a talented team of, yes, women. leaving her home, moving her family because she believed she can help tens of millions of women. so to all you hashtag haters,
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and loud classless women and the stores that capitulate to them, yes, by hitting her, you did hurt her dad. but she's stronger than you. and you know the very feminists who marched and purport to advance strong independent women are the very ones rallying to suppress another who epitomizes every quality that they claim the champion. i challenge you all to put your money in your hashtag, where your mouth is, and support a strong independent women like the ones you claim to march for. try as you might, you won't defeat this woman. and you will not set us back. we have worked too hard, and fought too long to be pulled back by small jealous women, too limited to even comprehend
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the advances that are still ahead with ivanka trump. we, all of us, are worthy of so much more. and that's my open. tell me what youong my facebook page or twitter -- joining me is liberal journalist and analyst publisher of catalina magazine, cat cathy araoux. tell me where i went wrong? >> you could not go wrong, i think she went wrong. ivanka went wrong when she wore her dress, one of her brand dresses at the convention. i thought she made a beautiful speech, what a pretty address and to find out later she was selling that dress. she put politics and her dress in the same stage. judge jeanine: i heard you say that before. what is wrong with wearing something that you made?
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i mean, i would be proud of wearing something -- >> like she was selling it. judge jeanine: she wasn't selling it online. >> she sold out. >> she didn't go to the convention and say by the way, you can buy my dress. >> she basically did. judge jeanine: practically is -- come on. that's not the truth. >> i saw it and looked it up and said wow, that dress is for sale. judge jeanine: those results say these good at what she does. she did not say go to my website and find out what i wore tonight. >> she practically did. judge jeanine: you keep saying practically. move on. you and i disagree. if you're not proud of what you do or what you make, like i'm proud of what i write and what i say. >> right, right. judge jeanine: and i promote it. if she made that, she should wear it. should she be ashamed of wearing it? >> she introduced that dress into politics. judge jeanine: what should she do? wear it when she goes grocery shopping and be ashamed of it.
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>> michelle obama wore a white house black market dress and her family was proud of it. judge jeanine: she left that business, she left everything that was personal to her and went to washington. >> so no one is hurting her by not buying her dresses. she's not tied to it. they're sending a message to her father. judge jeanine: let's talk about -- sending a message to her father? it's a little late. if they want to send a message, they should have gone out and voted. move on. what do you think about nordstroms? >> neiman marcus pulled it as well. judge jeanine: neiman marcus i think pulled necklaces, nordstrom, why did they order the spring line if she was doing so poorly? >> according to the "wall street journal," sales were down 70% from october last year to october this year and ivanka trump products. sales are down 70%. market has to dictate -- judge jeanine: overall, they're up 21%. >> not nordstrom. judge jeanine: nordstrom is one
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of -- and they have a thousand different in a matter of three days, doesn't it tell you it's political. it doesn't go boom, boom, boom, that's politics. let me ask you this, nordstrom, the gentleman by the name of peter nordstrom said that ivanka trump's brand is a sizable and successful business and not worth jettisoning even if customers feel that it should be gone. this is a few weeks before the election. >> dress sold out and then three weeks before the election, they said that -- really? you believe that? >> i do believe that. judge jeanine: it wreaks of politics. >> if it was selling so well. if nordstrom was making so much money off the product --. >> you think peter nordstrom was lying when he said a few days before the election, this is great, we're not going to let it go. don't you believe product placement has a great deal to do with whether or not something sells. >> marshalls and t.j. maxx have
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done the same thing. judge jeanine: the employees said they never, ever seen an e-mail like the one that came over that said take down the signs. lot of politics, that's the sad part. you agree that ivanka trump is committed to women and supporting women and women's issues. >> i loved her speech, loved her speech. when i found out that dress was hers -- judge jeanine: it bothers you that she's proud of what she does. >> upset she brought her line into politics. judge jeanine: she wore a dress she made? that upset you? you know what? do you believe that a woman who's devoted her life to women -- >> she was using her name to sell a product. her name is not that product and the product is not selling. >> you're wrong because it is. cathy, thank you so much. a ballistic missile fired by north korea, here to talk about that more is gop congressman chris collins from the state of new york. good evening, how are you?
