tv The Five FOX News October 26, 2017 2:00pm-3:00pm PDT
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bottom line, we are going to be following this. we are going to be following the tax talks. they are having a devil of a time agreeing on how we need them. there is the issue of paying for it. we are all over it. >> kimberly: i'm kimberly guilfoyle with juan williams, jesse watters jesse watters, dana perino and greg gutfeld. it's 5:00 in new york city and this is "the five" ." tonight democrats on the defensive as their own russian scandal widens. an fbi informant working undercover at the time of the controversial uranium one deal is now free to talk. the justice department's has lifted a gag order so we can tell his story to lawmakers who want to know more about the obama administration's uranium deal with moscow. and about the cash that flowed to the clinton foundation made the deal.
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the white house says democrats have a big problem on their hands. >> i think this further proves if there was anyone that was colluding with the russians to influence the election, look no further than the clintons and the dnc. it is hypocrisy at its highest level. it may be a new low in american politics. everything the clinton campaign and the dnc while falsely accusing this president of doing over the past year, they were actually doing themselves it turns out and i think this is a major scandal for the democrats. >> kimberly: the ranking democrat on the house intelligence committee sees the uranium one probe as part of effort to take attention away from the special counsel investigation into the trump team's possible coordination with the russians. >> this had to be orchestrated with the approval of the speaker of the house, and so this is a partisan effort to distract. it's a partisan effort aligned with what the white house has been urging ann fox and
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breitbart in which there was no consultation with the democrats in congress. i think that tells you all you need to know about whether this is in good faith or not. >> kimberly: dana, big news today. a lot of people back and forth on that, including the white house taking a position coming out and attacking. >> dana: it's a different way to deal with it. usually with a special investigation you basically say we will let the justice department handle it. we are on a different world now. anything the white house can do to suggest there was a problem on the democratic side of it comes to russia, that probably benefits them politically because it makes everything super confusing and looks like everybody is bad. i can't believe how many people in washington were dealing with russia, but i also think this deal, whatever we call it, committee for foreign investment in the mid states, nine different departments. it wasn't as if hillary clinton just signed it, did it herself. i am curious about the
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informant, it's unusual for a gag order like this to be lifte lifted. seems to be directly from the president and speaker putting pressure on the fbi. we don't know this person's identity. i understand he is a male. i don't know if he will have additional information or if it will be more part of an ongoing investigation. i don't think it will be determining any wrongdoing. more of an investigative step. >> kimberly: a very different approach. juxtaposition in terms of how the bush administration with you at the helm, different than what we saw today. nevertheless, they were under attack, greg, for quite some time, saying everything was untoward with respect to the election and russian collusion. now you see the layers peeling back ending gag order being lifted to say you want transparency? there you go. >> greg: i love how the media is looking at it. they are trying to tell us this
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is nothing after telling us a minor meeting was something that somehow this was nothing. it's as if they are showing us an apple and telling us banana. >> jesse: great analogy. >> greg: a little cnn humor. i do feel bad for hillary. after all, it is her birthday today. i think we should get her some yellowcake. anyway. >> jesse: a uranium joke. >> greg: she thought she was going to be celebrating her birthday in the white house but it seems like it might be closer to the big house. we'll be right back. >> kimberly: he worked on that all afternoon. >> jesse: it paid off. >> kimberly: jesse, where'd you go from here? if you are president trump and his advisors, what do you do? you want to maintain the propriety and sanctity of an investigation while at the same time giving a bit of a statement to say this is what's going on. the investigation is going forth. letting the american people and the press know you're being
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transparent, not trying to cover up anything. no collusion to cover up anything. >> kimberly: i think the president has done the right thing so far. he personally asked for this gang -- gag order to be lifted. his fbi and justice department have been stonewalling out a few clinton scandals. i don't know how it's gonna play out because i think there are people within the administration, fbi and doj covering their own tracks which is suspicious. i wanted take issue with something congressman schiff said. blaming fox news for this? this was "the hill" newspaper that broke the story, not fox news. i'm very interested in what the whistle-blower has to say. i want to know why he was gagged. president obama has a history of gagging whistle-blowers from benghazi to fast and furious to bergdahl. i want to hear why he was gagged. i want to hear how they russians were trying to curry favor with
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the clintons. i would like to know when this foreign committee on investments, if they were made aware of this. if they weren't made aware of it, why not. if members of the committee who voted to approve the sale had any idea there was bribery going on with the russians. all those things i think are going to lead to very interesting explanations. i want to do a little fact-check on juan. i'm going to play the ombudsman. yesterday he was saying all this money flowed into the clinton foundation way before any of this happened. not true, juan. records show nine investors in uranium one gave $145 million to the clinton foundation prior to, during, and after the vote on the sale. >> juan: can i respond? >> jesse: in a minute. in 2010, while all this is going on, bill clinton went to moscow and was paid half a million dollars to give a speech. while he was there, he met with putin. what was he saying to putin?
