tv FOX Friends FOX News April 4, 2017 3:00am-6:01am PDT
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florida. the florida police officer flailing his arms sprinting down the hall after brushing past the row debt. he looked to see if anybody noticed. heather: then we show everybody. clayton: god bless him. "fox & friends" starts now, everyone. heather: bye. >> the surveillance close to president trump, possibly the president himself now has name and one you have seen in major scandals before. >> this is stunning news. >> this is not a minor flunky. this is obama's right hand woman. >> the unmasking reached unprecedented portions. >> i have decided i will not support judge gorsuch's nomination. >> i cannot support this nomination. >> i will not, i cannot. >> let me assure that you judge gorsuch is going to be on the supreme court by midnight friday night. >> off the mark and this -- it's going to fall to north carolina. they're not going to be denied
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this time. ♪ r-o-c-k in the u.s.a. ♪ r-o-c-k in the u.s.a. brian: south carolina was the women's championship and go to the north carolina tar heels to win sixth national championship last night. big game. ainsley: it was amazing. brian: what a bracket. finally done. ainsley: proud of the gamecocks in my house. heather childers was thrilled because she went to unc. steve: you would know this. did anyone have a perfect bracket. brian: i don't think it's possible. how could you possibly have oregon and gonzaga in the final four? i do know tv newser had a competition going. i know i was win not guilty first couple weeks top three and then i lost interest. ainsley: we did the brackets iin the beginning of march madness. i think we said unc was going to win.
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i had north carolina, too. so maybe the brackets looked a little different but the ultimate winner. steve: the middle part kind of a mess. brian: if you open up to page a 16 you have this story. and. steve: and this is it. turns out we were wondering who in the obama administration would have been asking to unmask members of the trump team's names. and as it turns out it is that woman right there. barack obama's national security advisor asked for the id's of trump associates unmasked. and then, of course, later, the administration changed the classification of unmasked documents to spread it inside the government. kind of broke -- absolutely legal, broke the spirit of the law though. because then though transcripts and names were leaked to the press which, of course, is a felony. we're not saying she is the leaker. we know she is the unmasker. ainsley: here is the thing though. remember benghazi?
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she went on five sunday shows and said bengals was because of that tape. that videotape. that turned out to be false. so the question is can we trust her because she went on a show, pbs, is that right? pbs just 14 days ago, two weeks ago she says she knows nothing about this. listen. >> i know nothing about this. i was surprised to see reports from chairman nunes on that count today. i really don't know to what chairman nunes was referring, but he said that whatever he was referring to was a legal, lawful, surveillance, and that it was potentially incidental collection. brian: it's fascinating in that this. evidently, according to the "new york post" today, she made dozens of requests to intel agencies to unmask the personal on the other side of this conversation with some type of foreign entity. so she made multiple requests.
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she also know there was a big push at the administration to fan out all this information to intel agencies and apparatus around the government as the transition took place. this doesn't exonerate and say this is exactly what president trump was talking about three weeks ago or a month ago now with that tweet. it does let you understand that there is a sense that conversations were being recorded and transcribed and suddenly this information is out in the public. even john brennan who was on the bbc yesterday because we are out of outlets here in america for him to talk on. he was out saying the leaks are appalling but so far nothing illegal about the fact that it was happening. ainsley: that's how the left is going to spin it is it legal is it not illegal. left saying it's not unusual for this to happen. it's not unusual for them to unmask. this is not even a gray area. it's black and white. it is illegal for this to be leaked to the press, for the public to see this. brian: that's true. steve: absolutely.
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here is why you unmask somebody so that the person in the intel community or high official can understand the intel because reading it it's like who is this person? oh, that makes sense. or if it's a u.s. citizen involved in what could be criminal activity. there is no suggestion that that pertains to the trump team. no obvious reason to unmask other than political curiosity. senator rand paul saw this information that she's the one who did the unmasking and he tweeted out. this smoking gun found. obama pal and noted deselm bler susan rice said to have been spying on trump campaign. he also said she needs to be asked under oath did barack obama ask her to do this? she needs to be asked under oath did she reveal this information to "the washington post? he said i don't think you should be allowed to listen to american conversations without a warrant. brian: former national security advisor who wanted to be anone news in the "new york
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times" trump looking to deflect essentially on a-16. only conservative outlets are interested in this story. request -- the requests are normal and justified, shows a need to stoond the context of these conversations that were handed to her by the intelligence agencies. we do know there was an fbi investigation. one thing would be indisputable is if an american citizen was talking to another american citizens and those recording were taking place and those -- and that information distributed why if you think about this the big picture. why is she surveying the opposing party's nominee for president? brian: just pack your stuff up and leave. ainsley: why do that? what was president trump's campaign team doing that was -- that needed to be surveilled? steve: this is such a big story.
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keep in mind the other twin investigation, parallel investigation is about how whether or not russia influenced the u.s. elections. we get that they are looking into that. but don't you think this is a big story as well. if one political party, essentially is spying on the other and, yet, brian, what page was it on in the "new york times"? brian: a-16. steve: mainstream media big three nbc no time for it. abc no time for it cbs had 45 second for it sean spicer thinks that this lack of media coverage is, well, peculiar and interesting. >> i think that it is interesting the level of or the lack of interest that i have seen in these developments when it goes in one direction where i think it was going -- where other amounts of interests that have come from this room and beyond. i'm somewhat surprised in terms of the level of interest that i have seen from the press corps. one set of developments versus another set of developments.
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brian: he doesn't get many questions about that. ric grenell who has been a guest on this show has a rich international relations background who might be the next u.s. ambassador to nato said this. got to give him credit on the daily two weeks ago he said on sean hannity he said the former state department colleagues of mine have been talking about susan rice's role for weeks. she and her team were certainly hyper partisan it makes sense. she by far seems to be the angriest exobama official speaking out against the new trump administration. steve: jim over at cnn tweeted in this just in the idea that ambassador rice improperly sought the ideas of americans is false according to a person close to rice tells me. i've heard that the way the democrats are going to handle this after adam schiff went over to the white house and saw the stuff, which apparently shocked him -- in fact he went reportedly directly to democratic
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leadership to say how do we handle it? and what they said is our answer is what she did was absolutely legal. and so they went out to the "the washington post" and they went to the "new york times" and they said what happened was legal. the unmasking is absolutely legal. but then when you relax the standards so that the information can be spread out to 16 different intel agencies, with the likelihood of it being leaked to the press e which is a felony, that breaks the spirit of the law. ainsley: you are right. brian: if you are devin nunes and you get a call there is a whistleblower that wants to give you information and happens to be on the acreage of the white house not necessarily the white house, do you go over he? yeah. when you treated, then you realize what you have, you come bang and talk to the press and then the president, and then you talk to the ranking member. it seems a little bit more logical now for devin nunes' actions. steve: well, because the big story last week was he got the information from the white house. he went to the white house. now we can putt the puzzle pieces together because that's where the nsc is. that's where the request for
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the unmasking by susan rice took place. see, all the pieces are coming together. the guy who essentially released her name, eli lake from bloomberg view is going to be with us in about five minutes. we're going to find out what is new today from eli. brian: interesting that alam schiff didn't come out and say there is nothing there. why wasn't he shown this right away he? didn't come back and say this was a waste of my time. i wish i could go to the movies. ainsley: you are saying it's understandable why nunes did this and didn't include schiff. steve: i think he was shocked what he saw. which will come out in the next week. brian: revival of healthcare. possibly revisiting it. heather childers welcome back. heather: other stuff going on.i. we begin with this breaking news. the manhunt for a wanted cop killer is intensifying. this is brand new video showing the suspect's car near the murder scene which is a
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courthouse in texas. clint greenwood deputy constable was 30 years on the job ambushed in the parking lot. greenwood who previously served as prosecutor and defense attorney recently said that he felt threatened by a man in the past case. a $65,000 reward now being offered. some extreme weather pounding the south. death toll climbing to 5 after powerful storms ripped through. one of the victims killed after suspected tornado sent his mobile home flying through the air in south carolina. look at that and then outside atlanta. three firefighters very lucky to be alive after a twister blows the roof right off their fire station. the deadly storms are now moving up the east coast. and the senate will begin debating today on supreme court nominee justice nominee judge neil gorsuch. and this shaping up to be a fight of historic proportions. democrats claim that they have enough votes to block his confirmation. but senate majority leader mitch mcconnell vowing to push him through by friday, promising the nuclear option.
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and finally, an pandemonium in the streets of franklin street. thousands of tarheel fans storming the streets celebrating the ncaa national champs. >> matthews, off the mark. and this is the confetti is going to fall for north carolina. they're not going to be denied this time. heather: not this time. gonzaga failing to hit a last minute jump shot. unable to claw their way back. this marks their sixth championship victory. it was utter heart break, of course, other side of the coinel for the bulldog fans. many of them weeping at the final buzzer. all the teams, all of them that made it to the final four including south carolina, they are great. ainsley: our women's team we won. that was good. steve: gonzaga heart break
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first time at the dance. brian: steady powers being challenged. so many good schools. straight ahead. steve: more on our story about barack obama's national security advisor susan rice exposed for surveying the trump campaign. the man who unmasked the unmasker. bloomberg columns eli lake joins us live. ainsley: while you were sleeping the trump administration making moves on healthcare. the overnight wheeling and dealing straight ahead. brian: reunion months in the making. tom brady stolen super bowl jersey now back with the rightful owner. he knows what it smells like and it smells like that but not before being stolen one more time ♪ no one wants to be defeated ♪ show us your fight ♪ it doesn't matter ♪ who's wrong or right ♪ just beat it ♪ beat it ♪
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there was some type of terrorist plot and neated to unmask server or institution being used taken over to launch that attack. steve: none of that applies to the trump team. >> right. and then e of course, like because it's a little bit muddy at this point devin nunes said the reports he saw didn't have anything to do with russia. i was unable to confirm that too. there was ongoing fbi counter intelligence probe on russia and trump. that would be reason to do it. the real scandal here is that the bar is so lowe low just to show there is a foreign intelligence value could mean almost anything that i think the real scandal here is that how long is this kind of thing been going on and how long has a senior white house officials been able to do this? how many other people, let's just take trump out of it we know that when the israeli leaders were legally surveilled that members of congress and other people in jewish organizations in 2015 were picked up during a bitter
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fight over the iran deal. what are some other examples where incidentally collected stuff was making its way to the white house that would have basically had a political value but not a national security value and do we need to reform the law that called fisa that allows you to collect this stuff in the fall in order to make sure this kind of thing doesn't happen? steve: you are saying it's bigger than trump? >> really a story about how easy it is to learn the identities of americans who are incidentally collected and now we know from how this -- whether that can be abused by one party for some sort of political advantage. steve: sure. >> those are things we should reform i would imagine. i don't understand why democrats are not more interested in that considering usually they do have an abiding interest in things like privacy and abuse of surveillance power and things like that. steve: and if this is okay, then what's to stop trump from doing it to his political adversaries? >> i have been making that point in my columns for like a month now and i'm getting very few answers from my democratic friends who basically are
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still of saying nothing to see here. steve: what about in houston? you know, he took a lot of heat now, his story is starting to be cleared why he took the route that he did. adam schiff surprisingly quiet since he went to the white house on friday. >> adam schiff has been quiet. he is a careful lawyer. knows the stuff. has dealt with the stuff before as a prosecutor. he is mainly limited his critique not to the substance of the allegation but rather to the way in which the information was shared, which was unusual in terms of devin nunes seeing it and him not sighing it and not going through a kind of formal process. steve: well, it is curious, because it does look to some like the obama administration may have abused domestic -- or surveillance for political purposes and that should trouble all of us. >> well, i mean, again, i am really surprised we haven't seen more democrats showing at least curiosity in it because, again, if the obama white house can do it then one can imagine the trump white house
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can do it, too. steve: there you go. elie lake who broke the story over at bloomberg view. good job. >> thank you. steve: did susan rice get caught on another lie on national tv. a look at her track record on the truth straight ahead. to a different company with car insurance, and i was not happy with the customer service. we have switched back over and we feel like we're back home now. the process through usaa is so effortless, that you feel like you're a part of the family. i love that i can pass the membership to my children, and that they can be protected. we're the williams family, and we're usaa members for life. call usaa today to talk about your insurance needs. i've been fortunate enough to win on golf's biggest stages. but when joint pain and stiffness from psoriatic arthritis hit... even the smallest things became difficult. so i talked to my rheumatologist... and he prescribed enbrel... to help relieve joint pain and help stop further joint damage.