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>> good evening, judge, i'm enjoying the conversation, you had a great opening statement. judge jeanine: thank you, i got to tell you, and as you know, i know the trump family, i know her as a very elegant woman too smart to fight with anyone and totally staying out of it which is her promise to not engage in anything that involves business and the government and that's just -- >> she defines class. she is a classy lady. judge jeanine: elegance personified. >> you are right. judge jeanine: talk about what's going on with north korea. what do you think is going on here, congressman? >> they're just flexing their muscles, you know, it's not surprising we saw iran do it as well. i think americans can be very happy today. president trump will keep our country safe whether it's general flynn or general kellogg or our new attorney general jeff sessions, he's got the a-team. general mattis, it's going to keep us safe. this is nothing more than a
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little posturing as some have suggested. north korea feels left out. no one's been talking about them, talking about china and talking about iran and now japan. mexico. so this is not unexpected. it was not an intercontinental ballistic missile, it was intermediate range. so not a threat. i do know that president trump and his team are going keep an eye on iran, keep an eye on north korea. they're not going to let either of those countries threaten stability in the world. judge jeanine: you know, kim jong-un isn't the most favorable individual either? >> certainly well said. i wouldn't want to be a family member, that's for sure. and i think that, again, he's -- he's because he's propped up by china, and this is the interesting dynamic, judge. it's china that's propping up north korea. you know, china depends on the u.s. consumer for their economy. there's a lot of issues on the trade side that are going to have to enter the mix, and when
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you think of the art of the deal, i wouldn't be the least bit surprised that as president trump and trade negotiators discuss trade with china, you're going to see issues related to north korea on the table. i wouldn't be the least bit surprised if that's not part of discussion moving forward. judge jeanine: let's talk -- very quickly moving forward -- the executive order and the 9th circuit, the most liberal leftist, laughed at circuit in the country. what do you think the president is going to do? throw off a new one and call a day? >> good idea. it was a liberal judge and liberal court decided they didn't see urgency to stay, you know, to reverse the stay. so a very smart thing is to take what the judge said which is not accurate, things like it was a muslim ban, things like it was a religious litmus test
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and the like. they can be easily addressed and the new executive order speak clearly. doesn't effect green card holders, visa holders, students in and so forth. judge jeanine: that was one of the problems that wasn't clear, interesting they said we're not going to take at his word don mccann white house counsel when he says it doesn't affect these people. >> the judge did give us the road map to doing something they're not going to be able to claim any constitutional basis for. judge jeanine: right. >> they may sue again but won't be a constitutional basis for congress to uphold. it would be expeditious. judge jeanine: to me it would be expeditious. free and fight it out and en banc the whole thing. you know what i find incredible is -- i don't think the state of washington had standing, they did not have a direct and immediate effect on the state of washington. how could someone from another country who's not even a
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citizen and wasn't entitled to due process because he's not over here have standing against the president as it relates to national security? >> well, it goes back to the stretch that they had a student who was denied entry. so i would grant you a student with a visa and clarified they would be allowed in but that was the stretch that there was a student with a visa that wasn't allowed back into the country and that was the nexus that they had to claim standing. judge jeanine: boy, that tips the scales, doesn't, it congressman? >> sure does. judge jeanine: from new york, congressman chris collins, good to have you here. >> good to be with you. judge jeanine: the travel ban drama dominating the news this week. what's the president's next move after the court of appeals ruleing? deputy assistant to the president sarah huckabee sanders is standing by live to talk to me about that and so much more next.. then, put your hands down? somebody looking for you. judge jeanine: street justice in america's most famous store.
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i get shoppers takes on ivanka trump's clothing line. "justice" rolls on in a moment. why are you checking your credit score? i think we could finally get a bigger place. yeah, let me check my score too. try credit karma. it's free. credit karma. give yourself some credit.
