tv Americas News HQ FOX News March 11, 2017 1:00pm-2:01pm PST
1:00 pm
american left, they deserve credit for spending blood and treasure for their own country. dave:that is it for this week's show. you can cast me weekdays on after the bell on the fox business network. paul is on next week, hope to see you then. >> federal prosecutor has been fired by president trump. is among 46 us attorneys held over from the obama administration asked by the justice department to submit their resignations and he did not so he knew this was coming and it is official. welcome to another hour in america news headquarters. greg:one of the highest profile us attorneys representing the southern district of manhattan, he said he did not resign his post as requested, he was fired.
1:01 pm
let's bring in doug burns, defense attorney and former federal prosecutor. let's begin with what normally happens when a new administration steps and especially an administration the represents a different political party. >> for is the united states attorneys, chief federal prosecutor, one of the 93 district around the country, a political level appointment as opposed to career doj lawyers who remain. all those united states attorneys are asked to step aside and leave. what happened here is a mix of a few things. everybody should understand that concept but there were a number of holdovers as the new administration tries to get its footing, some people will scream democrats are holding them up, other people take other
1:02 pm
positions. the replacement concept is not unusual at all. gregg: bill clinton takes office from president george hw bush and simultaneously all 93 us attorneys are asked to tender their resignation. maybe they were given a week or two to empty their offices but here, a bunch of us attorneys have already left, 46 remaining and asked to tender their resignations and i guess they were told we are not going to give you a week or two, please leave but nothing wrong there. >> two of the wrinkles here are kind of interesting and that may be why people i think what happened here, the wrinkles are then president-elect trump had him over to trump tower and apparently as reported in the media may indicated he wanted him to stay on which jumped out
1:03 pm
to me. i was a federal prosecutor tween 9 years, that struck me as very odd as the second wrinkle that caught my attention is when united states attorneys are asked to submit their resignations, they over, one administration to another, in the same party or one party to another as you point out earlier, they give their resignation, don't refuse to do it. unusual. gregg: a couple attorneys who tended their resignations, he asked them to stay on but he wasn't among them. >> i suspect also there are political aspects to this which are not my area of expertise, senator schumer, president trump, hard to say but as a lawyer who worked in the department of justice between 9 years the replacement of us attorneys is 100% normal but here it is very unusual because
1:04 pm
he asked him to stay on originally which was confusing and when they asked him to tender his resignation he said no, not doing it and they fired him. gregg: who takes over? it is generally the second line who was a career prosecutor, he is there -- doesn't seem to have a artisan bent. >> under federal statutes and regulations you have acting united states attorneys, generally the chief assistant us attorney in the southern district, they model after an associate prosecutor which we associate general, one of those two officials will be acting united states attorney for the southern district of new york until a replacement is named and confirmed in the senate. gregg: great to see you, thanks
1:05 pm
very much. heather: to the secret service egg someone breached the white house grounds while the president was inside. a suspect now in custody after climbing the fence surrounding the white house and cutting onto the south lawn. the suspect was carrying a backpack but no hazardous materials inside that bag. kristin fisher is live from the white house with more on how this went down. >> reporter: this intruder was able to make it all the way to the south entrance of the white house, the entrance to the residence which is where president trump was when this happened right around midnight last night. president trump spoke about it for the first time this afternoon at trump international golf club in virginia. >> secret service did a fantastic job it was a troubled person. >> reporter: president trump
1:06 pm
saying it was a troubled person, very said though he praised the secret service for the job they did. president trump made those remarks during a working lunch with his cabinet and several members of senior staff. the president said his coming along nicely but the secret service is trying to get to the bottom of how someone with a backpack jumped the perimeter fence and made it a few hundred feet from the president. nothing hazardous was found in that pack, and the criminal history, this is a very serious security breach, last time a fence jumper got that far was omar gonzalez in 2014, the iraq army vet made it all the way inside the white house to the east room with a knife and that led to the resignation of director of the secret service, after that investigation, the secret service planning to build a new fence and five feet taller