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are you my uber? [ horn honks ] [ tires screech ] hold on. [ upbeat music ] the biggest week in tv is back. [ doorbell rings ] who's that? show me watchathon. xfinity watchathon week! now until april 9. get unlimited access to all of netflix and more, free with xfinity on demand. ♪ ainsley: we have quick headlines for you. vice president pence pulling a late night on capitol hill meeting with the freedom caucus to try to resurrect the new healthcare bill. the trump administration vowing to promote officer safety and morale while fighting violent crime. attorney general jeff sessions ordering a review of police reform agreements at the center of high profile shootings. the goal, handing authority back to the local police chiefs. brian? brian: tulsa police officer who shot and killed
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unmarshalled black man last september now breaking her silence. >> because of your action, a man is dead. >> yes. >> how do you come to terms with that? >> it's very difficult. i never wanted to be in that spot. his actions dictated my actions. i never wanted to do it. >> officer betty shelby set to go on trial in manslaughter facing four years to life. so why did she decide to go public with her story and does it have anything to do with the fact the media and others are already labeling her guilty and a criminal? here to weigh any fox news contributor former washington, d.c. detective rod wheeler. rod, you probably saw the feature. >> yes. brian: we've also seen the video. how unusual is it to come out before the trial and give your side of the story. >> i was a little surprised
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the officer divided to do the sixtsixth minute segment. giving away whatever case she had giving it up right now. i'm not sure why she is doing that more important point here, brian. that is she will go to trial. the challenge for the jury is going to be to try to decide whether or not officer shelby was, in fact, her life was in jeopardy or anybody else's life was in jeopardy. and whether or not she used proper discretion when she decided to use lethal force. so those are the challenges that's going to be facing the jury, brian. brian: some the unorthodox things that happened her husband in the hospital but being taped right there. you see the victim with his hands up in the air. you say why does that officer shoot? and here is her explanation of why she felt threatened. >> his hands are just dropped beside him. his chin is resting on his
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chest, and he is standing there motionless. i thought i wonder if is he on pcp. >> why did that cross your mind first? >> because it was odd behavior, zombie-like is the best i can -- zombie like. brian: he did have pcp in his system. does that mean anything to you? >> not necessarily so. obviously if a person is high off of a drug like. cp they have this enormous amount of strength. again as police officers, brian, we are challenged and we are given the responsibility to use the right amount of prescription in effecting annual arrest. when i first look at the video. i'm thinking this is a training issue. i don't see what the immediate athletic is was this officer reckless by her actions or did she, in fact, feel as though this guy was posing an immediate threat because of his stature, maybe because of the way he was acting? we don't know. so we do need to wait until we get all of the testimony, because there were other police officers that you see
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there on the video, brian that were on the scene, none of them decided to use lethal force, soft challenge and again, the question is why is it that this officer divided to do that? >> i will say, this rod, with your professional experience, i get it i watched the 60 minutes piece and they weren't even giving her a fair shot. this thing might have boomeranged on her. very interesting to see how it goes. one thing underlined how hard the job. >> absolutely. brian: to be an effective police officer. rod wheeler, thanks so much. >> thank you, brian. brian: 28 minutes after the hour did. susan rice get caught in another lie on national television? a closer look 59 her track record on the truth. that's straight ahead. and caught on camera. a stranger becomes a hero when a man falls onto the subway tracks a train barreling in. why he was the perfect person to save the day next. ♪ we'll give it a shot ♪ oh, we're halfway there ♪ oh,
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>> i began by asking about the allegations leveled by house intelligence community chairman devin nunes that trump transition officials including the president may have been swept up in surveillance of foreigners at the end of the obama administration. >> i know nothing about this. i was surprised to see reports from chairman in housto chairmat count today. i really don't know to what chairman nunes was referring. he said whatever he was referring to was a legal, lawful, surveillance and that it was potentially incidental collection. brian: i guess technically you can't say what you don't know but disingenuous don't know what he is referring to that's susan rice on pbs last week.
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steve: told fox news that susan rice was the obama era official when she was in national security who asked for a number of trump team members names to be unmasked. brian: dozens of times she requested. she said there was a very -- there was a reason for national security interests to find out who was on the other end of those international calls. steve: she had the authority at that point. brian: nothing illegal. steve: what happened after that, that's the gray area. ainsley: let's bring in dr. james lee mitchell enhanced interrogation techniques. inside the minds and motives of the islamic terrorists trying to destroy america. we want to talk to you about judge gorsuch and his response to the enhanced interrogation comments, but this news just broke yesterday so, we first want to ask but that susan rice. what do you make of this? >> well, the best predictor of future behavior is past behavior in similar situations. and that holds true for both individuals and for
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organizations when they are made up of those same individuals. i think what we have seen in national security advisor rice's behavior is that she wants to own the news cycle e and in the course of doing that she wants to control what information gets out. and she is willing to be deceptive to do it. if you actually pars every single word she said in that interview that you played that i heard just before i came on the air, probably every single sentence she said, particularly given the pronoun references that she is using is probably true. but she has put it together in such a way that it's misleading and leads believe to believe because how she said it that she didn't know anything about it. brian: jim, they put together the patriot act and you know this because you got called on to interrogate when bestarted picking up al qaeda. we saw the hijackers here we wanted to know who they are talking to overseas. we have to get the predic patrit
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to allow to surveil would be tastes. it demands some integrity that they are going to use it for our international security. are we seeing a possible abuse of that? >> in my opinion, we we very well might be. the investigation not revealed yesterday. if she unmavericked those names for political purposes. it's one of the things people fear. it's one of the civil liberties that americans are afraid are going to be violated for this. here is the problem with that is we need those tools to protect ourselves and when people abuse them like this. then there is a tendency to not want to use them or to outlaw their use and that puts us at risk. steve: it's so unusual when you look at her history for the national security advisor to be somebody who is political. i mean, what supposedly
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happened here with the unmasking of the names and wound up getting leaked that looks political. you look at bengals, when she went on television that looked like it was political, too trying to get the administration out of hot water before an election. and then when you look at what she said about bowe bergdahl how he served with honor and distinction that looks political as well. >> the purpose is not really to tell the truth. their purpose because they know that the mainstream media is basically going to have their back is to put something out there that they can then say well, let's move on, we have already discussed that. that's been settled. because what happens is people remember how they responded emotionally to the news. they don't necessarily remember what the facts were. so they are trying to control people's emotional reactions. ainsley: let's move on to judge neil gorsuch, he was being grilled about enhanced interrogation and what his
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thoughts were and he basically was saying i'm not going to legislate on that. i'm not going to give an opinion. that's not my job. that's your job. what is your opinion about him not answering that question, basically. >> well, i think the answer he gave was the appropriate answer. you know, the judge -- he is an originalist. he is a person who believes that we should base our laws on the constitution a as the founding father. people put that together actually intended it to mean. that's not a judge legislating law from the bench. he said, quite clearly is, as things stand right now, certain things are illegal. i would agree with him 100 percent. i don't think interrogators should do anything that is illegal. i'm glad that a man like him is going to be involved in the process because we're going to have to make some hard decisions about how we are going to protect ourselves. brian: and if you read your book, you talk about how eventually as believe it or not khalid sheikh mohammed the evil genius came out and said
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to you eventually they will turn on you and the american public will turn on each other in this fight. and that's when they will win. that's what we're debating nau. >> definition of torture and enhanced interrogation and the need to get the most information. >> absolutely. what's at issue is whether or not we should elks tend our american 1eu68 liberties and legal protection he is to people who are not u.s. citizens and who are by their own choice trying to destroy us. and i believe that's wrong and i think an originalist who looks at the constitution as it was intended to be will see that they really, foreign nationals really do not have the same rights as american citizens. ainsley: do we want judges to give their opinions on interrogation techniques though? is it there their job to interpret the law. >> it is their job to interpret the law. he was clear about that. if it's illegal it's illegal. if it's legal, it's legal.
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he should not be making decisions about what's legal and illegal based on his personal opinions or his personal preferences. he should be basing it on what the law is there are some laws i don't like but they are laws, right? and so i think it's -- he is the perfect guy for that and he is honest with them about doing that. steve: looks like he is going to be the next justice on the supreme court come hell or high water. we will find out by the end of the week. brian: friday at midnight. steve: doctor, thank you very much for making a house call today. >> thank you very much for having me. brian: do you want to know what we're up against al qaeda and isis. look at his book on interrogation. he spent hours with the worst of the worst. steve: it's an eye opener. 20 minutes before the top of the hour. heather nauert joins us with breaking news. heather: breaking right now, first look at cold blooded killer linked to islamic extremist behind the russian subway terror attack. authorities say the 22-year-old monster is from kyrgyzstan and he blew himself
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up on a train packed with people. the horrifying aftermath showing chaos and carnage in st. petersburg leaving at least 13 innocent people dead. and nearly 50 others injured. a second device found nearby was diffused. president trump vowing his full support to russia after the massacre. and dramatic video of a man putting his own life in danger to save a boy from the subway tracks with just seconds to spare. look. you could see the man jumping onto the tracks in new york city scooping the boy up. witnesses say that the little boy fainted but is okay. the hero ironically just took a track safety training program just last month. and tom brady finally reunited with his super bowl jerseys nearly two months later. owner robert craft presenting them to the quarterback at his home. you may recall mexican
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journalists stealing them from the patriots locker room not yet charged. brady showing it off to red sox fans fenway park for opening day. watch, his teammate rob swiping it from him. brady chasing him around a little bit before finally, wait for it, tackling him. those are a look at your headlines, he did get it back though. brian: you don't normally see that. brian: hard to believe he was hurt. mifsed the super bowl. he wrestled on sunday and tackling tom brady on monday. ainsley: he missed the super bowl and he was the one partying the hardest at the parade. remember in boston afterwards. he had his shirt off and spraying beer and champagne at everyone. brian: like steve doocy. ainsley: wait until he tackles him. they kind of roll around. they have a man crush. steve: half a million-dollar. be careful. ainsley: i want to hang out with him. is he a funny guy. brian: they have a family van,
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they go around. steve: the grunk mobile. brian: the dad is the biggest partier of it all. steve: tom has his jersey back all is safe in america. meanwhile the political left demanding that everybody in america have healthcare. no one is asking the question, would it actually make americans healthier? dr. nicole saphier isn't so sure and she is next. ainsley: plus, meet our furry friends. we are getting wild and crazy this morning. ♪ brian: there's a doctor in the house. ainsley: dr. saphier with some sort of an animal. steve: is that h a lemur? so you can travel the world better.
