tv Happening Now FOX News April 27, 2018 8:00am-9:00am PDT
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dedication and commitment, you have risen to the top of your fields and the highest levels of your sports. >> president trump honoring u.s. olympians at the white house. the vice president, ivanka trump. >> so cool. >> that's it for us. "happening now" starts rights now. >> jon: president trump all set to welcome german chancellor angela merkel to the white house this hour as history is made on the korean peninsula. did you ever think that would happen? >> no. >> good morning. i'm jon scott. >> and i'm melissa francis. >> this is all on the heels of a historic break through in asia. the leader of north korea and the leader of south korea agree to end the war between the two countries after 65 years. dictator kim jong-un and president moon meeting and shaking hands and committing to denuclearizing the korean peninsula. moon and kim even planting a tree on the border to cement
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their pledge for peace. >> jon: john roberts joins us live with more now. john? >> jon, good morning to you. the president still on the steps of the north portico with the u.s. olympic team behind me here. the president talking about north korea and that meeting between kim and president moon. he says he hopes it yields peace for the korean peninsula and the removal of all nuclear weapons in north korea. the president is optimistic about the potential for some sort of break-through with north korea. now it appears and i stress appears to be happening, the historic summit between moon and kim yielding a promise to sign a peace group after 65 years. really observing a cease fire. who knows what a peace agreement could bring and a promise from north korea to denuclearize. the president taking to twitter by saying he's very pleased by what he seeing so far.
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he says the united states and all of its great people should be very proud of what is now taking place in korea. let's play what the president said. >> on the occasion of this week's meeting between president moon and kim jong-un, i want to express my hope that all of the people of korea, north korea and south can some day live in harmony, prosperity and peace. and it looks like it could happen. >> the president mounted a campaign of maximum pressure against north korea to bring kim jong-un to the table. many of his critics thought he was trying to incite a war. instead, it seems to have changed kim's mind. listen to what kim said in his summit meeting. >> let's walk together by uniting our minds, efforts and our wisdom together for the future where a new era, new dreams and hopes are waiting. >> while the president is optimistic about the potentials
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and possibilities for a peace deal with south korea and his upcoming meetings with kim jong-un about denuclearization, he's very weary because north korea has played the united states to get what their wants. here's michael anton earlier today on fox. >> the president is right to be cautious. the north koreans have been in tight spots before because of international pressure and then they have a pattern of showing a willingness to talk when their real goal is to not make concessions. it's to get the united states and our allies to make concessions and the north koreans have made promises they didn't follow-through on. >> the president sending praise to china and president xi. he's very thankful for what president xi did to bring north korea to the table. the president said please don't forget the help from president xi. without him, it would have been a much longer, tougher process.
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the president insists there will be no let-up of the campaign of maximum pressure on north korea until it sees concrete actions to begin the process of dismantling its nuclear program. jon, the president also reminding that he's willing to get up from the table and walk away or cancel the summit if he thinks that no progress will be made. >> jon: amazing to wake up and find out the war was over. >> could be a whole new world. >> really could. >> jon: john roberts, thank you. >> thanks. >> president trump taking aim at his own justice department as he fights to discredit special counsel robert mueller's probe into russian interference in the 2016 election. here's part of his interview on "fox and friends" yesterday morning. >> because of the fact that they have this witch hunt going on with people in the justice department that shouldn't be there, they have a witch hunt against the president of the united states going on. i've taken the position and i
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don't have to take this position and maybe i'll change, that i will not be involved with the justice department. i will wait till this is over. it's a total -- it's all lies and it's a horrible thing that is going on. >> wall street journal member kim strossle has a different look. still the analyst tweet bleeps of phony and witch hunt are doing little to help his cause. the question is why this high energy president seems to fallen for the media claim that his on proactive course is to fire mueller. there's not. there's two actions that the trump white house could take to reset the russian dynamic. kim strassel joins us live.
