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tv   Fox Report Sunday  FOX News  June 17, 2018 3:00pm-4:00pm PDT

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barnes & noble, amazon, it is there. get it you will love it. we are out of time. special thanks to our guests and studio audience. i'm greg gutfeld and i love you, america. [applause] >> as we begin on this father's day, a high speed chase on a texas highway leading to the deaths of at least five people. apparently illegal immigrants. as border patrol agents tried chasing down a car believed to be smuggling people into the i'm john scott. you are watching the fox report. >> police saying 12 people were ejected from an suv doing at least 100 miles-an-hour down a highway, about 50 miles from the u.s. mexico border. the driver of that car believed to be a u.s. citizen is now in custody. jeff paul joins us now with the latest. jeff? >> well, jon, the county sheriff just spoke a little while ago saying now a 6th person might have died and the number of casualties might only rise. he also says the driver was
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known to law enforcement and was seen just last week either scouting the area or looking for immigrants to smuggle. here's what that chevy suburban looks like after it wrecked. investigators say 14 people were inside it when it crashed while border patrol agents pursued the suv. they say the vehicle ran off the road and flipped over several times. 12 were ejected. four died on scene. and a fifth passed away on the way to the hospital. the sheriff says it is an extremely busy area for smuggling, more assets are needed and that they have a real problem with illegal immigration that's showing no signs of slowing down. >> not unusual at all. absolutely not. we've seen this many many times and not only this county but other counties along the border. it's a problem. this is i think a perfect example of why our borders need to be secure. it endangers american lives as well as those people from mexico and other countries coming --
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>> when asked how they were tipped off to the suv, the sheriff said, quote, it's called good police work. the county sheriff also added that he needs more boots on the ground and more patrols and possibly a wall, but says he understands a wall might not work in every spot on the border. border patrol hasn't commented about what sparked the initial chase, but the sheriff's office says it wasikely part of normal border apprehension efforts. jon? >> sad story. jeff paul, thank you. now this, president trump launching a full defense of his negotiations with north korea, accusing the media of a coordinated effort to disparage the process. the president sending a series of rapid fire tweets this morning after a week in which some people questioned both the optics and the outcome of his summit with dictator kim jong-un. the president tweeting quote: the denuclearization deal with north korea is being praised and celebrated all over asia. they are so happy. over here in our country some people would rather see this
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historic deal fail than give trump a win even if it does save potentially millions and millions of lives. garrett tenney is following this from the white house. garrett, the president is also defending his decision to end joint military exercises with south korea as part of his kim jong-un agreement. >> yeah, jon, that move has been a point of criticism for the president over this last week. those exercises have been a very contentious issue for both china and north korea for years, and democrats argue that the president gave those exercises up without getting enough in return, but today, the president defended his decision tweeting holding back the war games during the negotiations was my request because they are very expensive and set a bad light during a good faith negotiation. also quite provocative. can start up immediately if talks break down, which i hope will not happen. now, the top democrat on the senate armed services committee disagrees with that assessment. on fox news sunday, senator jack reid suggested there could be
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serious consequences for pausing those exercises. >> it is a big deal. first of all, complete surprise to our allies, the south kores and the japanese, they are very concerned. second it is part of our determined not war gaming but deterrents of the north koreans. and if this goes for a long period of time, operationally, we'll lose the skills that we need to collaborate with our colleagues in the region. >> while south korea and japan are supportive of these talks and of course do want to see north korea denuclearize this move by the president is concerning to them because it raises questions about what the u.s.'s security commitment to the region will be going forward. jon? >> another issue that's royaling at the white house right now, garrett, the angst over immigration policies that separate families crossing the border illegally. the first lady had something to say about that today? >> yeah, she absolutely did, jon. this is notable because it is rare that the first lady weighs