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>> you take away health insurance from 30 million people, how many of them will die? and the answer is many thousands. >> the fear that is instilling in people, stress is the last thing anyone needs when they are sick. >> we're united in our opposition to these republican attempts to make america sick again. ainsley: does medicare or even obamacare really make americans any healthier? our next guest says she isn't so sure about that. joining us now to explain is dr. nicole saphier. >> good morning. ainsley: why aren't you sure making his healthier. >> it isn't the lifesaver it was set to be. the truth is whether we have more insurance, more people covered, people are still making bad decisions. and it doesn't matter if you have insurance or not, we still have obese 307 legs, we still have a lot of people smoking and just bad behaviors in general. the relationship between low
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socioeconomic factors and unhealthy behaviors has been well-studied and it's there. whether have you insurance or not it doesn't change that. ainsley: if you are overweight and eat a lot and do have a heart attack as a result. at least you can go to the hospital and get treated from your dock door and rest of america doesn't have to pay for it? >> that is true.r have you insur not, you go to the hospital with a heart attack, you are going to be treated. now the financial stability that has come out of affordable care act that is proven. whether or not it's making people healthier or not, that isn't so sure quite yet. ainsley: because have you health insurance doesn't mean you are going to stop smoking and eating healthier and see your doctor more. >> you want a healthier america, you need to have people throw some skin in the game. they have need to start taking responsibility for their own health. the litany from democrats take insurance away from people, people are going to get sick again. that's not the case. what about opioids. people because of obamacare will flock to their doctors and get prescription medicine and get addicted. >> several studies have shown
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people gained insurance medicaid expansion under the affordable care act not only have more mortality overdose death and overdose. people now have insurance through medicaid, they have more access to opiates. also young adults staying on their parent's insurance they have more access to opiates, therefore, promulgating the opioid epidemic. ainsley: this is a huge problem in america. >> huge problem. ainsley: seeing that in the hospitals? >> every day. not in the hospitals. everyones' life is being affected by opioid. ainsley: pain killer is it up to the doctor to say wait a minute, you don't need this anymore? >> there is a lot of things a lot of factors that have to go with it. patients come. some physicians are overprescribing. they give them a longer course because they don't want their patients to be in pain. they don't want to pan n. pain over the weekend needing to go to the er for pain medications. overprescribe. going to multiple doctors, getting multiple prescriptions.
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luckily we have mandates in place so overseeing this so that has lessened. trying to hone in on appropriate opioid prescriptions. ainsley: thank you for joining us. a huge two hours we have still on this show. judge andrew napolitano. laura ingraham and stuart varney. plus it, is a jungle in here. we have a lemur. we have a d tucan and two toed floss. ♪ only invisalign® clear aligners are made with smarttrack® material to precisely move your teeth to your best smile. see how invisalign® treatment can shape your smile
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you are are friends joining us from busch gardens that you don't have in your house. peer theer give us idea what is on my shoulder ambassador for busch gardens. >> good morning. steve: kind of has skunk coloring. i hope it is not one. >> one of busch gardens animal ambassadors. a lemur. many species of lemurs found on the island of ma madagascar off the island of africa. endangered. brian: who is killing them? >> unfortunately logging and agriculture. 90% of the forest. even though we don't live there, there are things we can do in the united states that help protect their habitat. ainsley: like what? >> lots of things just buying sustainable wood products. avoiding mahogany and teak and rosewood. what we can do to protect them
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in wild habitat. brian: what other animals do we have as we say goodbye lemur? >> next one is another rain forest animal. steve: when i get home my wife is going to see blonde hair. >> this is a toucan from the rain forest in central america. i will see if he catches a grape for me. if he does -- they have this huge bill, let's wait for him to swallow that. eats lots of fruits in the rain forest. undigested seeds will go straight through him and help replant the vegetation in the rain forest. you will see little tosses. he is ready. brian: that was awesome. steve: toucan can. >> he will use that long feather to flip it back in his throat. ainsley: amazing. i love him.
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>> favorite animal the sloth: this is cody, he just turned 1-year-old last week. he was born at busch gardens. one the ambassadors that helps represent the piec piece specie. brian: spends most of his day sleeping. >> they do. spend up to 20 hours a day. >> we have our last animal behind you. brian: wow, oh my gosh. so graceful. >> 3 feet high. this is from after infantry call. these guys can jump way over your head about 10 feet high. brian: no kidding. >> catch birds right out of mid-air. they are amazing animals. the best hunters of the cat world. brian: are they great at hearing too? >> if we had ears the same size in proportion to our face they would be the side of dinner plates.
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huge ears, they use those ears super sonic hearing to listen for rodents like mice and rats. steve: they are feeding him raw meat. >> we have raw meat. steve: watch your finger. brian: are these vicious animals. >> you never want to take them for granted. they are definitely animals that we want to respect. they become pets. people have them as pets which is not legal in many states. we highly discourage it they are wild animals. they don't make good domestic cats. ainsley: they are absolutely beautiful. >> all of these animals are represented at busch gardens and talk about conservation and get people excited about how they can take part in helping wildlife. brian: another reason to go to tampa. >> if you are planning to come down to florida this summer or this spring. tampa bay. busch gardens tampa bay best. >> thanks for having us. steve: a bombshell report that nsa advisor susan rice was the person who asked to unmask
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intelligence on the trump campaign. so, could there be legal ramifications? judge andrew napolitano here with the answer next hour. ainsley: plus, guys. group hug, group hug. it's actual hug a news man day.od brian, you ran into some problems, right? tresiba® is a once-daily, long-acting insulin that lasts even longer than 24 hours. i need to shave my a1c. ♪ tresiba® ready ♪ tresiba® works like my body's insulin. releases slow and steady. providing powerful a1c reduction. i'm always on call. an insulin that fits my schedule is key. ♪ tresiba® ready ♪ i can take tresiba® any time of day. so if i miss or delay a dose, i take it when i remember, as long as there's at least 8 hours between doses. once in use, it lasts 8 weeks with or without refrigeration, twice as long as the lantus® pen. (announcer) tresiba® is used to control high blood sugar in adults with diabetes. don't use tresiba® to treat diabetic ketoacidosis, during episodes of low blood sugar,
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and together, we'll help you make decisions for your plan... to keep you on track. ♪ time to think of your future it's your retirement. know where you stand. >> the surveillance of people close to president trump possibly the president himself now has a name, and it's one you've seen in major scandals before. >> this is stunning news. >> this is not a minor flunky. this is obama's right-hand woman. >> the real scandal is how long has this kind of thing been going on? >> we need these tools to protect ourselves. when people abuse them like this, then there is a tendency to outlaw their use and that puts us at risk. >> i have decided i will not support judge neil gorsuch's nomination. >> i cannot support this nomination. >> i will not and cannot. >> let me assure you that judge neil gorsuch is going to be on the supreme court by midnight friday night.
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>> matthews, off the mark. and -- going to fall to north carolina. they're north going to be denied this time ♪ we will, we will rock you ♪ we will, we will rock you ♪ steve: well, first, if you're getting dressed today and you are in the northeast, wear something water repellant because it is a soggy day as you look up sixth avenue toward central park. welcome aboard. congratulations by the way to north carolina. big game last night. sorry, gonzaga, you were fantastic. ainsley: women's team at south carolina they did well, too. brian: over on sunday after that monster upset uconn mississippi state pulled that off. unbelievable. meanwhile, trying to follow this story, ever since a month ago when the president said enough about russia. he tweeted out he had information that possibly the obama people were spying on him. people wanted to know where this was coming from. little by little, we are
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getting a clearer picture on what's going on. according to eli lake, white house lawyers last month learned that the former national security advisor susan rice requested the identities of u.s. person in raw intelligence reports on dozens of occasions. so you know you are allowed to see person one and person two as they talk to the bulgarian ambassador or the finland ambassador. anybody any foreign entity. well, she as national security advisor was allowed to ask for the identities of the other person. she did it dozens of times as it relates to trump officials. ainsley: including, the guy, her successor who was general michael flynn who was head of the nsa for a brief second under president trump. she unmasked his name. it cost him his job. steve: well, what she did by unmasking was legal and she was authorized as national security advisor but then what they did was they changed the rules regarding unmasking and the nsa where they could then distribute all this information and, you know,
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brian: through an executive order. steve: how many people were unmasked, we don't know at this point. we do know it went out to 16 or 17 different intel agencies where it would be easier to leak. somebody leaked it and then it wound up in the papers with the transcript verbatim essentially. and that's why flynn loos his job. that's why we got where we are today. because the first question was who unmasked, now we know. and, in fact, senator rand paul yesterday tweeted out this. smoking gun found. obama pal and noted disassembler susan rice said to have been spying on trump campaign. now, that's interesting because thee was just on pbs within the last couple of weeks and she pretended or said she didn't know anything. >> i know nothing about this. i was surprised to see reports from chairman nunes on that count today. i really don't know to what chairman nunes was referring, but he said that whatever he
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was referring to was a legal, lawful surveillance and that it was potentially incidental collection. brian: i don't know what he is referring to, maybe exactly what you did and requested dozens of times? i don't know what you have to tell pbs but the truth might have helped. but maybe -- how about this? trey gowdy, when he weighs questioning james comey gave us a clue that he knew something was going on. remember this question. he asked james comey at a house intel hearing when he came down that monday if obama officials including susan rice could have access to unmasked names that were leaked to the "the washington post" and "new york times." now, unmasking in her position, not a crime. leaking is a crime. ainsley: well, yeah. and james comey said yeah, she had access to it she could have been the one who unmasked. steve: sure. ainsley: in that sound bite she is saying it didn't happen. also went on tv on five sunday shows after bengals and said it happened because of that videotape that was released. we found out later that was
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not true at all. >> steve: we had dr. james mitchell on, he essentially wrote the book on interrogation. is he good at listening to people. he was good at analyzing what she said in that sound bite and here is his analysis. >> if you actually pars every single word she said in that interview that you played that i heard just before i came on the air, probably every single sentence she said, particularly given the pronounce references that she is using, is probably t but she has put it together in such a way it's misleading and leads believe to believe because how she said it that she didn't know anything about it. ainsley: she should come out and explain herself not that we believe it but it would be nice to hear from her. brian: rand paul nice to hear. hear from james clapper and former cia director brennan. why shouldn't we hear from susan rice who says she will not show up. steve: call her up in front of some the committees, put her under oath. ask her whether or not she was asked by barack obama to do
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that? did she leak it to the "the washington post"? these are good questions that we need good answers to. brian: marie harf is full time now. she used to be in the state department about w. barack obama. she was asked by march that mccallum on first 100 days about this incident and she said there is no problem with this? >> it is not at all unusual for the national security advisor to request additional information a and that by here i mean unmasking of intelligence report that does not mean she leaked it and no one has reported it. we should not equate unmasking with leaking. we have seen no until eli lake's report or others there were partisan motives behind. this. steve: there is no obvious need for the unmasking of these names other than political curiosity. ainsley: 100 percent. why are the democrats surveying the opposing party's candidate? why are they surveying him? brian: that argument is we are concerned that the next administration coming in is
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too close. ainsley: are they allowed to do that? are you allowed to just surveil the next person running for president? he. steve: under the fisa stuff you can. but the name of the american citizen that they talked to is supposed to be covered. unless you are a member of the trump team and it looks like they uncovered a bunch of those. you mentioned russia. all of the information so far is that this stuff did not involve russia. it didn't involve a crime. why did they unmask it? eli lake who broke the name yesterday is a reporter for bloomberg view. he said the real scandal is this: >> the real scandal is the bar is so low foreign intelligence value could mean almost anything. i think the real scandal here is that how long has this kind of thing been going to on and how long has a senior white house official been able to do this?