1:07 pm
than the current fence so they raised six feet to 11 feet and that won't be complete until 2018 and another year until that happens, this is a big deal and it is important to keep it in perspective and there has been a long history of white house fence jumpers since 1991. there have been 78 fence jumpers at the white house. heather: to hear with more on how this could have happened in the first place, ronald kessler, former investigative reporter with washington post and author of the first family detail and in the president's secret service. thank you for taking to us. how did this happen and why are we just finding out about it today, this afternoon in particular? >> hate to disagree with donald trump, i have been a friend of his for 20 decades and discussed
1:08 pm
these issues involving the secret service but this was a total screwup by the secret service. they had to apprehend this individual immediately and the fact that he got as close as the white house itself is shocking. these intrusions and screw ups go back to 2009, the party crashers went prancing into the white house, president obama, the secret service, refused to fire the secret service director. in my book the first family detail i recommended an outside individual brought in to be director, someone who would not be beholden to interests within the agency, president obama's own four person panel appointed the security, recommended the same thing, president obama ignored that and a veteran agent -- mostly congressional testimony which i got into in the book and here we are with
1:09 pm
all these embarrassing, shocking intrusions including got dollars who went into the white house and clancy gave misleading testimony about that which will trump and mara margo before my wife pam and i attended and went over these issues and emailed them and i am quite confident though he to give me any indication he will appoint an outside director. julie:he said the secret service dropped the ball, he said they did an amazing job stopping this person, he called this person disturbed. we don't have an identity yet but you talk about gone dollars in 2014 and today and not much of a surprise, gonzalez managed to get over a 7 foot forage fence under construction on the north side, not only did he get
1:10 pm
over it but got inside the white house and the door was open and unlocked so clearly there has got to be something that needs to change. president trump want to the border wall to keep out mexicans, i would hope he has a fence that will keep out intruders. >> this new improved fence two years ago, going to be finished by 2018. donald trump took office a month ago and taking bids for new wall on the border. that is difference between the trump administration and obama administration. julie:it is just coming in that the fence jumper will be arranged later today. when that happens we will have more information on this person but we don't have a name, male or female, we do know their was no criminal history here. we do know this person was disturbed, mentally ill which is pretty much the case when it comes to any of these fence jumpers and when asked if ~taller fence is the solution
1:11 pm
one of our guests suggest something i want your take on that anyone who attempts to jump the white house fence should be met with lethal force as in deadly, you jump the they shoot. >> absolutely because by definition the president's life is threatened when you have a fence jumper and under supreme court rulings, lethal force is justified at the secret service under clancy has ignored efforts to provide much more up-to-date high-tech fences to discuss these intrusions but in the case of god dollars the secret service people are asleep or knocking on their cell phones. outrageous and not one thing has changed under clancy. outside director preferably from the fbi never tolerate this cover-up culture.
1:12 pm
cannot afford another assassination. julie:president trump described the intruder as a mentally disturbed person, many jumped the fence in years past are mentally disturbed. >> could have had explosives which =1 let's talk about the backpack, it did contain any weapons. he had a knife in his bag in 2014, didn't take it inside the white house like the fence jumper did in 2014 but what if he was carrying a weapon like a gun is now more of a possibility, struck down obama regulation the blocks gun sales to the mentally ill. >> could have had explosives, biological or radiological materials, could have wiped out the president, no question. this is outrageous. the fence, if donald trump -- on the southern border, he can get a new fence within a month or two.