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in on policy, related issues -- policy-related issues. but today was an exception. her office tells us ms. trump hates to see children separated from their families and hopes both sides of the aisle can finally come together to achieve successful immigration reform. she believes we need to be a country that follows all laws but also a country that governs with heart. now some are pointing to her statement as a criticism of her husband, but we should note that the president used almost that exact same language when he was asked about this policy on friday. jon? >> garrett tenney at the white house, thank you. the immigration debate will be front and center tuesday when president trump heads to capitol hill to meet with house republicans. this as lawmakers wrestle with pair of new immigration bills. the author of the more conservative of the two, house judiciary chairman saying his bill would open up a number of new opportunities. >> we also as you know in that bill move from a terrible visa
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lottery system to a merit-based immigration system that not just daca recipients but other people who are lawfully present in the united states and are young and don't have a path way forward can use and we're going to go to a long w towards endi ining chn migration for extended family and moving towards a merit system. >> gillian turner has more. >> the congressional delegation of democrats toured a detention facility in new jersey earlier today, where children separated from their parents at the southern border are being held. they had some scathing words for president trump. >> today father's day we spoke to fathers whose children have been ripped from their arms, who have no idea when or if they will see their children again. >> it is a policy that is unacceptable, unjust, un-american, and unconscionable. >> also called the policy quote
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inhumane and vowed to bring a democratic legislative fix to the house floor on tuesday. in the meantime, fox news confirms president trump will also head to capitol hill late tuesday afternoon to rally republicans around one of two g.o.p. immigration bills. on the agenda fors meeting are president trump's big ticket policy priorities, most notably border security funding, including his multibillion dollars request for the wall. >> i do think this is a historic opportunity to advance conservative agenda that we've been trying to do for the last 25 years, to structurally change the way we do immigration and make it more merit based. >> steve bannon jumping to the president's defense this morning. >> it is zero tolerance. i don't think you have to justify it. we have a crisis on the southern border. >> other administration insiders insist by enforcing the separation policy, the president's playing a game, he hopes to ultimately force the democrats hand and crease chances of reaching a broader compromise on immigration that will curb illegal border
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crossings, something he firmly believes is in the best security interest of the nation. jon? >> gillian turner, thank you. we are getting new reaction to the doj watchdog's bombshell report on the fbi's handling of the hilary clinton e-mail inigation, as i general michael hor ritz prepares to -- horowitz prepares to testify before lawmakers on capitol hill this week. his report uncovering more text messages between fbi officials peter strzok and lisa page. here's congressman adam schiff the ranking democrat on the house intelligence committee. >> these text messages are very troubling. the fact that they were on work e-mail, the fact that they were commingled with e-mails discussing business, all that's problematic. again, you know, the ig concluded that none of this affected decision making, but nonetheless, that was completely inappropriate. >> ellison barber is live now from washington with more. ellison, the ig testified this week. what do we expect to hear? >> the report is over 500 pages
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long. there are many options when it comes to questions and republican congressman says at this point he already knows he's going to have quite a few of them. >> the hilary clinton failure to prosecute was predicated upon two things, number one, that her e-mails were not exposed to foreign actors. there's some evidence that that's not true. evidence of intent.ere was no well, of course there's no evidence of intent. you didn't bother to ask her. you went into the interview knowing that she was not going to be charged. so i think some members will ask about that. a lot of members are going to ask about the bias. >> the inspector general says former fbi director comey failed to follow established protocols and was insubordinate but they say the investigation was not motivated by political bias. the two fbi officials exchanged thousands of messages, many antitrump on the third page of the ig report summary it says quote we were concerned about