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it's really a story about how easy it is to learn the identities of americans are who are incidentally collected and now we know from how this -- whether that can be abused by one party for some sort of political advantage. those are things that we should reform, i would imagine. and i don't understand why democrats are not more interested in that. ainsley: that's what's hard to understand. it's like they have the advantage because they are in office. that goes with the territory. steve: break the law. ainsley: exactly. what you were saying if they are looking at donald trump and his campaign to decide whether or not they are colluding with russia, and they found something illegal, then, yes. but i'm wondering why do they have the power to look into his campaign and his team without -- trump can't do that. brian: he can't do it now. ainsley: he can now. brian: he has all the transcripts right there. the white house lawyers have them. so the question is what are they going to show us? and does it show anything illegal and nefarious that's going on? steve: i don't know how many of the transcripts they actually looked at because the person at the national security council was looking
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through it and realized wait a minute, there is all this stuff right here and they unmasked the names. then he called the white house council and said, hey, come on he over here, take a look at this. the guy says stop looking at it because we don't want it to look like we are having our own parallel investigation so they stopped it right there. one of the things that is just curious and has people scratching their heads today is the mainstream media ignoring how the barack obama administration might have abused surveillance for political purposes? i mean, that ultimately is. ainsley: that's the question. >> steve: people have got to wonder about and worry about. if you used the intel appear rat telappearrat as it of appe. ainsley: when you have her on sunday shows lying about what happened in bengals. how can you trust that administration? brian: nobody outside of valerie jarrett, susan rice might have been the closest in
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the white house to president obama. it's hard to believe that didn't coming up in coffee talk. steve: have you a feeling her name is going to come up when they are drawing up lists of witnesses to call up on capitol hill. so, stand by for that. in in the meantime, it is exactly 10 minutes after the top of the hour. heather joins us with the news. it starts with the weather. heather: it does. we have extreme weather to talk about pounding the south. death toll climbing to five after powerful storms ripped through in louisiana a twister blasting through a parking lot. lifting a car flipping it in the air. outside atlanta. a home left in ruins. crushed by this falling tree. and there was a pickup truck left suspended in the air. look at that after wind uproots a tree in south carolina. the deadly storms now moving up the east coast. heather: the senate will begin debating today on the supreme court justice nominee judge neil gorsuch. and it is shaping up to be a fight of historic proportions. democrats claim that they have
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enough votes to block his confirmation, but, senate majority leader mitch mcconnell vowing to push him through by friday. promising the nuclear option. and it has been a presidential promise from the very beginning. you'll remember it protect americans with the mexican border wall. and today, we're one step closer to seeing it happen. >> do not worry. we are going to build the wall. okay? don't worry. [cheers and applause] >> don't even think about it. ainsley: it is deadline day for border wall bids. the trump administration asking companies to hand over design contracts for a 2,000-mile long barrier. and finally, pandemonium in chapel hill as thousands of tarheel fans storm the streets celebrating their team crowned the ncaa national champs. >> matthews off the mark and this year the confetti is going to fall to north carolina. they are not going to be denied this time.
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heather: no, not this time. a little redemption. the sixth national championship for them. gonzaga failing to hit a last second jump shot, unable to claw their way back 71-65. marking there as i just say sixth championship. utter heart break on the championship. bulldog fans crying at the final buzzer at their loss. they made it to the national championship. ain't ains they made it so far. steve: first time ever. ainsley: thanks, heather. steve: much more on top story. bombshell report on susan rice. could she face criminal charges? judge andrew napolitano on deck. judge? brian: it's not easter but you are looking at this year's hottest halloween costume. the mexican border wall. great. ♪ this is what i say ♪ run, run, run away ♪ [ ominous music ]
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official in the administration, requested the identities of u.s. citizens caught up in foreign surveillance to be revealed. >> i think it's really a story about how easy it is to learn the identities of americans who are incidentally collected. what are some other examples where incidentally stuff was making its way to the white house that would have basically had a political value but not a national security value and do we need to reform the law that called fisa that allows to you collect this stuff in the fall in order to make sure this kind of thing doesn't happen? ainsley: here with reaction is fox news judicial analyst judge andrew napolitano? judge, did she do anything illegal here? >> it depends on what she did with the information she unmasked. she is entitled to this she as the president's national security advisor has the highest level of national security clearance. so if general flynn is talking to the russian ambassador and that conversation is recorded, is surveilled because the
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government wants to know what the russian ambassador is saying to whomever he is speaking, and she needs to know to whom the ambassador was speaking in order to understand the conversation, she can do that. can she reveal the identity of the american for a purpose other than national security? absolutely not. can she ask for more americans involved and then unmask them and say to her boss, by the way, guess what trump and manafort were talking about last night? do you know what's that's called? that's called espionage. that's called the failure to safeguard top secret information. the identity of americans incidentally caught up is otherwise lawful surveillance is protected by the top secret protection, the highest level of classification of secret he is that we have. this is the same crime that hillary clinton probably committed by her failure to safeguard top secret ghfings when she weighs secretary of state. steve: this is very troubling.
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because if you use the apparatus of the intel community to do something bad to your political opponents or to surveil them for political advantage that is everything that fisa was not supposed to be. >> correct. it's also hacking and it's espionage. each time it's done. so the fbi must examine this. and she must be challenged as to why she needed this information and what she did with it. she only had one boss. she only reported to one person. we all know who that was. that was the president of the united states. steve: reportedly, a lot of these conversations had nothing to do, actually none of this stuff somebody saw, according to sources, in the press today, had to do with russia. so there is no national security interest. >> if there is no national security involvement, then she has no right to examine and she has no right to reveal it, even if the revelation is not in public. ainsley: she is going to get away with this though, right? she can always say she did have a national security interest because they were checking to see if he was colluding with russia. that's all she has to say and
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she gets away with it, right? >> no. she can say what she wants, but the fbi when they are investigating this should challenge her as to whether or not what she is saying is true. think about what happened. the president of the united states and his national security advisor were obtaining transcripts of the president-elect and his potential national security advisor and other transcripts. could you imagine if george w. bush and condoleezza rice had done this to president-elect obama in the political earthquake would still be palpable. steve: now maybe we know what trump was talking about in that tweet. >> i think we do. ainsley: maybe some democrats will come out against this as well. >> i'm waiting for them. steve: all right. judge. thank you. >> you are welcome. steve: the courts may have tried to tie his hands but president trump's tough stance on immigration already working. the proof is in the numbers. we will share them with you next. ainsley: i love. this it is national hug a news man day. steve: today's the day.
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ainsley: remember what happened last year? brian: excuse me, this is national hug a news guy day? [laughter] ainsley: no takers? this morning brian is heading out to times square to see if he can do better this year. please, someone hug him. >> brian is very huggable. r, that help them save on their car insurance. any questions? -yeah. -how do you go to the bathroom? great. any insurance-related questions? -mm-hmm. -do you have a girlfriend? uh, i'm actually focusing on my career right now, saving people nearly $600 when they switch, so... where's your belly button? [ sighs ] i've got to start booking better gigs. actually making your body feel better... that's exactly what tommie copper does for people everywhere. they call it "wearable wellness," and tommie copper has infused it into everything they do.
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steve: time now for news by the numbers on this tuesday. first, 20070, that's how many refugees arrived in the united states in the month of march. that's a 504% drop since february. proving president trump's immigration order apparently is working. next, $78,000. that's how much president trump made on his first paycheck and as promised, he donated every penny to the national park service, i
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believe. press secretary sean spicer handing the check over as you can see right there to the nps. and finally, first, you're taking a look at melania trump's debut portrait. taken in the first family's restaurants upstairs at the white house. and that's news by the numbers. but that's not all the news today. is it, ainsley? ainsley: that's right. today is national hug a news man day. so, we're wondering is brian going to get a better reception this year than he did last year? look at this. >> excuse me, excuse me, guys. this is national hug a news guy day. [laughter] ainsley: no takers? brian: you would think the george m. co-hand statue would bring a bigger crowd but it isn't. brian: i would stop him he is probably mile four. i'm wondering if he could get a quick hug?
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>> i need to walk. brian: i'm working too. quick hug? [laughter] steve: that is new york. brian joins us from times square. brian, it is national news hug day where people salute their news guys. you got a sign. we will let you go for three minutes and see how it goes. brian: all right. steve. if you can stay with me on this one. now it started out and now becoming a national holiday. kids home from cool because it's national hug a news anchor day. thankfully due to the rain nobody is here. i'm going to find strangers to hang out. sir, what's your name? >> gillespiey. >> where are you from? >> australia. >> everyone in australia loves orlando magic. this is national hug a news person day. >> yep. brian: it's awkward can i get a hug? >> bring it in. brian: another friendly australian. congratulations. are you having a good time in america.
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>> i'm having a great time. beautiful country. i love it. brian: never been in australia with a personality. steve doocy get you out of any problems. how are you doing, sir? it's a national holiday here. national hug a news person day. what's your name? >> my name is raul. >> where are from you. >> england. >> sorry about the revolution but your loss. i was wondering if i could have a hug. >> of course you can. brian: america around the world. a what's your name? >> carroll. brian: you are with this man you? saw him hug me. i prompted him so don't be mad. i was wondering -- wonder if you wouldn't mind. sir. >> go for it. brian: look at this. two hugs. fantastic. i'm already beating last year. how are you dyin doing, sir? brian: i guess is he going to keep going. i should have known by the look. wait a second, what's your name? >> ted. >> roo. brian: how are you doing?