1:13 pm
julie:the mentally ill given background checks before being given weapons? >> that is beyond my expertise. julie:if they get a gun and jump the fence, the white house or the president's life is at risk. thank you very much. gregg: the white house is moving forward with a plan to repeal and replace obamacare, mike pence traveling to louisville, kentucky to help rally support for the gop healthcare proposal. the vice president making a pitch in the backyard of senator rand paul, one of the biggest critics. >> we are going to work with congress and our agency at health and human services and have an orderly transition to a better healthcare system that makes affordable high-quality health insurance available for every american. we are going to make the best healthcare system in the world even better. gregg: a member of the house ways and means committee
1:14 pm
approved the bill earlier this week in a marathon session. you don't look worse for wear, congratulations on getting that through but looks like president trump's role here, he is working behind the scenes trying to prod reluctance lawmakers, republican leaders in congress such as yourself, white house advisers hammering out the details. is that a good approach? >> i think it is a good approach, i am from the private sector and never thought hours on the job were supposed to be -- can't go longer. both committees work long and hard because that is what you are supposed to do but where we are now today the president will get involved and if you look at the president's past this is a strong businessman am a very successful businessman, wrote a book called the art of the deal and it is hard for me, and it won't be conservative -- mike
1:15 pm
pence is conservative, somehow speaker ryan, the best job we can, it is a little far -- gregg: some people in the president's party our opponents of this, some want to move up the rollback of medicaid expansion in 2019, is that doable? what about it? it is a concern, the third district, and some folks, to be in that position, we tried to do a transition call people down, let them know you will have access to insurance, still have that ability, the medicaid expansion under obamacare took it beyond but we got to look at it. are we doing the right thing not just for conservatives but for
1:16 pm
the american people? that is the most important part. gregg: there are other republicans who want to change the tax credits to deductions so a lot of americans who don't pay taxes don't receive checks the mail and another free entitlement. that is not an reasonable request, is it? >> we need to listen to those voices, here those voices, we have to work hard to get to make sure the product we deliver after all is said and done actually fulfill the promises we made when we ran for office and the disaster we are facing we can leave until it implodes and that would be a disaster for the american people, what we are doing now, it will never be perfect, not everybody's going to go away with a smile on their face and say this is exactly what i wanted but i said with a lot of people that the people i'm
1:17 pm
concerned with keeping happy is making sure they understand are the american people. and can't imagine what it is like, don't they understand, president trump, vice president fence, speaker paul ryan get work together to make sure a product is absolutely acceptable. gregg: it is politics, that is part of the process, thank you very much, mike kelly of pennsylvania, appreciate it each >> congress steps probes in russian interference in the 2016 election in democrats turning into a political which to go after president trump. fair and balanced debate coming up and bashar al-assad issuing a veiled threat, and do us troops
1:18 pm
are considered invaders which we will take a look and here's general jack keane which is >> we have the capability for any enemy holding our territory, in the united states of america, we do that in conjunction with our allies on the ground. it's looking up not down. it's feeling up thinking up living up. it's being in motion... in body in spirit in the now. boost. it's not just nutrition. it's intelligent nutrition. with 26 vitamins and minerals and 10 grams of protein. all in 3 delicious flavors. it's choosing to go in one direction... up. boost. be up for it. what are you doing? getting your quarter back. fountains don't earn interest, david. you know i work at ally. i was being romantic. you know what i find romantic?
1:19 pm
a robust annual percentage yield that's what i find romantic. this is literally throwing your money away. i think it's over there. that way? yeah, a little further up. what year was that quarter? what year is that one? '98 that's the one. you got it! nothing stops us from doing right by our customers. ally. do it right. let's get out of that water. ally. do it right. c'mohappy birthday! i survived a heart attack. i'm doing all i can to keep from having another one. and i'm taking brilinta. for people who've been hospitalized for a heart attack.
