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[burke] and we covered it. talk to farmers, we know a thing or two because we've seen a thing or two. ♪ we are farmers. bum-pa-dum, bum-bum-bum-bum ♪ leland: fox news alert. the reaction all morning to a letter from president trump lawyer that was sent to robert mueller in his office. good afternoon on a very busy sunday. a rainy sunday indeed. i am leland vittert. elizabeth: thanks for joining us. i'm elizabeth grant papers reported by "the new york times" was written back in january pushes back on a potential subpoena for the testimony and the russian investigation. it also outlines the legal teams reasons for the president not to meet with the special counsel. for all the latest reaction, let's had to ellison barber live at the white house. >> this letter is signed by the president's attorney, jay secular from january 28 team,
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dated january 29th, 2018. the president has added a new member to his legal team who giuliani did not write this letter, but the legal argument in it are strong. giuliana also says that it comes to a sitdown between the president of special counsel robert mueller he hasn't ruled it out, but it's not particularly keen on it. >> there's gotbe a high bar they have to reach in convincing that we look at two things we need. if they can convince us to be brief, to the point in five or six points they have to clarify and without the 10 at this nightmare the american public over. the mac they argue that an in-person interview between mueller and president trump is not necessary because the special counsel has all the answers in the form of document in interviews to any questions they plan on asking president trump. they argue the president's actions could not be obstruction because he has a constitutional
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and legal authority to and the russia probe. giuliani says constitutionally the president could end the probe but it would be a very good idea. >> i mean, it could lead to impeachment. to determine investigation of themselves. >> fox news obtained a copy of the letter yesterday first reported on by "the new york times" they talk about the documents as special counsel and say, quote, perhaps most notably your office has dirty been given access to conversations with the president himself. it clearly? the requisite need to personally interview the president. he still wants to see documents related to the fbi informant who had contacted members of president trump's campaign during the election. right now based the question of whether or not he will agree to letting his clients had done a special counsel robert mueller seems to hinge on whether or not
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they can access documents related to the fbi informant. >> ellison barber with the very latest. leland has more. >> florida congressman bernie. we will add to that attorney and ambassador and specialties from all three of those titles. first are your thoughts as an attorney on the letter sent by the president's attorneys to robert mueller. >> a very interesting argument. because the president has the power to pardon come he can't commit obstruction of justice. we read a lot of things about watergate and that's what the whole thing about nixon was by not releasing the tapes, which the supreme court compelled him to do. >> so you buy this argument do not take us into the political realm. using this as an argument that flies at the republican base and also with armchair republicans or do they not quite go this far and give the president this much
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leeway. >> like i say, given what i've researched so far come i'd be interested in what people like alan dershowitz feel about it who are more eminent legal scholars of me. i don't see what a president can't commit obstruction of justice. nixon did. leland: so now we will get to the politics of this. rudy giuliani speaking this morning to announce about whether or not the president can pardon himself coming here's what he said. >> is not, he probably does. he has no intention of pardoning himself. leland: now to the politics of this. if the president were to pardon himself or start down that path, instead of red lines for congressional republicans like yourself? >> well, i think the whole situation is so colored with politics without the deep state stuff we've seen out of the fbi, doj in the embedding that academic infiltrator. so i assume it would be rented
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to an all-new level where he pardon himself. >> do you see a situation where republicans who are even supporters of president trump go ahead and effect i'm not in her upset with them over it or not? >> well, when you look at the daca thing going on in some of the difficulty getting it past him you may well lose some of the moderate republicans. >> now onto the issue we initially thought would be the big worry on friday when we booked you which was north korea come you were ambassador before a congressman to the holy see. a lot about how these things go. this picture struck a lot of people i say, premature. a picture of president trump with the vice chairman of north korea. big smiles on their faces to president trump holding the oversized envelope with a letter from kim jong survey. the president is taking maximum