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>> upstate, new york. brian: ted, it's a national holiday. ask you right now. offering free hugs. i'm anchor. >> i really want to hug ainsley. ainsley: awe. ainsley: bring him back, brian. brian: i would rather hug ainsley, too. no offense. thank you very much. ainsley: brings him back, i'll hug him. brian: here we go. ainsley says go to 48th and sixth she is hugging everybody. brian: how are you doing, sir? it's national hug a news person day. offering free hugs. at any moment you could change your mind. stop walking and embrace, it's inevitable. you don't want to do. this anderson cooper would never ask you to do this. ainsley: he can't hear you. brian: it's not raining, you can put your umbrella down. it's national hug a news person day. i get a 401(k) and pension plan. i was wondering can i have a hug? >> sure. brian: where are you from? >> new jersey. brian: new jersey.
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on behalf of the people of new jersey i thank you for that hug. is this your first hug today? >> yes, it is. brian: can i have another? [laughter] i'm getting more hugs today. how are you doing? i'm brian. as you see, nancy, it's hug a news person today. i'm a full time news person. i have dental as well with a small deductible with $50 i get covered. i'm wondering could i have a hug? >> yes. brian: you are a great hugger. where are you from? >> i'm from singapore. brian: what's it like? >> hot. brian: are you glad to be here? >> it's cool. brian: can i offer you some advice? it's not raining. you can take off the hood. not raining. tell the people of singapore i high five you. it's bigger than christmas now in america. how are you doing? how are you doing, sir? come on, please, i need a hug, just a hug. you can't sit. what else are you going to do? i have already gotten five hugs, is he with you and he walked away, how can that --
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here we go, how are you doing, ma'am? it's national hug a news person day. you are not going to do it? how are you doing? the mets won opening day. how are you doing? nice to see you? look at this. he didn't even know it was a holiday. it's fantastic. fantastic. i have really outdone myself. steve: you have. brian: done something everybody else around the world has got to be envious of. i have approached 15 people. five have hugged me back. i feel embraced and welcomed for the first time in new york city since the early '80s. ainsley: you told them all about your dental coverage as well. brian: right. absolutely. ainsley: how many cavities do you have, brian? brian: i really don't know but i do floss. how are you doing, sir? it's national hug a news person day. is there any way i could have a hug? where are you from. >> from the eart earth netherla. brian: do they celebrate this in holland. >> they don't, actually.
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but they should. it's a great cause. i'm really in a hurry now, i'm sorry. i need to go to work. brian: where are you going? >> i'm a trader. so i need to go to work. brian: thank you very much. on behalf of america. thank you. singapore, the netherlands. this is unbelievable. steve: england and australia. >> everyone but americans. fantastic. back to you guys. steve: job well done. national hug a news person. go out and hug somebody who does the news. ainsley: he is so funny. steve: next up on the rundown on this big holiday. not even easter. hottest halloween costume it's the mexican border wall. ainsley: we have big changes. could they be coming to the white house? ed henry is here on what he just learned. ed henry is here with his new book. steve: come on in, ed, we're going to hug you. ♪
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he improves his farm and invest in his community to make even better coffee. all for a smoother tasting cup. green mountain coffee. ♪ steve: ed henry has a brand new book called "42 faith." we're going to talk to him in a minute. we are waiting for brian kilmeade to come back. he is hugging people out on the street. apparently he would like one more before he comes in. ainsley: heather is wearing blue because her tar hills one. heather: and women of south carolina as well. we can put a face to cold blooded killer. we brought this to you yesterday. the person linked to islamic extremists behind the russian subway terror attack. of the 22-year-old monster is from kyrgyzstan and blew himself up on a train packed with people. horrifying aftermath showing chaos and carnage. this is in st. petersburg,
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leaving at least 13 innocent people dead and nearly 50 others injured. a second device found nearby was difficult fox newsed. president trump vowing his full support to russia after the massacre. and a horrific tragedy on a college campus after student dies during a pancake eating contest. 20-year-old caitlin nelson was a social work major at sacred heart university in connecticut. police say she had eaten four or five pancakes when she started choking and she collapsed. this is the second tragedy striking the nelson family. caitlin's father was a port authority officer who lost his life in the september 11th attacks. and this president trump border wall costume is at the center of caree controversy. being amazon. $20 outfit white onesie with a bring wall with the words reading "mexico will pay" on the front of it amazon firing
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back saying it is not offensive. brian: senator schumer won't let me buy it huge day for ed and should be proud of this. it's out today, the rest of the jackie robinson story "42 faith" it's about jackie robinson's faith. how long have you been working on it? >> 10 years. next hour we will talk a whole lot about it i know you want to talk politics now. i was working on it 10 years. i heard untold story about how it almost didn't happen because tricky had second thoughts about signing him. had a secret meeting with a minister that led me to kind of explore branch rickey's faith but maybe more importantly jackie robs robinson faith. what sustained him when people were southing at him and threatening his life. people were wanting him to be killed just because he wanted to play baseball. new seasonal here and come up on the 70th anniversary of jackie's first game. if you are a baseball fan you
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will love it. ainsley: come back and share some stories. >> we have surprises in the show, too. steve: ed, you heard that it sounds like president trump is fine tuning his -- >> not just communicating but the broader staff. you saw katie walsh leave who was the right arm of reince priebus the chief of staff. hearing there were going to be more changed last week that leaked out a day early they got spooked and said let's hold this and see where we are going with this. there could be more changes in the next few weeks. why? you saw the president kind of -- this is from advisors to the president telling me that right after the healthcare defeat he was sort of lashing out and angry about it you saw him on twitter going freedom caucus. you netsed he pulled back and said very positive things both about the freedom caucus and how there is not a civil war in the party. we love each other. we're going to come together. what did he do? he also invited rand paul to play golf. now tweeting out about how they are going to come together on 2.0 here on healthcare move.
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the point is, i'm told from his advisors the president has gotten much more after the kind of broader. working the phones, how are we going to fix this and move forward not just on healthcare but on taxes. as part of that, he thinks there is going to be some staff changes in the weeks ahead. tickly what some of his advisors are telling me sort of a second wave of people. some of the original campaign people who did not make it onto the white house staff might be coming. in maybe some shuffling here and there. this is the president getting personally involved. ainsley: what about the healthcare plan? >> look, the complication is the president does want to get to taxes because that's what he talked about on the campaign. in addition to the border wall. but that's what's going to spur the economy. and for all of the mainstream media talk about trouble for this president, he has a lot of optimism around the economy right now. if he can get that tax deal, that would be a big shot in the arm. so i think, yes, he is trying to move forward with healthcare on w. rand paul and others show it's not dead. they are not going to move to
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that right await a minute they have to get moving on taxes. brian: background checks. ric grenell waiting. other people we know their names. they can't get through. ambassador bolton. i heard he was on the deck to get something. it's amazing they might be subtracting before adding. >> goes to the healthcare and tax fight. democratic obstructionism on a whole bunch of nominations that were up before. so they have had trouble getting their own team into place. steve: sure. >> it ties back to healthcare and taxes because if you think that you can just fight with the freedom caucus and bring in democratic votes on some of this stuff, it might be a pipe dream because democrats haven't worked with the president, period. steve: we're going to stay tuned and find out what he dose. see nut next hour. >> see you next hour. look forward to it. steve: meantime mainstream media in hysterics over the trump presidency. look at this. >> a presidency in crisis. >> the drip, drip, drip of crises in the trump presidency is quickly developing into a steady rainstorm. steve: what about the president's successes? we will break those down
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coming up next. you will not hear them on the other channel. ainsley: she was only three feet away from a bomb that went off at the boston marathon. her body acting as a shield to save her son's life. she lost her leg in that attack. but she has never lost her faith. rebecca gregory is here with her incredible story about tragedy and triumph. there she is. we will talk to her next. ♪ i'll be strong night i'll play my fight song ♪ kevin kevin kevin kevin kevin kevin kevin trusted advice for life. kevin, how's your mom? life well planned. see what a raymond james financial advisor can do for you.
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o brian: have you noticed -- president trump's so-called set backs. >> a presidency in crisis. >> the drip, drip, drip of crises in the trump presidency is quickly develop good a steady rainstorm. >> president trump is still licking his proverbial wounds after the stunning defeat of healthcare bill. >> instead of moving forward with his america first agenda trump was right back where he
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started. brian: what they're missing is while they are focusing on thoorks donald trump is focusing on other things and can you label them dare i say successes? let's break some of them down for you. joining us now to do that is independent general review erin mcpike. while people are looking left it hasn't left him from moving straight ahead. broke it down to series of issues. first off abortion issues which matter very much to his agenda. >> that's right. and what this is the mexico city policy. and basically this could affect about $10 billion in global health funding. what he is trying to do is take away federal funding for abortions both at home and overseas. what it is is really red meat for social conservatives. this is different than some of the others. but i think by and large, brian, the big thing here that trump has an opportunity to do is remake a lot of washington and federal government by rolling back a lot of regulations. brian: he is doing that constantly. that free's up business which they say is the bigger
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complaint among business, small and large and corporations than even taxes. now, let's talk about the xl pipeline because this xl pipeline has been in hyper space for six years. now it isn't. >> yeah. and obviously this is a big movement for the obama administration. i would say obviously that people trying to combat climate change don't like this decision, but it does -- it will create about 40,000 jobs temporary. mainly creates 5 50 jobs permanently. canada wants it and good in relations with canada. brian: also when it comes to personal finance obviously affecting all people's pocketbooks. you talk about him delaying obamacare and personal finance of fiduciary rule. what are you talking about? how does it relate to dodd-frank? >> what banks have been doing is spending a lot on compliance. so this -- in freezing this rule right now and they are reviewing that rule and also reviewing todd-frank.
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it just cuts out a lot of cost for banks that could then pass that on to consumers. brian: finally on internet policy and privacy? >> and that was an executive order that was just signed last night in rolling back, also approving a law that the senate passed. what this does is level the playing field between internet service providers and the other big tell con companies. it's not popular with consumers and consumer groups, that's for sure. brian: huge impact being felt on the fight against isis. deploying troops. keep that number secret in syria over at iraq. evaluated what's going on in afghanistan. and we let the -- and we let the myrtle know that a lot of money is going to be flowing your way in terms of over $600 billion. >> yeah. that's right. president trump has been making very clear that he wants to increase defense spending. i would also point out that air strikes have been increasing but they have been increasing for the past couple of months. the obama administration did increase those air strikes.