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. judge jeanine: a busy week in the white house. president trump considering a new security move in the wake of the 9th circuit court of appeals ruling against his immigration policy. joining me to talk about that is deputy assistant to the president, sarah huckabee sanders. let me ask you what i asked congressman col for instance new york. executive order looking forward. i don't want to go into what happened and everything that happened last week, by the way, sarah, none of it is a surprise to me. the 9th circus as it's called, more than 85, 90% of its decisions overturned by the supreme court anyway. is there a good chance that the president will draw out a new executive order that is a little palatable to the 9th circuit? >> right now the president is keeping all options on the table. the one thing i can assure you
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of and promise you of is he's going to do whatever it takes within the constitution to keep americans safe. it's what he campaigns on, what he's promised and what he's been doing and taken action to do in his first days in office and he's going to do whatever that takes. judge jeanine: well, i believe he was doing that already, enacting within the constitution, and article 1 section 8, but apparently 9th circuit didn't agree, but i think right now, the issue today had to do with i.c.e. and the claim that there are random sweeps going on and that there are now i.c.e. checkpoints in los angeles, and people are being deported, and i find it fascinating that there are legal setups and legal attorneys and points for illegals so they have their rights explained to them, so there are people who now fight deportation who are here
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illegally when many people have felony convictions as i understand who have been deported. talk to me about the numbers, if you can. >> sure, look, the bottom line here is that i.c.e. team and the i.c.e. officers are simply enforcing the law, and law that has existed before donald trump took office. they're just actually enforcing it. this is real simple here. people that have come in illegally that have felony charges are not allowed to stay. this is a law that has needed to be enforced and something that frankly we have to do in order to protect our country and they're stepping up and following the law, and i don't know why anyone would complain about our law enforcement doing their job and enforcing the law. judge jeanine: you know why they're not complaining? they're not using it. since when is i.c.e. given the ability or power to do this? to be fair, this is something that was done apparently, occasionally by the prior administration.
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for those arguing that there's no due process, there's no hearings, my understanding is the deportation is not just of those who have felony convictions and are here illegally, but those for whom there are already adjudication orders, so that there already has been the due process, adjudication in court that you are illegal, you have to be deported and they never showed up to be deported. are you comfortable that even without the wall that the people that we're deporting now can be kept out or do you think we'll only have to go through this again? >> you know, i don't want to get ahead of where we are right now. i think the bottom line is that the main priority that we have to do is we have to know who's in our country, why they're here, are they here for the right reasons? if they are, put them through the process and do it in a legal form and fashion. if we have open borders, we can't have a country. that's one of the priorities of the president.
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he's going to enforce the law, build a law and frankly going to secure our country. that is the number one job of the president and one that finally we have a president that takes that seriously and is going to take every measure under the constitution to do just that. judge jeanine: sarah huckabee sanders, thanks for being with us tonight. >> thank you. judge jeanine: and street justice from macy's herald square, plus ben stein is here live. and next, panel power, president trump's next move on security, and will the travel ban go all the way to the supreme court? go pac chair and democracy for america are ready to go at it next as "justice" rolls on in a moment. (vo) when it comes to valentine's gifts, helzberg diamonds knows bigger isn't always better. our beautiful diamond heart pendant is just $299.99. that's $200 off! helzberg diamonds. here's to love.
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it's league night!? 'saved money on motorcycle insurance with geico! goin' up the country. bowl without me. frank.' i'm going to get nachos. snack bar's closed. gah! ah, ah ah. ♪ ♪ i'm goin' up the country, baby don't you wanna go? ♪ ♪ i'm goin' up the country, baby don't you wanna go? ♪ geico motorcycle, great rates for great rides. reporter: this is a fox news alert. i'm kelly wright with breaking developments. we continue to keep an eye on a
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potentially deadly situation. officials ordered 130,000 residents near the 770-foot tall oroville dam near the northern part of the state to evacuate the area immediately. that evacuation has begun because as they pit a hazardous situation is has begun. the dam is severely corroded due to heavy rain fall. the dam could fail unleashing floodwaters towards homes and the valley below. joining me now, adam housley joining us by phone. you grew. grew up in that area. can you tell us how dangerous that situation might be? >> we are in resuma city. 25-30 miles from the dam.