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pressure, maybe not off the table, but he doesn't want to talk about it right now. prematurely close enough to north korea or is this how things need to be done with the rogue regime? >> each party to the talks is conduct in their own shadow boxing in of the talks and seems to me a little bit of a good cop bad cop performance, kind of like what reagan did with gorbachev. the key is to see what can we offer north korea to get them to be neutralized and the nukes are so important to their security. leland: do you believe they would be nuclear race? when other top about it, promised in the past and every time they get the cookies of economic relief for economic health and i go back on their word. >> yeah, we have not been successful in moving the ball down the field with them and i don't know other than perhaps something drastic like hemispheric reunification we could offer them that would substitute for security the nukes give them. he doesn't care about the economic health of its people
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anyway. >> in the past come you been skeptical of the administration saying you thought they were a little too trusting, and maybe even a little too giddy about a deal with the north koreans. you still feel that way or have been somewhat over the past month or so assuage those fears? >> i think donald trump is gotten north korea and a better spot than any of these three predecessors. i hope he doesn't want to deal so bad that he would succumb to deal i dislike obama did in cuba and iran and he'll be walking out lycra shifted with kennedy in 1960 or 61. leland: members of the administration point to the fact he was going to cancel the summit and sent a letter to kim jong un the basically said we don't think you are serious. we are walking away. present a positive development in your mind to this point? >> absolutely positive development. all of the shadowboxing to loosen everybody up for strategies that deployed
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singapore. leland: congressman, thank you for being with us. he travels to the district. if you like you're done in florida because there's torrential rains appear as well. >> a great day down here. 85 degrees and sunny. beaches are full. >> we will be thinking about you. good to see you. perhaps her tourism commission to his requisite resume. that's president trump in the administration gear up for his june 12 summit with north korean dictator kim jong un in singapore, defense secretary james mattis says there will be, quote, a bumpy road to the negotiation. molly henneberg joins us of exactly how bumpy it could be. hi, molly. jim litle hi, leland. sitting down with south koreans and japanese counterparts do some strategic planning for the june 12 summit. he urges them to maintain, quote, strong, collaborative defensive stance in the lead up
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to the summit in order to allow the diplomats to negotiate from a calm position of strength in this critical time. as far as easing international pressure on the north korean regime, secretary mattis says not yet. >> now we must remain vigilant and we will continue to implement all u.n. security council resolutions on north korea. north korea will receive the leak only when it demonstrates a verifiable and a reversible step at a nuclear station. >> president reagan met with north korean official kim yong chol on friday. at that time to nuclear weapons than it had been canceled. they spoke for over an hour in the oval office in the north korean adversary presented a letter to president trump for north korean president kim jong un. after the oval office discussion, president trump announces singapore meeting was not gone. and there is a shot at some progress that the trump administration officials.
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>> the president has been bolder on this in korea and on world trade than any other recent president. everybody says you can't do it. the president said tang on the second. we may be able to do it. >> there has than some published reports that north korea wants the u.s. to pay for a fancy hotel rooms for kim jong un in singapore. not so says state department spokeswoman. now the u.s. is not paying for the north korean delegation and we are not asking others to do so. leland: molly henneberg with that development. thank you good lives. >> for more insight, let's have a staff writer with the "washtington examiner." thank you for joining us. right off the talk on the details of the negotiation for the intelligence community may not be something wholly new. am i right? >> the drama over scheduling the summit is new, but the details necessarily aren't.