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so they are going forward and trying to really take the 2350eu9d to isifight to isis. brian: without getting assad's permission which drove him crazy but occupy to his national interest. and, of course, establish egg relations with japan. that's pretty secure, the one with egypt yesterday. elsie is i looks great. king abdullah today and on saturday a huge meeting with the chinese leader. erin mcpeak, thanks so much. >> feet away when the bombs went off in the boston marathon. she lost her leg in that attack. but she never lost her faith. rebecca gregory here with her incredible story of tragedy and triumph. let's look back on this day 1979. gloria gayner was top of the charts with i will survive and she did. ♪ i will survive ♪ i will survive ♪ hey, hey ♪
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ainsley: in 2013 when bombs exploded at the boston marathon, rebecca gregory and her son were only 3 feet away from one of the bombs, and they both survived. rebecca eventually did lose her left leg. and in 2015, she returned to boston to run the marathon on her prosthetic leg. she opening up about it all in her new book. it's out today, it's called taking my life back. my story of faith, determination surviving the boston marathon bombing. rebecca gregory joins us now. what a pleasure to have you here. >> the pleasure is mine. we have coffee.
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i feel like we are best friends. ainsley: i'm so glad to hear that what has the last four years been like for you. >> the last four years have been an absolute whirlwind. every day i feel extremely blessed to be alive to see a new day. as crazy as everything has been, i believe that god has a bigger plan and that's why i'm still here and able to tell my story. ainsley: do you know what i leave about your book? you are so open and so real. you went through a divorce after this. you were told you would never have any more children. you end up marrying your high school or college. ainsley: college sweetheart. you all did have a baby. the baby was in the niccu for a while and almost celebrating a yeenchts yes. she will be one on may 2nd so life is good. ainsley: congratulations. you talk about ptsd in your book. tell us what you go through on a daily basis. >> the important thing to remember just because it was four years ago, the people affected by it it's every day of their lives. just like any other traumatic event. i have to give myself a pep
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talk in the mornings to sometimes even walk out of my house. i wake up constantly from nightmares. and my poor husband has to just, you know, tell me it's going to be okay. i'm so humbled and blessed to have that comfort and support. but, it's, you know, airports and leaving backpacks unattended or bags. it sneaks up in every little way. ainsley: things you saw are things a human being shouldn't see. >> definitely not there were people's body parts laying all over the ground and blood and nails and b bebbs. everything they could pack went everywhere in range. ainsley: your son was with you that day. you all were spectators and he was sitting in front of you in front. >> he had gotten bored. i told him to sit down in my feet and told him to play in the rocks as a scientist. we were in asphalt. when the bomb went off behind me my body was a shield for him. i too close to call everything
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in the basket legs. they say that's what ultimately saved his life. ainsley: they tried to save your leg but they couldn't. >> they did. i looked like a shark's leftover. there were chunks of bone and muscle and tissue. 80% of the bones in my foot and ankle were completely gone. i just decided after 18 months of trying, bed rest, wheelchair, i wanted to get on with my life. ainsley: what was that like? do you remember that day? did you wake up and you see what happened to you and to your leg? your missing leg? >> i did. but i was so relieved, because i was taking steps back but at the same time i was moving forward. and it was the next chapter. so i decided not to be sad about it. but so grateful that i can continue on with the fake leg. i can walk. that's an amazing thing after all of this time. ainsley: you talk a lot about your faith and what gives you hope and strength to move forward. you also talk about the letter that you wrote to one of the brothers. can you tell us about that? when you had to come face to face with him.
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i know you gave something called a victim impact statement and you said i will never be your victim. you wrote something on facebook. could you read a little bit of what you wrote on facebook to him? >> sure. it says you can't handle the fact that what you tried to destroy you only made stronger. while you are sitting in solitary confinement, i will be actually enjoying everything this beautiful world has to offer and guess what else? i will do so without fear of you. that was really powerful for me. because i gave my testimony and then i just -- i didn't get to say everything i wanted to. and it was me expressing myself through writing which obviously that's why i have written a book. i have wanted to do that all my life. i didn't realize people would pick up on it and be so supportive and encouraging. that letter was one of the neatest things that i have ever done. ainsley: well god bless you. may god just walk with you every day of your life. >> thank you so much. ainsley: and your precious children. we wish you all the book. have you to pick up her book "taking my life back." and laura ingraham is going to join us next. >> thank you.
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so when it comes to your retirement plan, you'll always be absolutely...clear. it's your retirement. know where you stand. >> the surveillance people close to president trump possibly the president himself now has a name, and it's one you've seen in major scandals before. >> obama's right hand woman. >> i think the real scandal here is how long has this kind of fortunately been going on? >> the fbi must examine this, and she must be challenged as to why she needed this information and what she did with it. >> i have decided i will not support judge gorsuch's nomination. >> i cannot support this nomination. >> i will not and cannot. >> let me assure you that judge gorsuch is going to be on the supreme court by midnight friday night. >> off the mark and --
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>> it's national hug a news person day. can i have a hug? ♪ ♪ it's national hug and news person today. i'm offering free hugs. at any moment, you could change your mind, and we could stop walking, and we could just embrace. it's inevitable. ♪ ♪ steve: come down to 48th and 6th avenue, hug brian. brian: 28 minutes, i'm going out again. ainsley: brian declared it a national holiday and talked about his 401(k), his pension plan, his health insurance plan. brian: a lot of people hold signs in time square hoping to get stuff. food, change, pictures. steve: a lot of weird stuff.
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brian: absolutely. steve: all right. that was fun. ainsley: i love that the script says national newsman day. so you have to hug a newsman, not a news woman. brian: is that true? ainsley: your sign was correct but some of our scripts said newsman. brian: wow. steve: back out on the street shortly. in the meantime, let's dial in laura ingram, you know her. ainsley: no hugs for you today because you are a woman. steve: she's via satellite today. you've got a newspaper there today. what page was the susan write unmasker story on? >> well, this was the washington compost, and we got the trump donor putin ally. democrats are ready to filibuster gorsuch. sessions order review of police reform pac. i've been flipping. there's a story about a dog that was rescued from a -- no, i'm just -- steve: check the wanted.
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>> every manner of story but i can't find any story about susan rice. it must be here somewhere. ainsley: 8:16, the time. brian: oh, yeah, the helen, can you hold up the new york times there? >> i can't find it in the washington post at all. i'm sure it's -- yeah, i'm sure if someone like rice or any of the national security team of george w. bush had spied on barack obama, yeah, that wouldn't be a story or anything for the washington post. i mean, it's so shameless. steve: in the new york times, the helen on page 16. trump citing a crooked scheme by obama. >> this is such a low point for the american media. i mean, they have been pounding the russia story for weeks, even though top officials say they have no evidence of any russia
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involvement in our election or attempt on our election have any effect. they stay on that story. finally find out what russia wanted to do to the election. fine. but now we have a confidante of both hillary clinton, who was running against donald trump and barack obama. the same woman who went out on four sunday shows and lied about the attack in benghazi. she was that trusted and that relied upon that they sent her out to tell that lie endlessly on television. this very same person just decides one day. huh i want to unmask all of these identities of people from these particular phone numbers in raw intel reports. now, did she do all of that on her own? what did barack obama know and when did he know it? and who in the obama administration directed susan rice to do this? or was she just acting alone? there's a -- an aggressive lack of curiosity on the part of the mainstream media on all
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of this. steve: she has said through intermediaries that she did nothing wrong. and if you watch the mainstream media, that's what they say. in inner capacity, she can do that. but if none of the conversations were about russia, why would she need to unmask this information about the trump team? it looks political. >> well, i mean, it very well might have been legal. that's a separate problem that we have with our surveillance culture in washington. i mean, should this be legal? i think we'll have to find out more. steve: is this fine between americans? no. >> exactly. and if the sole purpose of unmasking was to just kind of find out what they were talking about and kind of find out how they were going to change obama's policies or how they were going to proceed on various domestic policy fronts or foreign policy fronts that had very little to do with national security, then we are on the verge in this country
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of living with police-state tactics. this is what police do to their opponents. they surveil and report back to headquarters. i lived in the soviet union for a semester in college. this is the kind of stuff i witnessed as a 20-year-old. onspiracyd, no, i'm not part because i speak russian and have two russian sons. we'll learn more and see why she did all of this, i hope. but for the mainstream media to push this eric prince blackwater story above the fold and leave this to, you know, some junk page somewhere else in the publication is beyond shameless. we know exactly what side they're on here. ainsley: just two weeks ago, though, she was on pbs saying she didn't know anything about this. >> i know nothing about this. i was surprised to see reports from chairman nunez on that count today. i really don't know to what chairman nunez was referring,
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but he said that whatever he was referring to was a legal, lawful surveillance and that it was potentially incidental collection. brian: this doesn't shed a lot of light on what devon nunez was saying and when he went over a couple of weeks ago, maybe he's seeing some of this. and my question is where is this going? i have a sense we're not done with this. she has dozens of requests to unmask the american citizen at the other end of the alleged international call. why is that? and could you perhaps be interested to that level, you thought our national security was a risk to do that? let's say that true. but how do you possibly rationalize if it turns out two americans are talking and those names are exposed? adam schiff didn't come out and say i saw that information, and i think it's no big deal.
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he declined to discuss the contents of the reports, but he said it was highly unusual for devon nunez to see it without him there first. which means he was blown away with what he saw. >> right. that's a great insight, brian. and i think john mccain this morning said it was duty on the part of the susan rice. pretty much mccain criticizes the trump team for everything. so the fact that he even came out today and hit her on this. but i still go back to was susan rice acting alone here? in her request for this information. again, it might have been legal. but was there a concerted effort to discover as much information as possible on a -- on the incoming administration for future use and politics in other investigations that might not even have been going on? what were they looking for? and who else did she discuss this unmasking with? and her little comment, by the way, where she said, oh, well, this could have been about
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incidental collection. you know, you've had the same former intel people on your show, guys. 78 you, that's irrelevant. whether it was incidental or not, if she had a political motivate for doing what she did, that is reprehensible, it could be unlawful, and more investigation needs to go on about this. steve: sure. >> i mean, what's closer to the truth? that obama ordered a wiretap of trump tower? what's closer to that or susan rice saying i know nothing about this. what's more to the truth? ainsley: what if the roles were reverse? if trump was surveilling hillary clinton's team? >> or george w. bush surveilling barack obama's team. brian: a typewriter like w. those were the scandals back in the '90s. >> yeah, and george w. bush's national security adviser had been doing this, they would pull in the race card. they would say they're doing
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this because they're racist. brian: sure. >> this story must be focused on in the right way. the russian investigation will go forward. fine. i don't think there's anything there. we're going to find that. but this story about susan rice given her past is explosive. and i hope journalists at the washington post start doing their job. steve: and when you click around and see nobody is talking about on the other channels, it tells you a lot about those channels. really quickly because you worked at the supreme court back in the day after you lived in russia, it looks like neil gorsuch is going to get the job for life on friday. but the republicans are at this point poised to invoke the nuclear option, get rid of the filibuster. it looks like democrats are doing about the dumbest thing they possibly could. >> yeah. exactly right. they're shooting themselves in their own foot. i don't like calling it the nuclear option. this is actually what is constitutionally always been the case. there has never been a partisan filibuster of a
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supreme court nominee. we all knew that. chuck schumer and the democrats took the first step down the road of ending that senate position and now they're eating crow on this. but it's not -- mcconnell is not doing anything out of the ordinary. earlier isn't. he's merely keeping in place the long-standing tradition that filibusters of the part of the sin nature do not prevent an up-or-down vote on a supreme court nomination, and that's what's going to happen. justice thomas for whom i clerked was not filibuster, even though there was a lot of controversy surrounding his nomination. not filibustered. so why should someone be filibustered now? brian: health care back, getting the sense of getting off on the right foot this time, it looks like they're going to make an announcement today. what do you hear? >> i've been hearing this for days and my sources on capitol hill with whom i've been speaking have said this. there is a concerted effort to get this done and do it the right way. i think not everybody is going to get everything they want. but this is critical for
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moving forward on tax reform. donald trump needs this win on the board and so do the republicans. they've got to work together on this and bring down the cost of health care and get back to the health care. a number of freedom members will be onboard, maybe not everybody but that's okay. brian: met with them over the weekend, and he was left kne liaison. >> don't you think they should be working overtime? i think they should be staying in town and get it done. and until they get it done, they shouldn't go for a easter recess. steve: it will be his best wake. >> great week for him if it happens. brian: yeah, and the helen will be something else. lori, take care. ainsley: thanks, laura. >> we have some other news not related to politics.