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this is a brilliant and clear article. you say he take two very bold actions to turn it all around. tell us the first one. >> julie: >> so the first one goes to his own legal team and strategy, which needs to reorient itself. by all accounts, mr. mueller is not looking at collusion anymore. it's about obstruction of justice. in the reports are to be believed. that requires a legal team that begins to make the argument that that is a nonstarter on constitutional grounds. you cannot construe a president to obstruct justice when he's engaged in his core constitutional functions. they need a team, go to court and get declaratory judgment of that finding and mr. mueller, we
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can take that entire topic off the table. >> that's brilliant. you think he needs a constitutional lawyer and focus on this. the constitution defines the powers these ways. if he can't exercise the powers and you call it obstruction, it's not constitutional. you're taking away the powers of the president, right? >> correct. president trump has an obligation in my mind to do this not just for himself but actually to protect the office of the president and the executive bran. because we are already now seeing this obstruction claim hampering his ability to engage in other core constitutional functions. when he pardons someone like scooter libby. we're told that's obstruction. when he districts his attorney general to comply with congressional document requests. we're being told that is obstruction. if this continues, it's going to hamper the presidency in ways that we have not seen. >> and we're seeing that.
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they use that charge to sort of limit and curb him in every turn. you're saying he can apply that logic when he's asked to sit down with mueller. he would make the argument how that that is not constitutional? >> yeah. right now -- this is what is wrong with the legal strategy, he's lawyers are learned about his personal legal liability. we've been told that they don't want to sit with mr. mueller because they're worried that president trump might purger himself. the other argument is we will not sit down with special counsel mueller so long as he's engaged in an unconstitutional obstruction of justice probe. so either come out and say that that is not something that you're looking at or we're not parlaying with you at all. >> the second bold step that you talk about is the idea of declassifying a ton of documents. tell me about that. >> yeah. i think -- the president, again -- this is another core constitutional function.
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the commander-in-chief, he has the ability, ultimate say over classification. he needs to go, direct the justice department to completely release everything underlying this fisa application, everything to do with the fbi's russia investigation in 2016. obviously with deference to sources and methods. the public needs to see this. the justice department are doing their best to keep it hidden from congress. >> what do you think people would see if those documents were released? >> well, it would answer a lot of questions that continue to get disputed. last night, james comey was on with bret baier on fox. he was claiming that this dossier was not a huge part of the fisa application. other people that read it say it is. put it out there. let people see what the reality is. >> obviously -- you addressed it, but the danger in that is revealing too much about how our
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government works. >> yeah. that's why this is something the president does need to make the call on. because it would be unprecedented. we don't want to set up a bad standard going forward that every time there's a controversy, you just release every document and put our national security at risk. but this is an unusual circumstance. this is needed to help restore some confidence in law enforcement and to just start with a clean slate, get 2016 out there. >> great ideas. i hope somebody in the white house read the "wall street journal" this morning. thank you. great stuff. >> thank you. >> jon: president trump's new secretary of state hits the ground running. immediately after his swearing in, mike pompeo hopped on a flight for his first trip as america's top diplomat. he's in brussels for a summit of nato foreign ministers. he will meet with his turkish and italian counter parts.
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from there, he will go to saudi arabia, israel and jordan. he will return for his first full week of leading the state department. >> nikolas cruz is in court today facing 17 counts for murder and attempted murder for the shooting at marjory stoneman douglas high school in february. prosecutors are seeking the death penalty. cruz's attorney says the 19-year-old mr. plead guilty if he's guaranteed life in prison without parole. >> jon: decades after murders and rapes that terrorized california began, police arrest a suspect. the man they believe is behind a vicious crime spree and the surprising way authorities tracked him down. plus, after the president's pick to lead the veterans affairs department withdraws him name from consideration, who will the white house choose to head up the v.a.? also, former fbi director james
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>> melissa: joseph deangelo has been charged with eight murders. police believe he's responsible for several others and more than 40 rapes in the 1970s and 80s. fbi agents and police searched his california home yesterday three days after police tracked him down by comparing genetic profiles from genealogy websites