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we've seen this before in the clinton administration pushed for an agreement with the north koreans early on in the 90s only to have kim jong un father cheat on the agreement enriched uranium on the side of everything fall apart. the united states cut off the oil supply and we were back to square one. i think that sort of remembrance is what inspired the caution we are hearing from. general mattis said this is going to be a bumpy ride. elizabeth: so what is new aside from details of the meeting. his enriched uranium and now we have some new i guess you could say factors in negotiations. >> commemorative coins and envelopes aside, there are two factors. north korea has 16 nuclear missiles right now. the real differences you have a president who is unconventional in his approach to negotiations. this is a problem we've had for decades using new fact or here
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and i think he's made significant progress with getting in a rational actor to act somewhionally and come to the table. but there is a risk like mitch mcconnell warned that you might fall in love with the deal too much that you don't focus on the details and in the end you risk. >> to go the president is being cautious? at one point he did say on friday where he said listen, this is a process. we talk about the meeting but it could be one of many meetings. you suspect that is the case after june 12? >> clearly this is going to be a process because the north koreans have one definition denuclearization and we have a very different definition and questions about how are we going to enforce and make certain that they don't achieve the second time around. there will be a process, that there have been conflicting approaches from the president. he gets tough on north korea and
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then kim jong un number two in the oval office. it's going to be a process like you said. at this point we have to buckle up and see what happens. elizabeth: secretary mattis as you mentioned in singapore and you talk about the gap in expectations. we see the gap gets smaller and smaller over the next nine days. >> we all kind of talked about that in the letter that was given to president trump. that's a perfect encapsulation of what's happening right now. president trump is more than happy and then the secret service swoops in and says we need to check to make certain there is nothing poisonous or wrong with them. that kind of shows you have a president here who wants to be personal, charming and charismatic and get the deal done. but then you have people at the state department and the intelligence community who have seen this play out before. it is up in the air, the president trump is bringing something new and perhaps that's needed. elizabeth: what are your predictions after covering the white house and what he thinks
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going to happen? >> the only thing you can say with the administration is everything so unpredictable. the e ing we did say is the willingness to walk away from the table. he got kim jong un to show some confession to ask more politely if you will. i think we could see an initial agreement, but it's much longer in the follow-through. >> and also lessons learned from the iran deal. he's going to walk away if he is unhappy. thank you so much. appreciate it. a reminder to hear much more from the white house tomorrow right here on fox news. sean hannity will speak with press secretary sarah sanders and also get reaction from marco van. you can get that tomorrow at 9:00 p.m. leland: the israeli hamas cease-fire in question today as hamas militants fire rockets overnight. earlier today israeli officials releasing this video showing airstrikes against hamas in the gaza strip. israeli defense force says they
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had a total of 15 targets including weapons and manufacturing storage sites. the strike was in response they say to those rocket attacks by hamas. >> still to come this hour, jampacked hours to 500 day of president trump in the oval office. our panel will weigh in on his administration's accomplishments and how they play midterm orders across. plus a fourth homicide in three days has arizona investigators looking for a possible serial killer. we'll have the latest on the manhunt and the possible connection to the 1996 death of jonbenet ramsey. and president trump creating a divide between the u.s. and top allies. we'll have reaction as a trade war begins to arise. >> these matters can be solved. no one says they can't be whether they will be i don't know. the president's vision here it
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for some of america's closest allies. the finance minister calling for action urging treasury secretary steve mnuchin to deliver ahead of the g7 summit in québec. >> in canada, we've been clear. we think the action is an appropriate observed to consider security risk to the united states and therefore we've taken a targeted and considerate approach to retaliation. >> the upcoming g-7 summit wal-mart trumps first visit to canada as president. >> also the past few hours, china warring president trump against earthquakes as well. the chinese government releasing a statement to a news agency saying the united states introduces trade sanctions and all the economic and negotiations by the two parties will not take affect their
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financial analyst, nice to see you as always. to mainstream americans who say look, we are having our lunch in providing these other countries. is there a danger these other companies retaliate? >> canada has argued mass retaliation an amount equal to what the u.s. has imposed on canada. that is still up for talks and negotiations of course as we pull back on steel and aluminum terrace with canada, mexico and the e.u. and they may follow suit. it wouldn't be surprised if the e.u. also retaliated with their own forms of terrace. >> we are $800 billion down, which relates to the trade deficit, not just tariffs. we can't lose a trade war. it can only get better for america. does that ring true to you? >> that is true in the main issue the president is
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addressing is their deficit on annual basis with the rest of the world at $800 billion. china rounded up $375 billion annually. china has agreed recently to buy more u.s. goods. after wilbur ross they pull back on that now. >> is that really zero-sum game way way to look at it? most economists, and they say look, i'm probably a few thousand dollars down in a trade deficit with amazon but i've gotten a lot of stuff from amazon in the same way $800 billion trade deficit with other countries that the united states imports a huge amount of goods. >> most economists would be against terrace, but even the most free-trade economists among us would say china has not played by the rules for many years. they sensitize aluminum and steel on the u.s. and they steal our intellectual property to the tune of hundreds of billions of
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dollars every year and that is a bigger threat than our trade deficit right now. >> is that the bigger threat why then with canada, australia, the european union. >> that's a great question and those are for separate issues. we are negotiating nafta, so why the tariffs were imposed in mexico is to hopefully bring mexico to the table and help renegotiate nafta, but more specifically talking about mexico versus the u.s. >> let's get to what the effect is on everyday americans main street in iowa, michigan, pennsylvania the state had voted for president trump. he's been touting the economy lately and unemployment down to 3.8%. listen to the president's own economic advisor when asked if terrace would be perhaps detrimental to the growth. take a listen.