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i would think the bottom line is it's about selling out america. why can we give 20% of the uranium to the russians but americans can't have a tax cut. it's not fair. >> juan: that's equivalent? >> kimberly: juan, your rebuttal. >> juan: as i tried to explain yesterday, the united states really did have an effort to try to infiltrate russia's nuclear activity to try to gain some control, influence. the second thing to say, of the nine major contributions to the clinton foundation that came from the effort the russians were making to bribe, control, influence america, most of it, 135 came from one donor. that donors contributions came came years, years before bill clinton or hillary clinton were involved and certainly before hillary clinton was secretary of state. >> jesse: do you know why that came in? it was this spring she was supposed to be president.
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everybody thought teller was going to be president. maybe that's why. secretary of state. >> juan: also a former first lady but it's not the case, mr. ombudsman, . the house of horrors is where i think republicans think they have hillary clinton at the moment. i didn't know hillary clinton was this important. i thought she lost the election. still looking for a bad guy. >> greg: still campaigning. i would be happy for her to go away. >> juan: republicans need a horse to whip and on the democratic side. >> greg: you shouldn't be referring to her as a horse. >> kimberly: let me help you, juan. segue out of it.
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meanwhile, the democrat denials are piling up. president trump calling out his former opponent for reportedly knowing nothing about her campaign funding of research to harm mr. trump's candidacy. >> hillary clinton denied this. she knew nothing. all of a sudden they found out. i was amazed it's almost $6 million they paid, and is totally discredited. it's totally a phony. i call it fake news. it's disgraceful. >> kimberly: you know who else doesn't buy that the secretary only learned about the dossier after it was published? her former campaign spokesman. >> you had said previously in the last 24 hours you don't believe hillary clinton knew about it either. is that right? >> i don't know. i haven't spoken to her. she may have known, that the degree of exactly what she knew is beyond my knowledge. >> kimberly: that was awkward. someone sounds like they don't
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want to testify later. >> juan: she said she didn't know if she had known, she wished she could have used some of the information about potential relationships between the trump campaign and the russians in terms of getting the message out, advertising, making it plain what was going on. let me tell you, a huge democratic lament. obama knew something was going on, never said a word. people were like, you assumed hillary was going to end? was to blame here? i want to pick on something which comes out, to me we have two separate worlds. venus and mars. men and women. republicans and democrats. it's two different stories. in the senate judiciary committee, they have stopped working together. dianne feinstein said i'm going to do my investigation and charles grassley, the republican chair from iowa says i'm going to do my investigation we will get together when we come back to trump and russia. for now we are going our
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separate ways. same thing in the house. these communities. devin nunes, thought he was gone. now is back working as what looks like a stand-in for president trump. whoever heard of the president directing the department of justice and the fbi with regard to whether somebody has a confidentiality agreement. do you think president trump has a stake? >> greg: two worlds. one is the mainstream media and the rest of the world is america in the sense that the media is not excited over this story. it is pulitzer prize turf but unfortunately it's not about trump. america would probably be interested in this but the media is saying no, no, no. if it doesn't involve dt, forget it. >> juan: "the new york times" just went off, went off. maggie. >> greg: she is special. >> kimberly: she's a good reporter. >> juan: marc elias.