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this is downstream from where that threat is going on. they have begun the night operation. basically oroville dam is one of the tallest earthen dams in the world and one of the tallest in the state. basically there has been so much water in the north state that we haven't had in a long time that it has caused the lake to go over his emergency spillway which is as lower part of earthen dam it's meant to alleviate water for a short period of time. before it many been overflowing for more than a day which has caused the some areas to deteriorate. they have the water down to the level where it's spilling over. they believe they stopped at that point and they will fry with helicopters at night to drop rocks into the area where they had some of this deterioration to hold that part
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of the dam in place. they will have three days if they can hold that water below the emergency spillway, they will have three days to repair. rains are coming thursday. so the water will probably reach the dam friday to saturday. there was a mandatory evacuation in many areas. you are talking about 80,000, 90,000 people who live in this area and a significant portion according to one sergeant. he says 70% may have gone the out of town. driving north from the sacramento airport, there were 25 miles of cars bumper to bumper, shores trailers, that sort of thing. can you see our live picture looks like an empty street? reporter: it looks like a ghost town. >> my first television job was here. right down that street not even 1/8 mile, you will see
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flashing lights in the distance. if the water is literally one foot from the top. if or ohville dam were to have the spillover. if that was to have a spillover, that water would come down here and cause problems in oroville, yuma city, lodi. there is 2,000 i'ms of waterways -- miles of waterways around sacramento it's basically a marshland. many of them are very taxed. the water in most place is within a foot or two of the top. there has been a lot of worry that the leaf hav have -- that d go. you are talking about a major issue for thousands of people.
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they had all these people evacuate now there is a press conference in a half-hour. the reports are they may have been able to hold that emergency spillover. if that's the case, people are want to go turn around and come back. but this town, you can see, is shut down. they are not letting people back in here. because in three days you may have to evacuate again. they have to figure out what they are going to do about the thousands of people who left in the last three hours and got out of town because there they were worried there was a flood of water. there are state agencies involved. you are seeing a roadblock. you can't get anywhere near what's going up in oroville, even media. we are not the priority here. we can't get close. they want us to stay back, which would be affected if water were
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to come down this way. reporter: we understand 8 cities have been evacuated including where you group, the yubs area. olive hurst. gridly. >> i grew up an hour and a half from here. but i lived here and my first job. the area you are talking about, if you drive a diagonal line you named all the cities, olive hurst, yuba city, marysville. which is projected by levies. i just spoke with one of the state spokesmen i have known for a long time. they are getting helicopters flying in pitch black trying to drop blocks into an area that
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has deteriorated from the water spilling over. reporter: that's a dangerous situation for the helicopters as well. reporter: those men and women are doing an unthinkable job. the danger is unbelievable. they are doing it to try to save the homes and lives of thousands. they think they can hold it until rain comes. but they don't know how much rain is coming. reporter: what we are seeing is the result of the winter storms that hit the west coast as well as the east coast. but what you have had to contend with on the west coast is the deluge of rainfall that has been so much in such a quick amount of time that it's impacted that area, that region. my understanding is that this is the first time they have had to deal with a situation like this
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in the history of the oroville dam which was built in 1961, i understand it opened may 4, 1968. all of that time it has been functioning as the tallest dam in the united states. reporter: right. it's huge. definitely very tall. i was here in '97 '98 when they had the last main water event which had pretty much hadn't had that kind of rain in 20 years. back then it was consistent rain. here the problem has been, you can drive for four or five days. it's been gorgeous. 65 degrees in some places. then you have four or five days when you get 6 inches. that's not normal. you have got a surge-stop, surge-stop. if you have a consistent flow it
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will consistently drain. but if you have a sun-stop, surge-stop, eventually it will go over the sink. that's what happened with the rain. you have massive storms for three or four days and surge the water everywhere. deluge. then it will stop for a couple of days. then it surged again and then stopped. that's what caused the levis to be in danger. the water is coming in significantly faster than they can get rid of it. and they were trying to help downstream. downstream remember also they have to take into account how much water is going down below. the water within 1 or 2 feet within the top. reporter: i want to remind you first and foremost we are
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speaking to adam housley from our west coast bureau in l.a. he's reporting on the developments that are unfolding as we speak at the oroville dam located 150 miles northeast of san francisco. officials ordered 130,000 residents near the dam to evacuate in the northern part of the state, to evacuate the area immediately. adam housley again with us on the line. he's there in the area near his hometown, an area he grew up in. he has good first-hand knowledge in addition to his expertise as a reporter. but good knowledge about what this area is all about if it's makeup and how this area relies on the lake as well as the river as well as the support receives from that dam. adam, the good news you are telling me is that officials -- engineers believe they may have