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>> i don't deny that. you have to keep an eye on it. it is possible absolutely. i don't think it has right now. leland: i don't think it has right now, but it's possible it could jeopardize economic growth. >> it is not reassuring coming from larry kudlow at his national economic council. he is more in the free-trade camp along with steve mnuchin opposing not global, protectionist and there's this tug-of-war in the white house that will have an impact on their economy. in the end, president trump is trying to protect u.s. jobs in the american steelworkers and manufacturers here. trained to hold on. at one end you protect american steelworkers on the other hand you've got a lot of americans in south carolina work in a bowling in bmw factories. it's the exact opposite to their
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jobs. >> i understand, that there was a good deal with regards to the e.u. tariffs that may be coming to germany was going to build more plants in the u.s. and they haven't done that. mercedes and bmw building more plants in mexico still. there are many i think that her surgical approaches we can take especially towards chinese intellectual property. that is what you're getting at. blanket tariffs on steel and aluminum may not be the best way and that's what larry kudlow is talking about. >> surgical is not prescribed as white house over the past 500 days. i think everyone can agree on that. much more on this tough topic coming up on "fox news sunday." larry kudlow as you know was on with chris wallace. he's the white house national economic advisor. a lot in there not only about the terrace, but north korea as well. right after our show, stick around until 2:00 p.m. eastern.
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>> stay with us. after the break, why authorities they are think it is linked to two other high profile murders. and today marks president trump's 500 day in office. a look at economic growth in the country and how it will impact primary votes coming this tuesday. >> very simply, we are more prosperous, more secure in our government is more accountable. anyone major achievement taken by itself would be enough in the first 500 days. (vo) dogs have evolved,
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>> of fox news alert. arizona authorities working to connect what they say could be a string of shootings to the scott hill police department now investigating what may be the fourth related murder. the very latest. >> police in arizona now investigating the possibility one person could be responsible for four murders at three different locations over the course of the last three days. thursday, frantic psychiatrist stephen pitt were shot outside of the scottsdale, arizona office. he died on friday. tutorial articles in 40 niner laura andersen went than done on a scottsdale law firm. on saturday, psychologists and counselor marshall levine were shot dead in a scottsdale office building. police believe the first to murder scenes on thursday and friday are linked.
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>> we have been able to tie or basically determined that the shooting on first street is related to the shooting of dr. stephen pitt. the first two are related in this one we are trying to determine what involvement in sending it has. jim litle three of the four murders are connect to it. we await word of mr. levine's death is as well. as for a suspect in the police have released this sketch of the man believed to have shot and killed stephen pitt on thursday as an adult male, who are in with a short brim. witnesses say stephen was argued that the suspect outside his office at 5:30 p.m. before he was shot in the suspect fled. this is where it gets even more interesting. stephen pitt worked as a forensic psychiatrist on high-profile cases including the jonbenet ramsey murder investigation as a consultant to the police and district attorney. jonbenet ramsey was the
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six-year-old who was murdered in her home in colorado in the 1996 case receiving worldwide attention and to this day remains unsolved. as for the paralegals murdered, one woman were shot in the head and she died outside the law firm. the other was found shot dead inside the law firm, which practices divorce and family law. we have a forensic psychiatrist, tutored paralegals who work at a family law practice in our fourth murder of a psychiatrist and now they're trying to figure out whether or not all four are connected. we know at least the first three are. elizabeth: thank you so much. disturbing. leland. leland: today marks president trump 500th day in office and he office and he's writing on the heels of a positive jobs report and record low unemployment. issues that generally push voters to the polls. speaking of polls right now. voters nationwide were infinitely more towards
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democrats and republicans the generic congressional vote. as you can see, it has taken significantly since the beginning of the year. five states have primaries on tuesday. joining us now from two of those states, california later post in iowa radio host steve days. nice to see both of you. right now you've got the economic argument coming out of the white house. the foreign-policy argument out of the white house and then the president attorneys going on offense against the molar investigation. take a listen to rudy giuliani later today -- earlier today. >> this is the what the president testified. our recollection keeps changing her were not even asked the question so nobody makes an assumption. in my case i made an assumption we corrected and got it right out as soon as it happened. >> steve, we have seen the white house and its outside counsel really turn up the heat on the molar investigation.