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i don't see how you would say it's the media if this wasn't about old, the media is hiding something. >> jesse: her friend stephanopoulos this morning gave this story uranium 30 seconds. you know how much time he devoted to the trump, jr. trump tower meeting? 10 minutes. >> greg: the meeting driven by the questionable dossier they paid for. >> jesse: i want to take issue with something else juan said which i found totally inaccurate. you said the dossier, besides the salacious thing, was mostly true. i looked at the dossier. here are some of the findings. >> juan: do not bring up anything about women in bed. >> jesse: i wouldn't. that's the part that's obviously false. the kremlin supplied trump with a regular flow of intelligence about democrats. was that true?
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trump was offered very sweet business deals by the kremlin but turned them down. don't think that's true. trump's personal lawyer michael cohen was the point man for meetings for kremlin officials in the czech republic. and trump's team used moles in the dnc to hack the dnc along with the russians. those are erroneous. i don't see how you can say the trump dossier is mostly true when all of that i just read isn't. >> kimberly: ombudsman, rest your case. >> dana: i think the white house is smart to talk about this because to your point, if the white house had not mentioned it and president trump had not talked about it in the interview with lou dobbs on fox business, it wouldn't have gone 30 seconds of coverage on "good morning america" or other places. most people are getting their news from social media now. the majority of people get the majority of their news from social media. it does get a little polarized on both sides. whenever this investigation is finished, i have a feeling most people have already made up their mind. >> kimberly: so true.
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that's the thing. >> greg: who is winning in this? putin. undermining an american institution, and we are undermining ourselves over the story. >> juan: i think that's the big picture. >> kimberly: next, the trump administration taking action to address america's growing opioid epidemic. the president shares a personal story of addiction in his own family. that's ahead. you owned your car for four years. you named it brad. you loved brad. and then you totaled him. you two had been through everything together. two boyfriends, three jobs... you're like nothing can replace brad. then liberty mutual calls... and you break into your happy dance. if you sign up for better car replacement™, we'll pay for a car that's a model year newer with 15,000 fewer miles than your old one. liberty stands with you™.
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♪ >> jesse: the trump administration taking action toward address the deadliest overdose crisis in american history. president trump declared the epidemic of public health emergency in a bid to redirect federal resources and loosen regulations to combat widespread abuse. >> more people are dying from drug overdoses today than from gun homicides and motor vehicles combined. this epidemic is a national health emergency. we can be the generation that ends the opioid epidemic. we can do it. [applause] each of us has a responsibility to this effort.
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we have a total responsibility to ourselves, to our family, to our country. including those who are struggling with this addiction. >> jesse: action will include a massive advertising campaign targeting youth to avoid prescription drugs and more research funding for opioid alternatives. the president shared a very personal story during his announcement at the white house earlier. >> one of the things our administration will be doing is a massive advertising campaign to give people, especially children, not to want to take drugs in the first place. i learned myself. i had a brother, fred. great guy. he had a problem. had a problem with alcohol. he would tell me don't drink. don't drink. he would say it over and over and over again. and to this day, i've never had a drink. i have no longing for it. i have no interest in it. if we can teach young people and
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people generally not to start, it's really, really easy not to take them. >> jesse: i thought that was probably the most powerful moment when he talked about his brother. >> kimberly: if you have heard him speak about his brother and the impact it had, you see this is something that was a formative experience for him. it's helped dictate the course of his life, his conduct, the choices he's made that he's stuck too. listened to the advice of his brother. they were extreme the close. the loss of his brother deeply affected him. very saddened by it, hurt and distressed. this is where you get to see, peel back the layers of president trump bravado and the larger-than-life figure to say this is the heart. this is a family man and he was pained at the loss of his brother. i believe honestly that's what he really wants to champion this cause i put this forward so other families that are dealing with substance abuse don't have to suffer the way his family
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did. >> jesse: do you think, greg, this is one of those moments where you say we are going to wipe out opioids forever, like the war on drugs on the '80s. 20, 30, 40 years later. >> greg: yes. the war on illegal drugs failed and the war on illegal drugs is going to fail. the question isn't why there are so many people on opioids. the question is why aren't all of us on them? this drug directly affects your pleasure centers. it creates the same sensation you get from great achievement, falling in love, success. >> kimberly: like endorphins. >> greg: it is dopamine. no wonder people are easily addicted to it. if you demonize it. people are looking at this to fulfill their lives because they are not getting a fulfillment where they are. if you demonize this drug and you criminalize it, you are going to do three things.