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been able to alleviate the problem or the pressure on that emergency spillway. and that's what we are hoping for. but if you can explain to our viewers, particularly for those who may have just tuned in and could be viewing us right now. what has to take place? it's a precarious operation that has to take place at nighttime to fill that erosion. >> first of all, kelly, can you see the big truck i'm streaming? so they have taken a lot of these trucks that are used for by the city or county and they blocked off streets to get anywhere near oroville. this part of the state is shut down. the on way north or south is interstate 5 which is 30 miles to our west. going up to the see air as or the cascades, this is shut down. reporter: what kind of impact
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does that have on the people who live in that area. you were mentioning how you saw a massive amount of cars as you drove towards the area seeing people actually fleeing and evacuate the opposite direction. >> you have got 20 -- i saw at least 25 miles of backup. literally bumper to bumper. i have been told by my friends in chicago cove it was bumper to bumper going north as well. so these are areas that have 100,000 people. you mentioned the numbers asked to evacuate. that's a lot of people. i talked to a couple sergeants here located where they had to shut down co lurks sa avenue. if they let people back in, could they friday or saturday have to do this all over again? and there is a lot of crime they
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are dealing with. so they are stretched thin having to hold these areas and make sure people don't get through. but they have to protect thousands of home because people are no longer there. they have already had calls of looting going on. reporter: we have to take a break here coming up in matter of seconds. i know you mentioned a news conference is coming up. we'll continue to stay with adam housley reporting every half-hour to keep you abreast of what's going on with regards to the oroville dam. we'll be back with him to give you have the breaking news. i'm kelly wright. . judge jeanine: president trump going at it with the courts over his immigration policy. here with me to talk about it is longtime professor of law and economics at pepperdine university in malibu and former
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speechwriter for president richard nixon, ben stein. good evening, ben. >> how are you? >> i am fine, thank you. we had this executive order, and what downing the president's going to do? you think he's going to draw up a new one or go to the supreme court? what should he do as it relates to national security and, you know, that temporary ban? >> i think he'll break it up into several different parts. he will send each out as an executive order, in the meantime, he'll appeal the blanket decision by the court in seattle and en banc court of appeals ruling. what the court did up there was clearly outrageous. never been a court that blocked an immigration order by the president since 1942. it's inconceivable what they, did it's a coup d'etat against the executive branch and the constitution. judge jeanine: do you think that they were motivated by politics? >> of course, of course.
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judge, i went to yale law school. we learned legal realism. judges do not make decisions based on the laws or the precedent. they make it based on what will please their friends and neighbors, make them big shots and big wheels. in seattle, do you think anyone will consider them big wheels if they are fans of donald trump? no f way, they wanted to show off and that's what they did. judge jeanine: so disappointing, isn't it? >> that's life. judge jeanine: i know it's life. but i'm one of the believers, i want to believe in truth and justice. especially in a federal judge who has a judgeship for life that there is honor and dignity and justice. >> i'm sure there is plenty. i think judge bork had a hell of a lot of it. i think justice scalia had a hell of a lot of it. these guys in seattle are political puppets of the left and the media power. the media is the supreme power
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in america right now and they're trying cut president trump down to size and using the judiciary as one of their pawns. judge jeanine: what downing of the fact that the media, the fourth seat now, at least with the -- with the three branches of government, there's so-called checks and balances but with the fourth estate, the media, there are no checks and balances. >> you know what i love? when the media points out somebody or other in the government has a mistress or a girlfriend, and all these guys in the media have mistresses or girlfriends or the government points out such and such is speculating on stocks and all the guys in the media are speculating on stocks. the media is the unaccountable fourth branch of government. judge jeanine: you know what is great. >>? they don't have to say who the sources are? it's incredible. >> they make up sources and have them go down in the history books as great journalists, they can make things up. judge jeanine: do you think president trump is going to change that paradigm somehow,
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some way? >> no, no, i think he'll try, he won't be able to succeed. media is incredibly power. the social media have undermind the media somewhat and they are cutting, cutting, cutting down the mainstream media, the mainstream media is powerful. the question is, is the new social media going outwit the mainstream media. social media helped elect mr. trump but can be turned against him too. judge jeanine: interesting, talk about immigration now. they're calling it a roundup in l.a., your part of the world. most people here illegally with felony convictions, by calling it that and we're starting to see the protesters, confrontations, you know, one of the people on the left, so angry, when are they going to pipe down? or is it never going to happen? >> never going to happen. i've been in protests. when i was in law school, i was in protests all the time.