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is that galvanize republicans to talk to or does it slip them a little bit? >> i think right now almost everything has the option of either galvanizing your base and/or galvanizing the other at the exact same time. we have a motto on my show, whoever loses because we have got this fascinating, this contrasts with the typical economic issues that drive the electorate are in favor of trump and the republicans. on the other hand, his approval rating is still very much in the danger zone. the energy level as we've seen in elections across the country is still very much in favor of democrats and those usually portend the outcome of midterm elections as well. i don't know that we've ever seen anything like this because typically the reason why the other side is energized is because your policies are not popular. in this case, trump's policies are far more popular than he is. it would be fascinating to see the voters sort this out come
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november. >> twitter will sort out which one of the three of us was class. we will tune in for that. we would get you to respond to steve in the sense that democrats now have to change their playbook. even democrats who come on the show and much more about attacking him in going after him on russia. >> well, i've always said that's what the democrats have to do. they have to do more than not. they can just be we are not shown, party of trump are different from trump because we've seen in some districts in elections where there've been successful in flipping it where there has been a more moderate tone with regard to the president. it really depends on the constituency. we had 10 districts right here in this state in california that are very football bowl to blue for bread. the changing demographic of california shows that and quite frankly if democrats often some of those issues and the demographics that are very
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important like immigration, walls that they don't want built in a lot of these districts and separation of children from families and the lack of immigration policy. also the issue of gun control and a lack of those issues that may get democrats out to vote. as a democrat, we are great at marching and we have all these young people who are registering to vote and that is awesome and many are registering as democrats. or so independence. if they don't vote, it doesn't help anybody flipping a district even here in california. >> i think it was on the west wing dayside decided by those who show up. steve, to you now, this is something splitting the republican party, especially in iowa. he should president trump stares. larry kudlow on "fox news sunday" in them will get your reaction. >> i don't deny that. you could jeopardize that. >> as possible, absolutely.
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>> the economy is on fire. unemployment three-point lead. does the president have show we say x does republican base on tariffs? >> i think he definitely does. he's got an exposed flank with everyday americans. when you get into tariffs over here in subsidies over there, you start groups against one another and democrats are far better at that than republicans are. let me give you an example. i'm in a grocery store here recently going through the express lane and the woman ahead to me wants to know why her carton of eggs or $3 when they were much cheaper a few months ago. we know the answer. it is a trade war, the threat of terrorists come at henry. right now we don't have nearly the unrest in the middle east from moving the embassy to jerusalem. relatively speaking we have as much consistent piece in the middle east as we've had post-9/11. yet when i want to fill up at costco the other day here in des moines to cost me $45 good wife
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passed away not. why are the of eggs more at the store. those are the things they don't get into complex economic areas and battling talking points. they want to know what's in this for me. right now a lot of good things for the trump economy for them. when you were to razors that of margins come you don't have to alienate a lot of people to change the outcome of the electorate come november. leland: i only have 15 seconds but i want to get you in. how do democrats exploit the view was just talking about? >> i actually agree with steve on this one because it's not just the economy. it's the perception of a person economic situation that is the reality. they are going to the pumps and prices are higher. the wage growth is not the, which we have not seen. we saw during the obama years unemployment dropped over and over in elections. so it's really the feeling of perception economically at the
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american people when they go to vote. >> perhaps as steve points out how they feel at the pump in the grocery store way, way out way how they fen they wch cable television. nice to see both of you. inc. so much. >> thank you. elizabeth: coming up coming as a building collapsed. what they are saying about the situation and how it's becoming reoccurring. a bittersweet day for marjory stoneman douglas high school students as they celebrate graduation day. our own phil keating is live outside with a preview.