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the death toll climbing to five after powerful storms rip through. one of the victims killed after a suspected tornado sent his home flying through the air. this is in south carolina. outside atlanta three firefighters very lucky to be alive after a twister blows the roof right off their fire station. the deadly storms now moving up the east coast. and it's been a presidential promise from the very beginning. protect americans with the mexican border wall and today we're one step closer to seeing it happen. trump: do not worry. we are going to build the wall. okay? don't worry. don't even think about it. >> it is deadline day for border wall bids but trump administration asking companies to hand over design contracts for 2,000-mile long barrier. and with some breaking news right now. nfl news this morning. dallas cowboys quarterback tony romo is leaving football to pursue a broadcasting career. espn and nfl network reporting that the star qb has informed
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jerry jones of his decision. he's receiving interest from several different networks, so that's interesting. brian: i think he's going to be great. meanwhile coming up straight ahead, some about president trump these headlines, i'll make sense of it in just a moment. stuart varney here. was built with passion... but i keep it growing by making every dollar count. that's why i have the spark cash card from capital one. with it, i earn unlimited 2% cash back on all of my purchasing. and that unlimited 2% cash back from spark means thousands of dollars each year going back into my business... which adds fuel to my bottom line. what's in your wallet?
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steve: all right. if you listen to the legacy media or democrats in washington, you might think that the trump presidency on the brink of disaster. brian: but it turns out the american people think otherwise. you have a new poll out there that reveals that six in ten americans think the current economic situation is good. the highest generating since 2007 financial crisis, before so what's the reason behind this renewed confidence? ainsley: let's ask stuart varney, the host of "varney & company" on the fox business network. one of them said the trump presidency is going from bad to worse. but you're seeing something different. >> oh, it's in crisis mode. no wonder people have a rather low opinion of the media and politicians. i mean, they're engaged in the jihad against president trump, and they're concentrating on these minuscule maneuvering in dc. we, the people are very smart. we see beyond this. you look what's really relevant in our lives.
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that's jobs, income, taxes, future prosperity. that's what we're looking at, and that explains that poll that you just quoted. six out of ten people -- this is a pew poll, reputable poll. six out of ten think the economy is getting better. what a contrast from a year ago and from all the way back in 2007. brian: do you think part of it is people who voted for trump like trump or have gotten used to trump that realize one of the things he wants to do is get washington out of the way? >> yes. steve: there are so many regulations, so many taxes, so many fees. and he's trying to pull them back. >> look, i think people voted for president trump, donald trump at the time because they saw in him a way to prosperit prosperity. a way to grow the economy for everybody. and now they see president trump, president trump doing it. he has created jobs, he's creating this extraordinary rally on the stock market. manufacturers call into the white house all the time. manufacturing is at the
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highest level in 20 years. same with consumers. same with small business and same with the stock market. way up there. record highs. brian: so, varney, we could see your show between 9:00 and noon. >> yes, you can. 9:00 a.m. eastern time on the fox business network. brian: stuart, thank you very much. >> thank you. ainsley: well, he was an atheist on a mission to destroy christianity and to prove that jesus was fake. >> i'm going to lose my wife and my kids to something that i can't even reason with. >> what happened next? change me forever. ainsley: instead, he was the one who came away a believer and now he is a pastor and his story is hitting the big screen. lee joins us live next. steve: hey, lee. ♪ [ ominous music ] [ sniffs ] little girl: daddy! trapped by your unrelenting nasal allergies? [ meow ] [ sneezes ] try clarispray
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brian: photosynthesis face of a cold-blooded killer linked to a islamic extremist behind the terror attack yesterday. authorities say that this 22-year-old from kirkstan blowing himself up injuring 50 others. and attorney general jeff sessions now organized a sweeping review of all obama-era police reform agreements at the center of the high profile shooting. he advanced handing of authority back to local police chiefs. all right. now for something from another planet. ainsley: all right. thank you, brian. he was an atheist who sent out on a mission to destroy christianity and prove that jesus was not real. instead, he came away a believer. and now christian minister lee
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strobel best-selling book. he sold 7 million copies of this book. called the case for christ. you probably read it. it's hitting the big screen now on april 7th. >> i spent my entire career as a journalist uncovering the truth. until the day my wife presented me with the biggest story of my life. i'm not going to lose my wife and my kids to something i can't even reason with. >> what happened next changed me forever. steve: it did indeed. joining us right now is the author of the case for christ lee strobel. good morning to you, lee. >> good morning. good to be with you. steve: so in that clip, we saw you were a chicago tribune investigative reporter. >> yeah. steve: and you did not believe in god. >> i didn't. steve: and you were off to prove that he didn't exist. >> well, because my wife became a christian, and we started to have conflict in our marriage because all of a sudden our world views were clashing, so i thought if i could rescue her from this colt that she got involved in
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then everything would go back to normal. so i thought if i could disprove the resurrection, which i figured would take a weekend. it can't be that hard, then i could get her out of this colt. that was my plan. ainsley: you were to prove that he didn't exist, and you walked away a believer. >> i did. it took two years of my life to look at the historical evidence of the resurrection. ainsley: you fought it. >> i did fight it. the thing about christianity, if it's true then certain things in happen that jesus lived, he died, and he was reliably enencountered afterwards. so those are historical issues. we can investigate those. that's not true of a lot of other religions, which tend to get lost in the shrouds of history. steve: what made you so positive in terms of the information you saw regarding the resurrection and everything else where it wasn't just mythology. >> yeah. because as a investigative journalist, my role was to seek out the best possible sources, not just look for opinions but look for the reasoning, look for their
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evidence, look for the facts underlying that. so i went to the best people i could. i interviewed all kinds of scholars and experts and really came to conclusion that jesus was certainly dead, even the journal of the american medical association said he was dead before the wound to his side was inflicted. and we have nine ancient sources inside and outside the new testament confirming and corroborating the encryption. ainsley: i'm one of those that says if it says it, i believe it because faith and god, that's how it works in my life. but there are a lot of my friends that are scientific, and they want to see the proof, and i watched this movie, and you get that proof. and it was if a isnating to me to see that side of it. because i watched in the movie how your life changed and your mind changed. you were raising a daughter together too. your daughter was little, and you were wife was telling her we need to pray, and you were saying i don't want to teach my daughter this. >> right. exactly. there was a lot of conflict. but what i discovered in that
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process is that if we sincerely seek truth, and we try to keep an open mind, i'm in the old school of journalism. i was taught you keep an open mind. you try to be balanced and look at both sides. so even though i wanted to disprove it, i tried to call a ball a ball and a strike a strike and look at the evidence for what it really was. steve: so what happened to the mustache? >> you know, in 1980, the movie takes place and we all have the hair. but i never -- steve: we all had that hair. >> i was never able to grow the mustache, though. ainsley: can you believe how good god is, though? you went -- you were a journalist and now you're pastoring a megachurch in houston or in the woodlands. >> i tell you, it's a great adventure. i wanted to stay in journalism because i think it's great to have a world view but god called me out of that into a different thing. and a 60% pay cut from them journalism days, but it was a adventure of a lifetime. ainsley: but you sold a lot of books to make up for it.
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steve: and a retirement plan. ainsley: that's true. steve: lee, thank you very much. ainsley: thank you, lee. god bless you. i wish you all the best with this movie. >> thanks so much. steve: meanwhile another state-defying president trump taking new steps toward becoming a sanctuary for illegals. we're going to tell you what state it is. ainsley: plus, it is national hug a newsman day and brian is headed back out. open your arms, brian. ♪ you totaled your brand new car. nobody's hurt, but there will still be pain. it comes when your insurance company says they'll only pay three-quarters of what it takes to replace it. what are you supposed to do? drive three-quarters of a car? now if you had liberty mutual new car replacement™, you'd get your whole car back.
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for whom methotrexate did not work well. xeljanz xr can reduce pain, swelling and joint damage, even without methotrexate. xeljanz xr can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections, lymphoma and other cancers have happened. don't start xeljanz xr if you have an infection. tears in the stomach or intestines, low blood cell counts and higher liver tests and cholesterol levels have happened. your doctor should perform blood tests before you start and while taking xeljanz xr, and monitor certain liver tests. tell your doctor if you were in a region where fungal infections are common and if you have had tb, hepatitis b or c, or are prone to infections. needles. fine for some. but for you, one pill a day may provide symptom relief. ask your doctor about xeljanz xr. an "unjection™". ainsley: well, today is national hug a newsman today
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so will brian get a better reception than he did last year? watch this. >> excuse me. excuse me, guys, this is national hug a news guy day. i'm wondering if this is a bad day. ainsley: no shakers? >> you would think that the statue would bring a bigger crowd. i would stop him, but he's probably in mile four. i'm wondering if i could get a hug. just a quick hug. i'm working too. a quick hug? [laughter] that is new york. steve: he wore him down. well, now it's a year later brian joins us from time square where he's going to see if he does better than he did last year. brian, i think maybe two, three hugs tops. let's see if you can outdo that. brian: i turn out unofficially i had five hugs last hour. there's a belief that i could do better right now. this is all i have is a sign and a smile.
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how are you doing, sir. it's national hug a news guy day, and i'm the news guy that has been selected to do this. ainsley: that's nice. steve: jersey. brian: what do you do? >> av. brian: oh, audio visual. brian: good luck today. plenty of bread on the truck later. looks like they expect a lot of input. it's national hug a news person day. free hugs here. i was wondering if i could have a hug. >> absolutely. ainsley: awe. ainsley: three. brian: there you go, big guy. steve: it's a streak. brian: national hug a news person day, i was wondering if i could have a hug. it would make my day. can i have a hug? look at that. a lot being at the love in new york city. thank you very much, sir. i'll miss him. how are you doing, sir. i know you're in a bit of a rush. you don't have to go to school every day do you? where are you from?