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punish people who are legitimately in pain, cancer patients who need these drugs. you create a police record for many men and women who now can't get real jobs and fulfillment so they take more drugs. and you drive addicts to the streets. i think it's great we are trying to solve it. there's a lot of people dying but i think it has more to do with creating drug delivery devices that one can handle and also the knowledge of how to use the drugs. also addressing the fundamental vacuum in our society where people can't find fulfillment. where do they find their joy in life? it's this drug. they are not getting an out of their job. they are getting out of this pill. and those pills are great. >> kimberly: that happens with veterans too. you leave the va with a bag filled with prescriptions and pills and they say best of luck, thank you for your service. not dealing with the emotional issues of the core causing avoid
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an emptiness which they self medicate and become addicted. >> jesse: it's a cheaper alternative than getting operations and surgery and physical therapy. day not come he's talking about a massive nationwide advertising campaign. maybe similar to nancy reagan, "say no to drugs." how effective do you think it will be? >> dana: i grew up during the "just say no" campaign and it helps me but partly i had parents who had me focus. i was in choir, speech, rodeo. i did all that stuff. >> greg: your life was filled. >> dana: yes, as i wanted achievement. the feeling of dopamine is like why people want to run marathons. to get that feeling. i don't even run errands so i don't get that feeling. but the speech was direct and detailed. it was inspirational and aspirational. the other thing i would add about concerns about the criminalization piece greg mentioned as president trump said something today that's very important.
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he is directing the nih, national institutes of health, to do this massive public-private partnership and try to find new drugs. it is like putting a man on the moon. he is asking america's scientists and underachievers of the world to get together to find some that will address pain that doesn't come with the addictive properties of opiates. that can be achieved in addition to trying to tell kids you don't need to do this. you can have all the fulfillment you need without it. i think the ad money, it could be well spent possibly but i think him directing the nih to do that is probably the most effective part. >> jesse: juan, can democrats get on board? >> juan: i don't think so because of a lot of things greg said. the emphasis on criminalizing this behavior. it's going to put more people in jail. people in the black, latino community know how devastating this has been. i don't think this is going to help. let me say the real news here was we all expected he was going
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to clear this to be a national emergency. and that would have meant more money going into trying to help people. by the way, i think it's much more mental health services, therapy and things like that, giving people a sense of purpose and mission in life that greg was talking about. that money is not there with the national health emergency right now. it's not a national emergency. he has so many openings. openings at the office of drug control, secretary of hhs, dea, open slots. all the various agencies will be coordinated right now, they are missing anybody who can be in control. my big concern, i think we have to realize that say no to drugs did not work for most of america, and the idea of criminalizing drug activity, i think it is self-inflicted pain. >> jesse: might be time to get more creative. the far left has the art of the
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tantrum down pat when it comes to anything trump. wait until you hear what some have planned for the anniversary of the election next. remember that accident i got in with the pole, and i had to make a claim and all that? is that whole thing still dragging on? no, i took some pics with the app and... filed a claim, but... you know how they send you money to cover repairs and... they took forever to pay you, right? no, i got paid right away, but... at the very end of it all, my agent... wouldn't even call you back, right? no, she called to see if i was happy. but if i wasn't happy with my claim experience for any reason, they'd give me my money back, no questions asked. can you believe that? no. the claim satisfaction guarantee, only from allstate. switching to allstate is worth it. when you're clocking out. sensing your every move and automatically adjusting to help you stay effortlessly comfortable. there. i can also help with this. does your bed do that?