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it's a way to get out of class, a way to pick up responsibility. it's a way to get high. they have no idea what they're talking about. they do it because everybody else is doing it. big party in the streets, go to the party. you can have a choice, get a job and be responsible citizen or do homework or join the party. what are they going to do? judge jeanine: i can't believe it, ben stein, but it's always a party having you on "justice". thanks for being with us tonight. >> thank you, your honor. >> thank you, your honor. judge jeanine: all right. if time is infinite, why is ta john deere 1 family tractor can give you more time for what you love. because with our quick-attach features, it takes less work to do more work.
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there still selling ivanka trump close and shoes. do you think she should be punished. >> not at all, it's very unfair
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she is the only hope that we have because she's a strong woman and i like her close. >> he goes with the territory. number two we should have better things to be concerned about. >> wouldn't any father want to protect his daughter. >> is not a father anymore. >> he's president of the united states. it's still relative. >> it's not fair. she's divested herself from the employee company and the employees have a company that they are selling product and it's the women that are behind it. isn't it antifeminist? she created her own product. >> and now she's involved in something else.
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>> what is she involved in. >> she's sitting by the president of the united states. >> i like her close, i like her shoes and right now i'm going to macy's to buy something. >> i'm doing my job so let's help each other out. >> put your hand down. is somebody looking for you. >> i wouldn't buy trump shoes. >> why. >> how do you know your shoes weren't made by kids in china? how do you know that. it's america. tonight be able to buy whatever i want? do me a favor. find out what child labor built your shoes and what country they're from. >> would you wear the shoes if they came in your size. >> it would depend what they looked like.
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>> it has to do with politics. they should take the family out of it. it's not right. >> it could becaususususus rodney and his new business.
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he teaches lessons to stanley... and that's kind of it right now. but rodney knew just what to do...he got quickbooks. it organizes all his accounts, so he knows where he stands in an instant. ahhh...that's a profit. which gave him the idea to spend a little cash on some brilliant marketing! ha, clever.
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wow, look at all these new students! way to grow, rodney! know where you stand instantly. visit quickbooks.com. i wanti did my ancestrydna and where i came from. and i couldn't wait to get my pie chart. the most shocking result was that i'm 26% native american. i had no idea. just to know this is what i'm made of, this is where my ancestors came from. and i absolutely want to know more about my native american heritage. it's opened up a whole new world for me. discover the story only your dna can tell. order your kit now at ancestrydna.com. >> thanks for joining us. join me on facebook. i'm almost at 2 million followers. i need your help to get there.
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the 2 million follower will get my book, he killed them all. i am -- they are telling me to stop. kelly: this is a fox news alert. i'm kelly wright in new york. 130,000 people are being told to get out of their homes in california because of the threat of a dasm break. this is the oroville dam you are looking at in california it's 80 miles north of sacramento. an emergency spillway has eroded thanks to recent heavy rainfalls which is causing the threat of the break. thousands of people were ordered from their homes. you can imagine what that would have looked like, 130,000 people getting out of the area to move to higher ground. many were told to go north to the town of

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