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columbia. columbia, south carolina? >> no, south america. >> are you going to come here? >> no. no. no. okay. can i have a hug? >> sure. brian: south americans are very physical; right? >> yeah. brian: thank you very much. how are you doing? i know you're in a bit of a rush, but it's national hug a news person day, trying to break my world record of five. can i have a hug? look at this. oh, my goodness. where are you from? >> india. brian: well, welcome to our country. best any luck, if you have any problems, pay the fine. okay? how are you doing? i was just wondering it's national hug a news person day, and i'm offering free hugs. i'm looking to break the world record, which was at five. ainsley: i think you just broke your record, brian. brian: where are you from? 56th street, which is really close. seven blocks. let's see if we have anything from here. a second i just got across. there you go. where are you guys from? where are you from? from georgia?
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if i can hug all of you people, i will set a new world record set one hour ago at five. are you ready? there. are you guys all together? from florida. fantastic. you feel tan. thank you very much. >> romance. brian: look how fantastic this is. a group hug. this is national hug a news person day. i want to break the world record, which i set at five last hour. please, just you don't even need an umbrella. one more record. how are you doing, sir. it's national hug a news person day. there you go. i'm full-time anchor. where are you from? >> india. brian: india? oh, i just hugged a person from india. i would love to hug a second person. thank you very much.
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ladies and gentlemen, i have tramp he would the world record, and i haven't gotten a cue in about ten minutes. i have no idea if this segment is over or not. how are you doing, sir? it's national hug and news anchor day, and i'm designated anchor. smith called in sick this morning, so can i get a hug? look at this. oh, my goodness. where are you from? >> new jersey. brian: new jersey. all right. a little bit concerned about your traffic. all right. ladies and gentlemen, i just destroyed last year's record. i think. steve: i think that was 17 or 18, brian. brian: pick up the pace a little. all right. guys, i haven't really heard anything from the studio in like ten minutes. do you hear anything? steve: brian, i think he lost communication with us. ainsley, i think what we have learned today is that people from new jersey are big huggers. steve: sure. ainsley: are you huggers in your family? steve: we're big huggers. ainsley: lovers in new jersey there. steve: keep hugging today,
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particularly if you see a news person. ainsley: hey, we've got one right here. >> we begin with this, though, in california. define president trump becoming a statewide sanctuary for illegal immigrants. the senate approving a bill preventing police from cooperating with ice agents. republican senator jeff stone saying quote by passing this today, you'll be kicking the president right in groin. and i can imagine he's going to strike back. ouch. liberal lawmaker now putting people in the state legally at risk for losing millions in federal funds. and a horrific tragedy on a college campus after a student dies during a pancake identify eating contest. 20-year-old caitlyn necessarily was a social work major at sacred heart university in connecticut. police say she had eaten four or five pancakes when she started choking, and she collapsed. and this is the second tragedy striking the nelson family. her father was a port authority officer who lost his
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life in the september 11th attack. and a man putting his own life in danger to, say, a young man from the subway tracks with just seconds to spare. just in time. you can see the man jumping onto the tracks in new york city scooping up the young man and then the train zipping by just seconds later. witnesses saying that the man fainted, they think, but is okay. the hero ironically just happened to take a track safety training program as part of a work project just last month. and finally tom brady finally reunited with his super bowl jersey nearly two months later. owner robert kraft presenting them to the quarterback at home. a mexican journalist accused of stealing them from the patriots locker room but has not yet been charged. brady showing off -- this was to red socks fan at fenway
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park in opening day but not for long. teammate rob gronk right there swiping it out of his hands. brady chasing gronk around before tackling him in right field. and congratulations to my tar heels. six times. steve: all right. very nice. thank you very much, heather. meanwhile let's go back outside. it's adam with the weather. and, adam, we have plenty of weather on this rainy day. >> yeah. it had been raining a ton here in the last 12 hours here in new york city. but we're finally drying off. i've got brian's sign. what was it? 17? 18? i think we can beat it. will anyone out here give me a hug? hug? it's free hugs. i saw josh was stealing my hugs a little bit ago. but i just got a kiss from josh. brian, i don't know what
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that's worth. i don't know what that equals. it feels like more than 17 hugs. all right. everybody, let me get out here. 17. i already had -- one, quick, we have to move quick. two, three, this is like a world record. we're fleeing through them. six, seven, eight, nine, 10, 11, 12, 13, oh, no. 14, 15, 16, quick. 17, and 18. there it is. we beat him. ainsley: 19 from josh. >> and i got a kiss from josh. steve: he didn't just hug him. he kissed him. >> i know. that seems like it's worth a lot of points. steve: anybody kiss you out on the street, brian? brian: this is scandalous.
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you cannot allow this to happen. these people waited for him. to be a true world record holder, you have to track people down. steve: brian, i just got an e-mail from susan rice she says there was nothing improper about it. brian: okay. fine. ainsley: lots of people apparently at home are sending us hugs through the internet. the little emoji. brian: if you want to get hugged on fox, you have to leave new york. steve: or go to new jersey. steve: if you spot somebody in our land from another country, as you did, that man from columbia, not necessarily a defector like you said, there's this thing called tourism. brian: i know. i overreacted, steve. i apologize. that was my mistake. ainsley: that was fun. steve: that was fun. i thought we maybe had a story. big one. ainsley: all right. coming up next on the run down. big changes could be coming to the white house. ed henry is here with what he just learned. steve: he's looking for a hug too. and you just saw him outside with adam.
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find out why josh is riding a bike and kissing guys on our plug. brian: are you going to get on that bike? ♪ there's nothing more important to me than my vacation. so when i need to book a hotel room, i want someone that makes it easy to find what i want. booking.com gets it. they offer free cancellation if my plans change. visit booking.com. booking.yeah. i wanted to get new blinds, about what kind i should get, and she mentioned i should visit blinds dot com. great quality for an incredible price,
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steve: all right. let's bring back in fox news chief national correspondent ed henry. i'm going to read the first paragraph. former president barack obama's national security adviser susan rice ordered u.s. spy agencies to produce detailed spreadsheets of legal phone calls involving donald trump and his aids when he was running for president, according to former u.s. attorney. >> incredibly true. all of these reports are
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coming in "fast and furious," so you have to be careful to stick to the facts, as i know you are. the president just retweeted this story basically saying here, folks, look at this. here's what needs to be done. you've got all of these investigations already trying to see did russia hack the election? there's still no evidence progressive any of that, by the way. but whys has susan rice been brought in to do a deposition? whys has evelyn farkus? the former obama official who suggested she knew about surveillance and now she's saying that's not what i meant. it's being taken out of context. well, paul manafort, kushner, why isn't susan being brought in? let's look at the facts. steve: why did you need a spreadsheet? >> yeah. what were you doing with that? and susan rice unmasked some names. if that's been leaked out, the law could have been broken. could have been. ainsley: and, to me, that sounds like a lot of information. >> absolutely. ainsley: so if you just listen for a week or so when you
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learn that there's nothing wrong going on, do you really need the separate sheets? how long did this go on? >> and if there's nothing wrong, then you can testify, and it will all be better. brian: before you say chairman nunez, this is what he was talking about, he said it had nothing to do with russia. so that's different. so this might be something else. or it might be about -- >> if it's not russia related, was it not general flynn? was it not some other adviser if you're a baseball fan, you're going to love this opening day. obviously has been here. you also had the 70th anniversary of jackie robinson's first game on april 15th this year. i i had a passion about telling this story that it almost didn't happen because branch rickey had some second things. the general manager of the dodgers. he had a secret manager. but new information on jackie robinson. he didn't wear it on his sleeve but sustained him through the rough moments. and here you have branch rickey, jackie robinson, different raises, different
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regions of the country. what brought them together? baseball, we love the pastime and a strong belief in faith. both of them had it. and if you're a baseball fan, you're going to love it. brooklyn church and plymouth heights. changed baseball hit of, civil rights history, and frankly the face of america. steve: the book is out today. it's called the rest of jackie robinson's history. >> i'm here tomorrow. thee hours. ainsley: you're off tomorrow. he's filling in. brian: riding a five-seater bike on our plaza with our favorite weather guy, who's a male. ainsley: but first, let's check in with bill. >> tell ed henry i'm going to his party tonight, so it better be fun. don't waste our time. morning, guys. big morning here in a moment. why did susan rice request the names? what did she do with them? what did president obama know? topic number two.
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has new health care found a new lifeline. topic number three is the fate of neil gorsuch now sealed? senator rand paul is meeting with the president of health care. senator on judge gorsuch, senator lindsey graham. see you in 12 minutes top of the hour here on america's newsm that support digestive health. the prebiotic fiber in benefiber® nourishes them... and what helps them, helps you. clear, taste-free, benefiber®. and what helps them, helps you. kevin, meet yourkeviner. kevin kevin kevin kevin kevin kevin kevin kevin kevin trusted advice for life. kevin, how's your mom? life well planned. see what a raymond james financial advisor can do for you.
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quickly. i'm lucky to even have a shirt on. brian: what are you doing here? >> we're here to get people outside. i just recently discovered that people are spending 95% of their time indoors. brian: unbelievable. >> it's just crazy to me. i grew up outside. i grew up in north dakota and spent pretty much all day outside. brian: sure. >> and i teamed up with clarityin for the outsider campaign that we're trying to get people outside, take photos, post it with the hashtag be outsider and the donation made to the boys & girls club of america. steve: so if you have an analogy, you don't have a good excuse because there's claritin. >> people have allergies because they're spending so much time indoors. ainsley: how is fergie doing and -- i follow you on instagram now. >> she's doing great.ctures. she's doing great. ainsley: how is your son? >> doing great. just in mexico the last two days, and i get to go home tonight.
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ainsley: what's his personality? >> very talkative. got very strong opinions about things. brian: wow. that's good. >> i don't know where he gets that from. brian: so let me ask you something. do you guys ever do carpool karaoke? >> yeah. of course. do we sing in the car? brian: full voice sing in the car? >> i mean, who doesn't. brian: i don't think a lot of america doesn't have professional singers. >> you don't have to be a professional singer to sing in your car. ainsley: brian loves watching those. steve: let's go ahead. >> this is not only am i here to promote be an outsider campaign, but i'm also -- brian: it looks like that. >> i don't know they trusted me with this bike. are you all getting on this? ainsley: we're all getting on it. >> no promises we're going to make it back in the studio. steve: it's on backwards, josh. >> is this on backwards?
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brian: maybe not. >> all right. brian: he even looks good in a bike helmet. brian: trying to look cool for the first time in my life. >> we have the kick stand down? where is that? >> lift it. brian: human chain. follow us. >> this is not going to be good. steve: break. josh. break. >> oh, yeah, we have breaks. we have breaks. brian: let's get out of here. come on.
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>> this is a lot harder than it looks. >> the entire cast will be wiped out. >> bill: good morning, everybody. now fallout fox news has learned susan rice is the obama administration official that requested the names of the trump team officials be revealed. now there are calls for her to testify about what she knew and when. as we try to sort through this today on a tuesday i'm bill hemmer. welcome to "america's newsroom." how are you doing, shannon. >> shannon: we made it through monday. i'm shannon bream in for martha maccallum. multiple sources say susan rice made the call to name the trump officials caught up
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