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♪ >> greg: according to "newsweek," which still exists, thousands of concerned citizens will commemorate the one-year anniversary of donald trump's election by screaming helplessly to the sky. screaming helplessly to the sky. i'm not kidding. it is both sad and fantastic. the november 8th event which some 4,000 facebook users have rsvped, it might be the most energy they expend that day. the event will be held in nine locations as a reminder they are not alone in their year-long rage vendor. while accomplishing nothing,
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hopefully this comical eruption of prophetic desperation will make them feel better. everyone could use a good cry now and then. i salute them, for with their screams, they admit the roots behind their age. pure emotion no longer tethered to rational thought. this action reflects the broken, fragile psyche of the modern adult toddler appearing physically fully grown but emotionally stunted. i also wish to thank them for congregating in specific places that will leave the other parks, streets, and shops free for one afternoon from the repetitive moaning. i might stop by just to serve them some refreshments. if i remember, gerber makes a great sweet potato puree. >> kimberly: eat it. >> greg: i know. i haven't had gerber in a while. juan, i'm going to go to you first. [laughter] >> kimberly: i hope that is not contagious. >> greg: did it feel good? >> juan: i had to be an adult.
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jesse would've left on me and beat me. we won. we won, you dog. now people get to scream a little bit. >> greg: i don't see why they can't turn around and make it a positive. we have to admit everybody has learned more about government under trump because there is so much conflict. best poly sigh class ever. >> dana: that's true. wasn't it tom perez, dnc chair who said the electoral college wasn't part of the constitution. actually, it was. we all learned that. >> greg: so much better on political questions on jeopardy. will this allow some closure? >> jesse: i'm going to go to the scream fest. i will be handing out pacifiers. i think the democrats should
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change their mascot from a donkey to a baby. since the election, they have rioted, boycotted. now they are screaming. the ones who are the adults, like perez, they are cursing. their name-calling. the women's march, they had on those costumes. >> dana: kitty cat. >> kimberly: that's not what they are called but keep going. >> jesse: if i were donald trump, i would have 29 seconds of these democrats screaming and i would say "paid for by donald trump for president." >> greg: kimberly, i read the "newsweek" piece. it was like a promotional flyer. people -- there's a lot of people who feel broken. >> kimberly: this scream fest, it's nothing new. they were screaming during the campaign, the election. they were screaming after. it's unbelievable. everyone should become an opera singer at this point. weeping uncontrollably, chelsea
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handler, miley cyrus. katy perry was busted up over i it. this is something they i believe viscerally feel. they are that upset over the whole thing because you are being programmed over and over again by the mainstream media, calling president trump horrific names. the whole thing starts to soak and sink in and you become brainwashed by this biased media coverage. >> juan: one last point. if you are not screaming over trump, you are not alive. >> greg: i have to say this. during the primaries, we were screaming about trump. this was something. with then you move on and you get over it and you find the positives. >> juan: don't normalize it. >> dana: government was not supposed to consume your entire life. you were supposed to have a government that allowed the people to be part of it but also there is supposed to be freedom.
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let them govern. >> greg: trump should be this part of your life. if you go around america, people aren't thinking about him the way the media does and the way these folks do. >> dana: why don't they do a national day of service instead of a national day of screaming? >> juan: can we do a national day of impeachment? >> greg: here. >> kimberly: who knew he was such a screamer? >> greg: jfk files are about to be released. will they provide answers? probably not. or fuel more conspiracies. we speculate next. ♪
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fever, chills, and rash. help protect yourself against pneumococcal pneumonia. ask your doctor or pharmacist about prevnar 13®. ♪ >> dana: the final batch of classified documents on the assassination of jfk could be released any moment. president trump ordering the files to be made public after decades of conspiracy theories.