1:20 pm
i take brilinta with a baby aspirin. no more than one hundred milligrams as it affects how well it works. brilinta helps keep my platelets from sticking together and forming a clot. brilinta reduced the chance of another heart attack. or dying from one. it worked better than plavix. don't stop taking brilinta without talking to your doctor since stopping it too soon increases your risk of clots in your stent, heart attack, stroke, and even death. brilinta may cause bruising or bleeding more easily, or serious, sometimes fatal bleeding. don't take brilinta if you have bleeding, like stomach ulcers, a history of bleeding in the brain, or severe liver problems. tell your doctor about bleeding, new or unexpected shortness of breath, any planned surgery, and all medicines you take. talk to your doctor about brilinta. i'm doing all i can. that includes brilinta. if you can't afford your medication, astra zeneca may be able to help.
1:22 pm
julie:we are getting this in washington as we identify the intruder that jumped the white house fence last night and was obtained and arrested and facing his arraignment, his name is jonathan friend, reports that he is 26 years old, whether that is true or not he did manage to get over the fence, he was arrested on the front lawn. he had a backpack, no hazardous weapons found in the backpack, said to be mentally disturbed but did not have a criminal record. more to be learned in his arraignment later this afternoon and when we get more information we will bring it to you. gregg: us marines moving it to syria to help local forces retake rocca from isis control
1:23 pm
but the deployment of meeting pushback from syrian president bashar al-assad who called us forces in his country, quote, invaders. here is general jack keane on how the us should proceed in syria. >> we should work with the turks and sunni arabs in the region and are owned forces to take rocca down, leave the sunni arabs in the region to occupy poland, pool ourselves out and pull the turks out. that is the best solution. gregg: joining the is lieutenant colonel mitch back, former special forces officer who served in both afghanistan, great to see you. do assad's mission complicate? >> she is a dictator who was losing until russia stepped in to assist.
1:24 pm
the interview aired on state television, he is being interviewed by a chinese news network, one of the strategic competitors in china, mostly for the people watching or forced to watch in his own country and allies watching, he has to sound like a strong tough guy. gregg: troops including the united states are operating in syria against isis, correct? >> we are uninvited guests, turkey has lost dozens of soldiers in the fight. we have almost 1000 for soldiers and marines, and european allies who are much more reticent to discuss who they have on the ground then we are but a few countries in syria now working against isis. gregg: is there an opportunity for coordination on the ground? >> yes there is.
1:25 pm
assad made a hint towards this. and a rate around rocca. it is of great concern. and he may have forces attack the province and leave rocca to us and our kurdish and local allies. we will see how this pans out, possible coordination. >> there is considerable danger. >> a marine artillery man was killed south of mosul by isis doing the same thing our marines are doing providing fire support to forces fighting isis. our troops are well within range of isis.
1:26 pm
>> when would you expect the isis caliphate to collapse? >> 2017. that is as close as i can get. it will collapse this year. three quarters of mosul have been taken by iraqi forces, they will be a long fight in iraq, pockets of isis have been bypassed, clearing their country for the next year and within a year the caliphate will collapse in syria but there is a great chance they could blend back in on a long range and long-term guerrilla war in the middle east and europe so these isis fighters are going underground for terror attacks. the change in the form of terrorism so we can expect to see as a result of the caliphate's collapse more action, terrorism. >> every isis fighter not killed has the ideology, still wants to
1:27 pm
fight on behalf of the caliphate and the middle east and europe are at greatest risk once the caliphate collapses in the fighters that were not killed blend into their own country and a terrorist campaign in the middle east in europe. >> you were just in mosul for a couple weeks with some of the elite iraqi forces. i'm out of time but just give me one or two observations. >> iraq is carrying the fight to the enemy mostly on their own, support from the coalition from the air, intelligence surveillance reconnaissance and medical support, and iraqi fight being done by iraqis. >> thanks for being with us. julie:breaking news, a us attorney has been fired from one of the most high profile positions in the country after refusing to hand in his resignation, the latest on this
1:28 pm
developing story. the cia in major damage control this saturday after a trove of documents released by julian assange, wikileaks. how is the latest security leak? >> we have never seen wikileaks release information about russia or chinese or other countries intelligence system. it is another form of attack designed to weaken the united states. >> i read the newspaper every morning. umbrellas!! you need one of these. you wouldn't put up with an umbrella that covers you part way, so when it comes to pain relievers, why put up with just part of a day? aleve, live whole not part. tell you what,
1:32 pm
like finding new ways to be taken care of. home, car, life insurance obviously, ohhh... but with added touches you can't get everywhere else, like claim free rewards... or safe driving bonus checks. oh yes.... even a claim satisfaction guaranteeeeeeeeeee! in means protection plus unique extras only from an expert allstate agent. it's good to be in, good hands.