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to crime scene dna. >> i'm focused on the next secretary of the va. we know somebody that will serve our veterans and make sure that they can run that organization and move it forward for the best benefit for the veterans of this country. >> jon: that's montana's john tester that compiled quite a list of so-called offenses that he says were committed byron any jackson, the president's former nominee to run the va. senators say they hope the next nominee is less controversial. so what is next for this embattled agency? senator bill christmas did joins me from the veterans affair committee. over four years, we've had two
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confirmed and three interim secretaries. how are we going to straighten out this mess? >> first, there's been a lot of progress with the va. since the death at the phoenix va, there's been a lot of progress made. we need the stability and we need the political appointees beneath the secretary. those appointees that implement thee the agenda. if the left wants to help, they need to appoint these people. >> jon: some say that ronny jackson was part of a smear campaign by the left. was he? >> i don't know because we don't know if the allegations are true. but probably wasn't the best way to do it. that's the political atmosphere we live in. but it was probably would have been more decent to a fellow human being to allow himself to defend himself. if he was going to lose the committee vote, let it be done
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quietly but that's the way it played. >> jon: fair to say, there's some republican senators that had concerns about dr. jackson's nomination. >> if allegations are true, i'm concerned. i'm not sure we had a chance to hear the witnesses in a way to establish if they were true. by the way, some of it was documentable. if he wrecked a secret service vehicle, there should be a record of that secret service vehicle being wrecked. so we didn't have to depend on he said she said. it could be no, we actually have documentation. that could have been developed. >> jon: but it's a very polarized atmosphere on capitol hill right now. that seems to be coloring everything. >> i agree with that. the resistance hates trump so much that they are getting the folks on the democratic side to oppose anything trump does. sometimes it has fatal consequences. i'll point out that chuck schumer was blocking the appointment of the head of the
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railroad transportation commission. i forget the exact name. even though he had been reported unanimously out of committee. we had a stretch of about three months in which six folks died on train wrecks. i was in one of those train accidents in which someone died. so it can happen consequences mindless blocking whatever trump proposes. >> jon: you also have mike pompeo was confirmed as secretary of state, but it was touch and go there for a while. now he's successor to run the cia is facing some issues of her own. >> yeah. gina haspel that served under a democratic president and the republican president who the intelligence community praises wildly. i hear the foreign intelligence services like our allies also praise her. but being a victim of the resistance, which tells the left oppose no matter who trump puts up. she's incredibly qualified. again, serving under obama and
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bush. i think she should be our next cia director. >> senator bill cassidy, thanks for being here. >> thank you. >> melissa: long-time nbc news anchor tom brokaw facing accusations of sexual harassment. why his accuser is coming out. and hundreds of migrants making their way from central america to mexico's u.s.-boarder. where are they headed next?
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lawyers offering the group free workshops on the u.s. immigration system, many planning to seek asylum on sunday at san diego's border crossing. >> any asylum seeker will be detained. we're trying to prepare them for that reality. many will be detained for months. however, other than that, there's a long legal process. whether it be in detention or outside of detention. >> the caravan drawing as many as 1,000 members as it begin crossing mexico. president trump portraying those on board as a significant threat and evidence of the need for a border wall. >> melissa: tom brokaw is accused of sexual harassment. he's denying the allegations. a former nbc correspondent, linda vasser said that he made untoward advances towards her in the 90s. what do you make of this story?
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>> well, these are really gripping al cases by linda who after her time at nbc hosted a show here at fox news. she's spoken to "the washington post" and variety in great detail making the allegations against the man for 25 years that was the face of nbc news. variety says that it corroborated linda's allegations both with friends she told and journal entries she kept at the time and she's talking about two separate incidences. one at her denver hotel and one at her london apartment when tom brokaw got physical with her. let's take a look at what she had to say. >> i went like this to show with all the body language that i could muster that i'm terrified, i don't want him here, i'm not interested. he took the same hand, reached behind my head and trade to force me to kiss him. i pulled back with all the
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strength that i could muster and stood up. i said tom, i do not want to do this with you. >> nbc says they have no comment. brokaw has a statement out of denial. he said i met with linda vester on two occasions because she wanted advice with respect to her career. he said the meetings were brief and cordia and i mad no romantic overtures to her at that time or any other. >> melissa: has anybody else come forward with allegations? >> there's a second unnamed woman in "the washington post" story who said she had a similar experience with brokaw in the 90s. brokaw is denying that as well. i don't have to remind you all this is coming about five months after nbc abruptly fired matt lauer, the big morning show star over sexual allegations that were far more serious.