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text messages exchanged between strzok and page that potentially indicated or created the appearance that investigative decisions were impacted by bias or improper consideration. ultimately the inspector general says the messages cast a cloud over the fbi's handling of the investigation but they quote did not find evidence to connect the political views expressed in these messages to the specific investigative decisions that we reviewed and to quote these judgment calls were not unreasonable. the top democrat on the house inteencemittee says the text messages were troubling but it is not the only thing troubling in the ig report. >> the report spells out that loretta lynch and james comey talked about an anticlinton bias in the new york office which is of equal concern to democrats. >> jon? >> what about peter strzok? are lawmakers going to hear from him, ellison? >> well, the chairman of the house judiciary committee says he wants to hear from strzok. he said in an interview today
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that it is possible they would issue a subpoena early this week, if strzok didn't voluntarily agree to come in within the next couple of days, but right now it seems like that may not be necessary. according to a report in the washington post, strzok's attorney sent a letter to the chairman saying a subpoena would be unnecessary and that internal agent strzok would voluntarily appear before the house judiciary committee and quote any other congressional committee that invites him. strzok's attorney confirmed to those statements to fox news this evening. strzok worked on the russia probe, but special counsel robert mueller removed him after learning about those anti-trump messages. jon? >> a lot of questions for that fbi agent. ellison barber, thank you. >> you bet. a holiday cease-fire in afghanistan taking a deadly turn over the weekend. two separate suicide bombings over two days in the eastern city of jalalabad. now isis is claiming responsibility for one of the attacks. conner powell joins us from our middle east bureau. >> afghan president announced that the historic cease-fire
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would be extended, past the celebrations which end on sunday. but the taliban rejected his offer, saying they will return to the battlefield on monday. now despite this temporary truce between the taliban and afghan security forces, isis militants showed no mercy this weekend, launching a series of attacks. isis was not part of the cease-fire and views both the taliban and the afghan government as enemies. on saturday, isis attacked a gathering ofaliban fighters who were publicly celebrating the three-day truce, killing at least 36 people. and today they struck once more with a bomb again targeting taliban fighters near the city of jalalabad, killing 19. despite these attacks, u.s. and afghan officials are hailing the cease-fire as an important steppingstone towards peace talks between the taliban and the afghan government. the two sides are long been talking, but now appear to have built a little trust that's long
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been missing in efforts to end the 16-year-long war. there's also hope that after this weekend, the taliban will come to see isis as its main threat and will see working with the afghan government as a potential partner to defeat isis. jon? >> conner powell, thank you. right now a drug so powerful just a speck of it can kill you. and one state leads the nation in overdoses from the deadly concoction. we will take you there to see how one community is trying to cope. plus, lawmakers select another location in texas after the administration zero-tolerance policy at the border results in even more children now in need of care. one senator accuses the president of using those kids as a negotiating tool. >> it's not the law. it's the president's policy. in fact, he has stated and it's been reported in the press that he's using it as a negotiation tool. he's using it to intimidate families so they don't come across the border.
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jon: now we take a look at one of the hardest-hit areas of the opioid crisis, new hampshire. the granite state leads the nation in overdose deaths from fentanyl, the synthetic opioid
quote
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nearly 50 times more powerful than heroin. authorities say just a speck of it can kill you. fox's rick leventhal reports on tragedy of one middle class american family and a community's fight to save lives. >> professionals at that time after experiencing overdose said she's not a danger to anyone else and she's not a danger to herself. >> -- not true >> new hampshire has been hit hard by the opioid crisis. >> everybody has been touched by this. and it's not just the hypothetical person who may be living on the street or under the bridge. this is affecting all people all walks of life. >> dr. william goodman is medical director at catholic medical center in manchester new hampshire. >> we know people using street drugs, illicit opioids, four out of five starting with prescription pills, either they had them prescribed directly or they're using diverted pills.