1:33 pm
gregg: preet bharara, famous for rooting out corruption on wall street among other things confirming in a tweet he has been fired. and following this developing story is the southern district of new york, preet bharara and 45 other appointed obama attorneys general are out of jobs today. he declined it had to be fired and did not resign. moment ago i was fired, being us attorney for the southern district of new york and forever be the greatest honor of my professional life. preet bharara was appointed to the southern district. he was in good standing with president trump after being stuck around. and he spoke to reporters.
1:34 pm
>> and and asked the he stay on. >> he was a fairly popular attorney general, a bit of a swamp drainer himself out for a new york political heavyweight for corruption in recent years. former speaker of new york assembly sheldon silver faces 12 years in prison. and dean skelos, republican, faces five years for corruption. he handled terrorism cases and gone after some bad eggs on wall street, chuck schumer had some words for the president saying is true presidents from both parties made their own choices for us attorney positions across the country, they have always done so in an orderly fashion the doesn't put ongoing
1:35 pm
investigations at risk. they asked for letters of resignation but the attorneys are allowed to stay on the job until their successors confirmed. preet bharara was looking at the democrat mayor regarding shady fundraising tactics, and looking at aids for democratic governor of new york andrew cuomo for allegations of bribery as senator schumer said, sweep like this, 46 attorneys general being asked to resign is not uncommon. definitions was fired from his post as attorney general for the southern district of alabama in 1993 when bill clinton and janet reno took over. a lot of people are surprised half of the attorneys general in the country. gregg: thanks very much. italy:congress is moving forward with potential ties between russia and president trump's campaign but clinton remaining over credibly considering the
1:36 pm
toxic and partisan atmosphere and republican dominated congress, put their party's candidates in the white house, plus congressman trey gowdy says the house may not be up to it. the change the house is not equipped to investigate allegations of crime. that is always a challenge but we have an oversight function due to the house intelligence committee but the house intelligence committee is not new to its oversight role over the intelligence community so congress has a role to play in this investigation but we don't investigate crime because we are not good at it. julie:brad blakeman served as deputy assistant to president george w. bush. brad, let me start with you in regard to is not doing a good job, making these investigations public and compare it to the 9/11 commission the 15th responsible for coming up with ways to better improve our national security.