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this has been a rough period of time for nbc news. >> melissa: not only that, there's been grumbling inside nbc that they haven't dealt with the problem. that it wasn't as simple as getting rid of matt lauer. there's other things going on. they haven't done a complete investigation. when you watch these things and we know from our own experience, it has to go through a couple different stages before a company is really reformed. what are you hearing about nbc? >> nbc is doing their own review in the wake of matt lauer's firing. it's one of the reasons that linda vester decided to speak out. she feels that nbc is not doing enough to change the culture. she's not suing, she's not asking for money. she's not looking for a job. like a lot of women that remain silent a long time is deciding this is the moment to speak out. in that interview with variety, she said at the time she was in her late 20s, she felt this man could destroy my career.
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she was physically shaking, deeply traumatized. so obviously this has to be taken seriously. i think nbc since brokaw is still there and a beloved figure is going to have to address this in some form because it's tom brokaw, an important journalist in its history. >> thanks, howard. >> good to see you. >> jon: james comey on defense as new questions are raised about his sharing memos detailing conversations with president trump. >> what he says is a leak is what the rest of us call a felony. leaking is disclosing a confidential conversation which is exactly what he did. get thra shift without a disaster. my bargain detergent couldn't keep up. so, i switched to tide pods. they're super concentrated, so i get a better clean. number one trusted. number one awarded. it's got to be tide
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and help make more tomorrows possible. entresto, for heart failure. >> jon: president trump calling out james comey on twitter accusing the former fbi director of illegally leaking classified information. during a one-on-one interview with bret baier on "special report" comey defending sharing memos about his conversations with president trump and several people including daniel richmond, the columbia law professor. >> i sent mr. richman a copy of a two-page unclassified memo and asked him to get the substance out to the media. >> you called him a good friend and a professor but you didn't reveal he was special government employee for the fbi to work on special projects. why? >> because it wasn't relevant. he was an fbi special government
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employee until february of 2017. >> did you leak other things to mr. richman? >> yeah. i was smiling, brett. i don't consider what i did a leak. i told him about an unclassified conversation with the president. >> jon: let's bring in leslie marshall and lawrence jones, editor in chief of campus refor reform.org. thanks for being here. is it a leak or not? >> it's not whether it's a leak or whether it was a criminal offense. we're getting into the weeds with semantics on that. i do think the information was leaked. but what was the intent of james comey? when we look under the current actual actually obama executive order, he had the power to declassify
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attorney. was it a threat to national commit? if it's not been proven, he has not committed a criminal offense. might have been a poor choice of judgment like hillary clinton but not criminal and not a threat to national security and not outside the scope and parameters of his position at the time. >> jon: go ahead. >> this is not about national security. it's about the fact that a former fbi director leaked information to get a special counsel. many of this information that we've found is that a lot of this stuff had to be redacted because it was classified. so the fact that we have a former fbi director deciding information can be leaked or not leaked is a problem and the fact that he leaked it to a guy that was formerly on the payroll of the justice department, the fbi, is also a problem for me.
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>> jon: leslie, there's the peter strzok-lisa page affair. the two fbi agents that got caught by the inspector general texting about donald trump and hillary clinton. comey says he didn't see any animus towards number. it's clear to me that those two hated donald trump. >> it is. but i think that within the government, whether it's a democrat or republican in the oval office, there's going to be people that agree with or disagree with the president. these people had a relationship -- >> not working -- >> jon: i'll give you a chance. >> and were giving information via the texts. it could be in his capacity as fbi director at the time. he did not sense that in the workplace. he obviously at the time was not trolling through his staff's personal e-mails or texts. >> jon: that's where you get the unvarnished truth, when you read
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the text messages that people are sending when they're not necessarily on working hours or not submitting stuff to their bosses. >> it's his job to manage. he personally was managing this investigation. he should know what is going on in his inner circle. they were using their government phones to do aim this texting. bottom line, this is not even a partisan issue. every american should be concerned that investigators are having conversations demeaning the person that they are investigating. the fact that leslie doesn't see that as a problem, i feel like that is a little bit of intellectual dishonesty. >> jon: there's been suggestions that director comey decided to exonerate hillary clinton in the whole server investigation even before he was interviewed by fbi agents. here's bret asking him about that. >> is it true that you and your
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colleagues made a decision to exonerate hillary clinton before she was interviewed? >> no. >> so write wait to the i'll and write up the memo that you bring forward first? >> good question. come may after we had been doing it for ten months, i started to as part of my regular briefing from the investigators see that their view was it was unlikely to end in a case that the doj would bring. >> jon: lawrence, unlikely to bring prosecution against hillary clinton for mishandling sensitive secrets. >> that's not his job. he's no longer a u.s. attorney anymore. his job is to bring the evidence to the justice department and say this is what we have. can you guys prosecute. his job is not to decide if he's going to charge or not. it was insubordination at its finest. it was insubordination for him