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>> you will be a balancing act today for graduating students at marjory stoneman douglas high school. on one hand they will be joint health and on the other pain and reflection for the classmates and teachers who are not at the graduation. phil keating joins us live from florida with more. >> hi, liz. for about 800 high school seniors summit today is finally the day and in about an hour they will be receiving their high school diplomas, capping 12 years of education and marketing the new beginning of life, college careers in adulthood. of course, this will be a bittersweet celebration ceremony and historically in celebratory nature. certainly, this one is going to be sad throughout especially as for would-be seniors who should be graduating today are no longer here. the students and parents request the ceremony has been closed off to the media.
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we are honoring god the principle nor the school district is dishing out any specific details as to what is planned for inside the arena. arriving here in about two and half hours ago. many wearing their crimson gown and cats in the loss of the supporting sashes around their necks. the ceremony at elf begins at the top of the hour. we all remember the high school experience for these graduates tragically became wounded in for many, totally destroyed on valentine's day. the pharmacy to barge into the building with a a or 15. multiple magazines and am loaded 150 bullets in a matter of minutes, killing 17. it was the deadliest high school shooting in u.s. history. the four singers killed that day, joaquin oliveira, metabolic, their parents have all been invited to attend and
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accept diplomas on their behalf in two of the families will not. this is way too difficult. he will be here as a tribute to his son and his friends. some students will also honor the terms, including then in their special moments when they walk the page. >> i am doing my cap for her. i'm putting a picture and then i think i'm going to say so she's actually walking with me. >> a picture of her in the quote is going to be when i look up i see you. >> this morning, the brother of metal pollock tweeted this. today is the day my sister has been waiting for where she would've been getting her diploma on her way to attend college. this is a sad day as well be walking the range to get her diploma. there is beefed up security here at the school district in the school going all-out to try to
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make this a happy occasion. it's supposed to be a happy occasion but without a doubt for so many just 109 days since this massacre in valentine's day. today will be very mixed emotions. elizabeth: i can't imagine the pain for those parents. appreciate it. leland: tv star kim kardashian pushing for prison reform. what one former bank robber wants the president to do. before i had the shooting, burning, pins-and-needles of diabetic nerve pain,
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these feet... grew into a free-wheeling a kid... loved every step of fatherhood... and made old cars good as new. but i couldn't bear my diabetic nerve pain any longer, so i talked to my doctor and he prescribed lyrica. nerve damage from diabetes causes diabetic nerve pain. lyrica is fda approved to treat this pain, from moderate to even severe diabetic nerve pain. lyrica may cause serious allergic reactions, suicidal thoughts or actions. tell your doctor right away if you have these, new or worse depression, unusual changes in mood or behavior, swelling, trouble breathing, rash, hives, blists, muscle pain with fever, tired feeling or blurry vision. common side effects: dizziness, sleepiness, weight gain, swelling of hands, legs, and feet. don't drink alcohol while taking lyrica. don't drive or use machinery until you know how lyrica affects you. those who have had a drug or alcohol problem may be more likely to misuse lyrica. now i have less diabetic nerve pain. and i love smoothing the road ahead for others. ask your doctor about lyrica.
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i support the affordable care act, and voted against all trump's attempts to repeal it. but we need to do more. i believe in universal health care. in a public health option to compete with private insurance companies. and expanding medicare to everyone over 55. and i believe medicare must be empowered to negotiate the price of drugs.
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california values senator dianne feinstein to negotiate the price of drugs. cliberal gavin newsom from knows becoming governor. they also know chicago lawyer john cox has thirteen losing campaigns under his belt... and cox supports bad ideas like a 23 percent sales tax! california police officers and police chiefs stand with antonio villaraigosa. as mayor, he worked with law enforcement, and cut violent crime in half. antonio for governor.