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perhaps these documents will settle some unanswered questions. juan, in 1992, a law was passed saying on october 26, 2017, these documents will be released. we have been waiting ever since. you are a historian. are you excited? >> juan: i love the idea of putting all out letting people get some sense of completion. what do we know and what don't we know? the other day you were joking about area 51 stuff. i tell you, and my world, which is a lot of civil rights history, and a lot of people are looking towards 2027, martin luther king wiretaps that robert kennedy did. all that will be out of the questions about his sex life and all that. when you read about people who have done extensive work on the jfk assassination, they don't think there's going to be any grand revelation that somehow contradicts the idea that lee harvey oswald was the lone
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shooter. instead, it is about the cia and tracking surveillance of oswald in mexico and his relationships are not only the russian government but specifically the cuban government in the aftermath of the cuban missile crisis and attempt to assassinate castro and whether that was connected to his behavior. >> dana: when it comes to conspiracy theories, even if this were to answer all the questions, conspiracy theorists love. to keep going. >> greg: you never find the bottom. there is always a new bottom. >> dana: maybe there will be more. >> greg: this release could be a decoy, part of a larger conspiracy to prevent the real truth from becoming known. i want to add. i would rather know. i know we are going to talk about this in the next block. we don't even know what happened in vegas. i know this is interesting, but this biggest thing, we don't know that. in the future, what i am hoping for. i love surveillance. everyone will have a pet drone. the pet drone will record your
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words and deeds. it will protect you from all sorts of stuff and we will never, ever not know anything that happened anywhere ever again. >> dana: we have that, right? with alexa, google home. >> kimberly: such a big part of my life. >> dana: you get the updates. >> kimberly: christmas lists. i want to play this song. volume eight. it's going to be helpful, get information. >> dana: most governments wouldn't do this. they would say let's keep it under wraps. >> jesse: speaks to the transparency of the government. i like how the president tried to take credit for their files, like it was already set in motion to happen but he made it seem like he was the one who was going to unlock the vault. >> greg: shouldn't it be -- >> jesse: president trump is good at building expectations
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and these cliffhangers. we don't know what's in them. i don't have anything to say, other than the shooting of jfk really sets the course of the election for johnson. who got us deeply involved in the vietnam war which cost thousands and thousands of lives and then are shared in the richard nixon. that bullet change the course of history. >> dana: also was the president when the civil rights act was signed. >> jesse: it's amazing that one bullet can do so much damage. >> dana: but the civil rights act was good. >> jesse: right, i was talking about vietnam. i'm glad we cleared that up. >> greg: think about watching television, commonly where things have happened and how many where things have happened in the last five years. we saw lee harvey oswald get shot on live television. the 50 million people in the united states still alive who remember it. has anything come close to that?
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that's pretty insane, side from 9/11. >> juan: imagined "as the world turns" is on your tv and walter cronkite tells you this is happening. >> dana: we will keep you updated. next, we will talk about las vegas and the investigation into the massacre there. a lot of new questions. why do a key witness mysteriously leave the country days after the attack? we'll be right back. every six months i'm accident-free. and i don't share it with mom. right, mom? right. safe driving bonus checks, only from allstate. switching to allstate is worth it.
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>> juan: a lot of unanswered questions nearly four weeks after the deadly shooting in modern american history. a laptop in the hotel suite of stephen paddock is missing its hard drive, according to investigators. they believe paddock removed it before taking his own life. now they can't find it. meanwhile, fox news has discovered that jesus campos, the security guard at mandalay bay and the only eyewitness to the shooting, left the country in the days after the massacre. campos traveled to mexico but it's not clear why or why authorities let him go. >> jesse: the hard drive makes no sense. you don't bring a laptop toy hotel room for days without the hard drive. we assume he took the hard drive out at some point. where did he put it? how did he destroy it?
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if he throws it out the window, i'm sure investigators are combing that place. how else did he dispose of it? this is what adds to the conspiracy theory. as far as him going to mexico, i would defer to kimberly. do investigators allow crucial eyewitnesses to the deadliest mass shooting in u.s. history to go to other countries right after doing the "ellen" show. it is the most bizarre situation i've seen in the last ten years since we've been covering this stuff. i don't want to attack the police. it just seems bizarre. >> kimberly: here's the thing. it doesn't sound like jesse thinks that was a good idea. but they can't compel him to stay. okay, be in touch. stay close by. they can make the suggestion but unless there's some kind of wrongdoing or keep it under wraps or investigation more than just as a material witness. yeah, i think it's inappropriate and bizarre. he disappears.