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to have the press conference to decide that he wasn't going to charge. it's not his job, jon. >> jon: leslie? >> i would disagree. as the director of the fbi, you can't bring everything before the department of justice. you have to bring information that you find as a result of an investigation that yields the question of criminality. there was not the question of poor judgment? yes. was it a stupid move? yes. i've said it over and over and so have many. but was this criminal? quite frankly if hillary clinton's e-mails and her use and intent were not criminal, that would work now in james comey's favor in a court of law. >> she had classified information on a private server. it was not in a secure location -- >> when was it classified or declassified by whom, what was the intent when it was sent and -- >> doesn't matter. is. >> that is extremely essential in a court of law. >> jon: extremely careless was
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james comey's -- >> she now regrets using, jon. >> i agree. >> jon: all right. it was quite an interview and i guess the arguing goes on over all of this. leslie marshall, lawrence jones, thanks both. >> have a good weekend. >> thank you. >> melissa: thousands of colorado educators rallying at the state capitol for the second day. will lawmakers listen to their demands? today's historic meeting between the leaders of north and south korea paving the way for president trump's upcoming summit. what does the north korean dictator really want? >> a lot is happening on the world stage right now. it's truly storage. a lot of critics are impressed with the president's pace and focus and ability to walk away if the conditions are not right.
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>> jon: colorado teachers walking out of the classroom for the second consecutive day. take a look. more than a dozen school districts had to cancel classes today as teachers protest. they want higher pay, more funding and better retirement plans. this rally at the state capitol is bigger than yesterday's. teachers make an average of $46,000 a year. nearly $10,000 less than the national average. many recent years, the housing market in the denver area has skyrocketed. >> fox news alert. today's historic summit with the north korean dictator and the south korean president is setting the stage for the summit with president trump and the task of denuclearizing the korean peninsula. >> would be difficult to
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overstate the rapid success of events in short order, this president created this climate. obviously north and south korea have not met together in a long time and the people have suffered for many years. it's this president that wishes to achieve that many presidents have attempted or promised and not been able to deliver upon. >> melissa: brett joins me. he's a former intelligence an list and author of the hunt for america's most dangerous enemies. thanks for joining us. >> good to be with you. >> melissa: the planting of the tree setting the stage. rather than the president spending time talk to the north korean dictator saying to denuclearize, they can focus on how and what that means, right? >> exactly. really the critical question here is how do both sides define denuclearization of the korean
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peninsula. i think it's so important for president moon when he's having this summit to let north korea know what the expectations are of the united states when it comes to denuclearization. that can even be a relatively tough questions for us considering our intelligence services are constantly debating what their weapons systems look like and the numbers that we're dealing with. the fact that north korea is one of the hardest targets for our intelligence services to penetrate. when they look at this, a lot of times they look at it from the air. on top of that, you have the north koreans running their nuclear program from underground. so how do you come to the negotiating table not really understand how to fully denuclearize? >> melissa: where would you start then? do you start that we need to have a certain number of people on the ground that can look anywhere? >> you have to come up with a method for understanding what tests that have taken place, where the locations of these facilities are and a number of
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different issues to determine where the stockpile is. i've seen a lot lately, talk of this thought that the reason that kim jong-un is coming to the table now is because of these crippling sanctions. you know, i got an opposite idea to that where i believe this is really part of his plan all along, this next step of economic modernization. people don't realize that most of north korea's nuclear program was funded through covert actions, through these covert networks where they do drug trafficking and elicit actions. a country that has endured this economic hardship, they can continue to do that if necessary and we have to apply pressure to make sure how to make this denuclearization effective for them. >> what precipitated this? you think it was the way the president behaved and how he's operated around the world, whether how he's dealt with syria or does it have to do with
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the collapse that we've heard about after so many underground nuclear tests? the mountain collapsed. >> i believe the president has played an important role. make no mistake, these negotiations will be the negotiation of their lives. kim jong-un understands this is really his only leverage that he has. i'd be surprised if he gives up his nuclear weapons without a fight but this is his next phase of economic modernization. when it comes to negotiating, they're not going to want a conversation about denuclearization inless it comes with a economic opening. we're rooting for the president. it's going to be a hard task. >> when you woke up this morning and you saw this, how big of a
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deal is it? >> to me, i got chills. it's a historic moment that happened. watching kim jong-un walk down the stress and cross the dmz into south korean territory. i've stood there on the south side of that dmz and i was in the military. we were training to go to war with north korea. i recall this eerie feeling of peeling into north korea and watching the soldiers look back at us. the tension there and it still exists now even with the smiles that we see here. at any point if one side or the other makes the wrong decision, it could set us back pretty far. >> melissa: thanks for joining us, brett. >> thank you. >> jon: big news from kensington palace in london as william and kate announce the name of their new royal baby. plus, comedian bill cosby now a convicted felon after he was found guilty of sexual assault.