1:37 pm
how good of a job do we do dealing with criminal investigations hands would this be treated like a criminal investigation? 's >> it shouldn't be treated as a couple investigation because the justice department and fbi do that and they should. it should be a multifaceted investigation into whether the russians had an influence on our election. with regard to congress's will congress have a constitutional location on its oversight as trey gowdy said to find out who, what, when, where, how, the resident allegedly did this and they are absolutely equipped to do that, a bipartisan committee in the senate, they shouldn't shirk the response ability, that is what they are paid to do and they should do it and do it well. julie:what is your reaction? >> speaking to what trey gowdy's concerns are, that is why there have been calls repeatedly to have a bipartisan select
1:38 pm
committee set up as you mentioned similar to what we did after 9/11 that has subpoena power so they can look at what happened. i agree that this is just a criminal issue. it goes to the larger issue of national security and safety going forward in terms of cyberattacks and cybersecurity and we still up limited recommendations by the 9/11 committee and all the agencies at the irs and security agencies at the government level and our economy. this is a real issue, they can do this damage, what else are they planning, willing to do and who else is out there wanting to do it? julie:what should they recommend as far as sanctions, how to deal with russian interference and jessica brings up cybersecurity,
1:39 pm
that is a topic they need to address as well. >> there are no rules for cyberwarfare or the cyberintelligence, no international agreement and it is time we did that. sanctions on russia, absolutely. it was found conclusively they tried to interfere in the election and find out who is responsible and how it was done, russia need that it sanctions more than obama put on them in order to deter them from doing this in the future. >> should this be a bipartisan effort? >> absolutely. what bread that speaks to the issue of concerns that not only representative trey gowdy said this that multiple people on both sides of the aisle said. everything is centered on a few committees. the senate banking committee that has oversight of doing the type of sanctions brad mentioned is not even hold hearings on this issue. that is not appropriate, it is not enough there should be many more hearings going on, at the
1:40 pm
very least, and the ideal situation would be to have bipartisan select committee set up to look at this issue. none of these are happening in the house or senate and that is why we rely on members of congress leadership to do these things for us and they are not, they are spending too much time and resources worrying about things like the wall, spending on defense they are on cyberdefense which is one of the main issues we already breached. julie:by spending the money on defense we are defending our national security, when you talk about spending more money, recent event plate theory ago to show that money is being well spent, we spent 400 marines, boots on the ground into syria to defeat isis because until this administration we were not sending anyone on the ground, just trying to get them through airstrikes, that has backfired. that money properly when it comes to dumping it into defense, the wall obviously, the
1:41 pm
wall is -- is not jumping into defense, the goal is to spend money on defense, defense include the national play for how we are doing cyber defense. >> there has to be a plan, what is the plan? to finally put this russia thing to rest? >> plan is to let congress investigate this, the justice department has to conduct their own investigation as to whether or not crimes were committed and who is responsible and another thing, we need a complete audit of the intelligence service, 17 separate and distinct intelligence services, overlap and different departments, that has to end and i believe there should be a dni. we need to streamline our intelligence and not have it is pervasive and extended as it is today. julie:thank you for your insight.
1:42 pm
we appreciate it. >> the world is reeling after julian assange, wikileaks, published a treasure trove of documents detailing the cia hacking tactics. how bad is the damage? a closer look next. [ex st here. [wife] hi [dad] hey buddy [son] hey dad [wife] i think we can do this. [chancellor] adam baily. [chancellor] adam baily. hei don't want one that's hadch a bunch of ownersd car? just say, show me cars with only one owner find the cars you want, avoid the ones you don't plus you get a free carfax® report with every listing it's perfect. start your used car search at carfax.com
1:43 pm
gave us the power to turn this enemy into an ally? microsoft and its partners are using smart traps to capture mosquitoes and sequence their dna to fight disease. there are over 100 million pieces of dna in every sample. with the microsoft cloud, we can analyze the data faster than ever before. if we can detect new viruses before they spread, we may someday prevent outbreaks before they begin.
1:46 pm
julie:cia doing damage control with the wikileaks release of thousands of documents the catalog the agency's hacking method amidst growing concerns and questions whether vladimir putin played any role in this. mike baker is a former cia covert operations officer and president of diligence llc, global intelligence and security firm. thank you for talking to us. on tuesday wikileaks released that huge pile of documents with descriptions of cia -- used to break into smart phones,
1:47 pm
computers, internet connected tvs. how badly did this wikileaks document dump hurt the cia really? 's >> it is never good. i guess the agency has not come out med made an official statement, there are indications the documents are legitimate but only layers to this. what is the extent of the documentation, classification at the secret level which implies not particularly sensitive? anytime you release information related to capability, your focus, your methodology, it gives the other side and edge even if they are aware of some of the capabilities, in a sense if you are a commercial company
1:48 pm
as an example and find out what your competitors focused on, what their research and develop its efforts are focused on, what they are planning, developing their resources, that by definition is an advantage to you. in a broader sense this is a damaging situation. in another sense an existential threat to national security. we are always looking for new capabilities and how to use technology to protect national security interests. julie:wikileaks is the documents came from inside source with the worrisome part is where is it coming from? where are these leaks coming from? speculation is it is even coming from a cia operator or contractor but bottom line this is another leak under the trump administration, not this time within his own people but within the cia. it is a mess. how does the president handle this?