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then he shows up on "ellen" ." then he goes to mexico. what was he doing in mexico? who did have contact with? i don't know. money, who knows what he was bringing over. >> dana: i don't know. one of the things that is so strange about paddock was that he didn't leave any explanation. like, there's no way to -- there's no grievance we know of. there is no nothing. we are left with the sadness that 58 people lost their lives and you had 400 people injured. some are still, have grievous injuries. we haven't had a chance to keep up with them because pretty much there is nothing. except for this. hopefully we will get some answers. i don't know. it could go away. >> greg: i would hate that.
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these loose strands feed into a whole nother conspiracy theory which will enlarge the footprint of the killer. the killer will be seen as a mythical kind of creature where, you know, marilyn manson is named after charles manson. there's going to people that are going to be interested in this because we never know. the mexico thing i think was probably a reward, a payoff for him to do something. i think he didn't want to do it. they went on "ellen." he knew he was going to get softball questions. you know i hate conspiracy theories. the killer's house was robbed right after, right after it happens. there was a break-in. who would have the guts to break into that person's house? somebody who could break into the house to get something. i find that, that's where you start thinking about, was this guy cia? who knows? who was he?
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-oh! -very nice. now i'm turning into my dad. i text in full sentences. i refer to every child as chief. this hat was free. what am i supposed to do, not wear it? next thing you know, i'm telling strangers defense wins championships. -well, it does. -right? why is the door open? are we trying to air condition the whole neighborhood? at least i bundled home and auto on an internet website, progressive.com. progressive can't save you from becoming your parents, but we can save you money when you bundle home and auto. i mean, why would i replace this? it's not broken. ♪ >> kimberly: it's time for "one more thing." >> jesse: another edition of...
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>> kimberly: this pleases us. >> dana: the virginia governor's race is a few days away. on november 7. it heated up today. latest hampton university poll shows gillespie ahead of northam. gillespie is the republican. fox's poll had northam up. it is within the margin of error. president trump tweeted support last night saying: "ed gillespie will be a great governor of virginia. his opponent doesn't even show up to meetings/work, and will be very weak on crime!" northam didn't let him get away with that. "i served eight years in the army, took care of sick kids. don't talk to me about showing up." it's going to be a hot one. november 7. >> juan: in case you didn't know it, i am a star. yesterday it doesn't student journalists from roberto clemente middle school in
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maryland came to fox to interview me. they are doing a documentary on prominent americans. they came with lights, cameras, put me in the hot seat. ask, how do you prepare for "the five"? why do you write so many books? these are really bright kids. be on the lookout for sophia, carolyn, samantha, melanie, nicole. rising stars on their way to their most selective high school in maryland. >> greg: juan, i am glad you filled in for me on that. the kids were heartbroken when i said no. this is very interesting. you wouldn't believe. this is a robot that one said it was going to destroy humanity. it's been granted. it's the first robot citizen named by saudi arabia. they weren't the best on human
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rights but they are leading the charge on android rights. this is the first step, by the way, to robot domination. robots will get rights, sooner or later. if they have a consciousness and they can feel pain, than they should have rights. >> jesse: do they let the robot drive? >> greg: i don't know. >> kimberly: you said you talked to the sexy robot lady on the internet. oh, that's another one. >> greg: that was in commercial when i was telling you that story. i thought it was a real person. >> kimberly: this is a cool story. army national guardsmen from kansas started painting his house. orders came for him to deploy to kuwait with his unit. 40 local college students jumped into action and donated time to finish the paint job and everybody donated food, paint, and materials to get it done. this is what we need more of in this country.
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if you could please set your dvr dvrs and never miss an episode of the fantastic show "the five." "special report" is next. >> bret this is a fox news alert. i am bret baier in washington. live from capitol hill. we have three major breaking stories. the house has approves the senate's version of a new budget. it's a prerequisite for the republican tax cut plan which now goes full speed ahead. fbi informant may be about to name names and provide evidence in the emerging scandal over the obama-era sale of uranium interest to a russian control company. president trump is bringing new resources to the fight against opioids. after declaring a nationwide public health emergency. we have fox team coverage. john roberts at the white house with the president's move against a drug crisis that kills
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