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>> melissa: all right. here we go. seconds ago we saw, there's the president standing outside the white house. he's getting ready to greet german chancellor angela merkel who is here for a one-day working visit. she's going to discuss with him no doubt the impending tariffs and what some are calling a trade war. we hear that she's going to try to talk the president out of the different tariffs that he has
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talked about imposing. you can see there, he's giving her a kiss on each cheek. very european. they stand in front of the door and look very friendly. although not as friendly as with his favorite besty over there in france. macron. but still very friendly. jon. >> jon: comedian bill cosby found guilty on three counts of sexual assault. he now faces up to 30 years in prison. is this legal battle finally over? >> i think everybody got to see who he really is when each of those prior bad act witnesses got to testify. you know, the guy was an actor for a long time. it was an act. it was an act. we got to see who he really was. >> we're very disappointed by
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the verdict. we don't think mr. cosby is guilty of anything. the fight is not over. thank you. >> are you going to appeal, sir? >> yes. yes. very strongly. >> jon: joining us now is former federal prosecutor fred teesey and mercedes colon. second trail, a hung jury in the first one, mercedes. they convicted this time. what was the difference? >> the huge difference is the ruling that allowed the prior bad act to come in. a string of witnesses that said this is what happened to me. it was obviously like the charges that were pending against him. that was critical. any defensive attorney knew that that case was going to rise and fall on that ruling by the judge. >> jon: why wasn't it allowed the first time around, fred?
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>> cosby is a bad guy. they have an appeal. couple things they don't teach you, bad facts make bad law. the guy is a despicable character. what they don't teach you in law school, the majority in the supreme court are woman and they run for election. nobody will let mr. cosby get reversed on appeal. >> jon: sounds like mercedes says he has of an appeal because of to testify that was allowed in. >> that would be one basis, absolutely. rulings like this where the judge is presented with this type of evidence. they have to do this balancing test. what is more probative, what is more prejudicial. the argument will say the judge didn't weigh it appropriately. the second part and there's been rumblings about, which is said,
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because the feelings of tom mezereau, it's been recorded that he was sleeping at periods of time during the trial. if you -- if somehow bill cosby changes lawyers, then he may rely on ineffective assistance of counsel as one of the other bases for the appeal. >> jon: fred, a few seconds left. does he have -- >> no. there was an army of lawyers at the table. they mounted an aggressive defense. he got the sixth amendment right to counsel. >> thanks for being here. >> thanks for having us. >> melissa: president trump welcoming angela merkel to the white house. we'll have more on their oval office meeting ahead on "outnumbered." we'll be right back. of things to wash
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because of the royal baby has a name. it's louis arthur child sell charles. prince louis of cambridge. it's lovely, big name for a little baby, but there you go. thanks for joining us. >> "outnumbered" starts right now. >> harris: we are awaiting possible new remarks from president trump as he welcomed german chancellor angela merkel to the white house just moments ago. this caps off a dramatic week of world diplomacy for the president. with a wide array of major international issues on the table including whether the president will decide to pull out of the controversial iran nuclear deal. don't want to see happen. this is "outnumbered." i'm harris faulkner pretty today, town hall editor and fox news contributor katie pavlich. posted can be on fox business, kennedy. commentator and fox news contributor rachel campos duffy and joining us in the center seat, fo
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