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>> the time is now for real criminal justice reform. no more jail, no more more incarceration. let's educate our kids in deal with poverty. >> senator bernie sanders in california yesterday talking about mass incarceration rates. his comments come just days after kim kardashian advocated for criminal justice reform at the white house as well as clemency for her great grandmother serving a life sentence for a first-time nonviolent drug offense. he was more, ceo and cofounder, john saunder. thank you for joining us. you've been on both sides of the aisle source folks at home know you. you've also been convicted of bank robbery and has been time in prison.
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my question to you is what made you turn your life around and why do you think you can help reduce recidivism rates? >> thank you so much having me here. what turned my life around was a conversation with god in a prison cell and asked him to show up for me in some spectacular way than he did so. but my life's mission about was to turn around and help other men and women who are facing the same challenges inside the prison upon release to do everything i can to help escort them to the next level of life. >> a conversation with god. another way to say that is fewer rehabilitated. keeping prisons and jails rehabilitate criminals? >> i don't think -- we were doing the best job we possibly can when it came to rehabilitation. what i'm excited about is the direction the administration is taking prison reform and reentry. we ensure he needs to be gained
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doing everything they can and then to be very thin to be able to help them be successful once they are released. elizabeth: is that it starts at day one. drug crimes, then not again are the predominant reason for us eighth in federal prison admissions. if that were drug offenders need to be going? do we need to figure out a better solution? >> i think inside the prison system, i'm having difficulty hearing you, but in the presence of an affordable to address the substance abuse issues again, those things that led to their incarceration. it's imperative that were able to do that and do everything we can to make sure while people are inside the prison system
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daily coming back home in much better condition when they walk through the door. >> event in the white house. if not mistaken you were there in may. there is a piece of legislation that stalled right now and involves a lot of prison reform. critics say it too narrow. that being said, do you want to see reform albeit narrow down at the congressional level? >> i think there are a lot of things that could be addressed in there. we should focus our attention on right now where we are at right now, actions that have been taken. the bible says do not despise small beginnings, but we are in a great spot, a great platform we can take from as we continue to move forward we can tear bringing some of those other things on the inside. go ahead. train to go ahead. we have 15 seconds. finish your thought.
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>> again, when we do everything we can to prepare men and women with the vocational skills they need so when they come home, they can do good things like getting good jobs. when we are able to get them employed, they become the fuel in the economic energy in communities across our country. that is something we should focus on the percent of our attention on. elizabeth: thank you so much. hope for prisoners. if people want more information they can find you on the website they are. tragic good conversation there. jeff sessions on the other side of the issue. president trumps talk with kim kardashian. "fox news sunday" coming up next. order your kit at ancestrydna.com but prevagen helps your brain with an ingredient originally discovered...
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in jellyfish. in clinical trials, prevagen has been shown to improve short-term memory. prevagen. the name to remember. and i recently had hi, ia heart attack. it changed my life. but i'm a survivor. after my heart attack, my doctor prescribed brilinta. it's for people who have been hospitalized for a heart attack. brilinta is taken with a low-dose aspirin. no more than 100 milligrams as it affects how well brilinta works. brilinta helps keep platelets from sticking together and forming a clot. in a clinical study, brilinta worked better than plavix. brilinta reduced the chance of having another heart attack... ...or dying from one. don't stop taking brilinta without talking to your doctor, since stopping it too soon increases your risk of clots in your stent, heart attack, stroke, and even death. brilinta may cause bruising or bleeding more easily, or serious, sometimes fatal bleeding. don't take brilinta if you have bleeding, like stomach ulcers, a history of bleeding in the brain, or severe liver problems. slow heart rhythm has been reported. tell your doctor about bleeding new or unexpected shortness of breath any planned surgery, and all medicines you take.
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...or this powerful. the new ego power+ string trimmer with powerload™ technology. exclusively at the home depot and ego authorized dealers. >> i am chris wallace. the summit between president trump and kim jong-un is on. but what about a trade war with our closest allies? ♪. >> i think the relationship we have right now with north korea is as good as it's been in a while. >>chris: the pushback from canada, mexico and europe to the president tariffs on imports of steel and aluminum. >> let me be clear, these tariffs are totally unacceptable. we have to believe at some point common sense will prevail. >>chris: a live interview with
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