1:49 pm
>> as any administration would handle an investigation. talking about these documents what you are talking about starting counterintelligence effort, the process doesn't really change, looking at the list of people with access to this information, staffers, contractors, service providers and all those jewels and narrow it down to a step-by-step, takes time it is labor intensive but something they will work through, the fbi leads the effort and part of this may point to there has been concern in the agency and until community for some time about overreliance on contractors, outside providers, whether individuals, companies, at times essential services but still they are outside. it makes it harder. if you trust them it makes it harder in terms of overall
1:50 pm
security. julie:makes potentially more possible. if you have outsiders becoming insiders what is the process in order to ensure this doesn't happen and what is the punishment? >> if we can identify the perpetrator responsible the punishment will be severe but at the same time, by definition when you talk about technology and how to use technology as work in cyberspace you have to broaden the scope so a variety of people they not fit the culture of the intel community, that is the problem. julie:a pleasure to talk to you, thank you very much. gregg: it is with to a longtime tradition with one elementary school renaming the daddy daughter dance. come on. because this scent lasts up to 12 weeks, which is longer than any relationship i've ever been in.
1:51 pm
freshness for weeks! with 9 lobster dishes.est is back try succulent new lobster mix & match or see how sweet a lobster lover's dream can be. there's something for everyone and everyone's invited. so come in soon. jack knocked over a candlestick, onto the shag carpeting... ...and his pants ignited into flames, causing him to stop, drop and roll. luckily jack recently had geico help him with renters insurance. because all his belongings went up in flames. jack got full replacement and now has new pants he ordered from banana republic. visit geico.com and see how affordable renters insurance can be.
1:54 pm
1:55 pm
taking away from me? >> they have been longer than anybody can remember, they take place at weddings, birthdays and school. sparking controversy in sacramento, the pta presidents and several parents recently complained so in response the school decided to rename it the family dance. now they are pursuing more gender-neutral events. >> got a request from a couple parents to be more inclusive and change the name. >> whoever they want to bring with them. >> in recent years several states have seen schools transition father daughter to family dances. in 2012 the aclu got involved in rhode island where a single mom said she couldn't participate in the dance. the solution, they named it the family dance and everyone was allowed to attend. as you might imagine despite a lot of conversation, more politically correct pandering to the west coast, that is probably
1:56 pm
fine, a lot of kids don't have dads, don't have moms, why not? sacramento there are still the do have father daughter dance is on the calendar and in early april the school board plane to review gender related policies and regulations. gregg: thanks very much. julie:there are -- gregg: mother-daughter events which julie:if you want to include the family, go ahead. maybe do a family dance. don't get rid of father daughter dance. a sweet moment. that and her wedding day. oh well, that will do it for us. >> the news continues top of the hour. the changed
1:58 pm
1:59 pm
termites, feasting on homes twenty-four-seven. we're on the move. roger. hey rick, all good? oh ya, we're good! we're good. termites never stop trying to get in, we never stop working to keep them out. terminix. defenders of home. and her new mobile wedding business.tte at first, getting paid was tough... until she got quickbooks. now she sends invoices, sees when they've been viewed and-ta-dah-paid twice as fast for free. visit quickbooks-dot-com.
2:00 pm
>> we begin with a fox news alert. an outspoken man appointed by former president obama has been fired. he became famous for aggressively rooting out government corruption, going after republicans and democrats alike . he was currently investigating corruption allegations against bill de blasio. hello and welcome to a brand-new hour inside of american headquarters. i am marcel neville. >> confirming he was let go after refusing to resign as part of an
103 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on