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and often what leads them to go from pills to injection of fentanyl or heroin is that it's easier to get. you don't need a prescription. it's often much less expensive. >> in the 1990s, opioids emerged as the new painkiller, one that promised few side effects, prescriptions increased, and so did abuse, by patients and sometimes by their family members. >> i had vicodin and a lot of it, and i was in tremendous pain and could hardly walk. >> arthritis a good part of her life and also had two knee replacements. >> some of it would go missing. i would always ask jackie, she would say no. >> jim and ann marie soon realized their daughter jacqueline was taking their drugs. >> i stopped her from leaving the house with a bottle of it, a big bottle of it. and she said you're choking me
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and i guess i was but i couldn't let her take it. >> she would take some of her jewelry, earrings are easier to take, go to the pawnshop and make a few dollars. >> they say they did everything they could to help their daughter, but the pull of her addiction was too strong. by the time she was 23, jackie was using heroin laced with fentanyl. and one october day in 2014, jim received a phone call. >> my son-in-law called me. and he said jim, has anyone reached out to you about jackie? and i said no. why, what's up? and they said that they were getting -- over the internet they were getting condolences on jackie. they knew before we did. >> every morning for at least a year, you would wake up and
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you'd say jackie's dead. that would be the first thought of my day. and it would be the last thought before i'd go to bed. >> 4, 6 milligrams, it depends on how much they took, how strong the drug was. >> to see what's happening in this community because of this drug epidemic is really a tragedy. >> manchester fire chief confronts death almost daily. it is part of the profession, but the volume of deaths due to drugs leaves him struggling for words. >> i don't know how to describe the deaths we're seeing as a community here. we don't have a heroin problem in new hampshire. we have a fentanyl problem. >> new hampshire leads the nation in fatalities from fentanyl, a synthetic opioid that's nearly 50 times more powerful than ro >> what we're dealing with is something that i never thought i would see in the fire service, but we're here and we're doing our best to combat it. >> the family are in the fight as well, their daughter jackie may be gone, but they believe
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her legacy can save lives. >> how are we going to stop this? you have start by talking about it. you have to let people know what's going on. you have to let people know that it is middle class america that's part of this problem. jon: rick leventhal reporting there f thank you. the wages of tipped workers in washington, d.c. are in the hands of voters on tuesday. a ballot measured called initiative 77 aims to get rid of the current minimum wage for tipped workers which is a little more than $3 an hour. that wage would gradually increase to the same rate as nontipped employees, but some of washington's waiters and bartenders say the raise offered by initiative 77 would actually reduce their earnings. many workers rely on the patrons' generosity to boost eirtake-home pay. local reaction is mixed. >> i like to support anybody that's trying to get a fair wage for what they are doing. unfortunately, i think one of the things we're talking about
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as we were having dinner is that unless there's some type of tiered system, a lot of people don't understand what it is going to mean in terms of tipping and things like that. and so it's going to have a net negative effect for people that are servers. >> actually think this is the kind of question that some of our friends have followed up a littleit more closely. so i will probably get some of their opinions on facebook. >> tipped employees can learn for more than $15 an hour in total pay are behind the force of tipped wage. one of the biggest ports on the east coast getting a major overhaul. how tens of thousands of businesses stand to benefit from the expansion. plus, the immigration battle heating up on capitol hill over the trump administration's zero-tolerance policy as the president prepares to meet with house republicans about two immigration bills. and be sure to tune in
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tonight to "life, liberty and levin", 10:00 p.m. eastern. here's a preview. >> does it seem a little quiet out there? well, it is. whatever happened to al qaeda, isis, the muslim brotherhood, and the rest of them, nothing. they're still poised to attack us. join us on the next "life, liberty and levin". and now for the rings. (♪) i'm a four-year-old ring bearer with a bad habit of swallowing stuff. still won't eat my broccoli, though. and if you don't have the right overage, you could be paying for that pricey love band yourself. so get an allstate agent, and be better protected from mayhem. like me. can a ring bearer get a snack around here?
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jon: i'm jon scott and this is the fox report. if you are just joining us, president trump set to meet with republican law makers on capitol hill this week to discuss two immigration bills. and house homeland security chairman michael mccall saying they both have the president's support. >> the president is fully committed to bot these bills. he's put the full weight of his office behind it. you know, the bill, they both i would say provide the four pillars that i discuss with the president at that sort of famous
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roundtable discussion. most importantly from my perspective, it's gotten border security in there. it's got funding for the wall the president really the tecology boots on the ground. jon: but the immigration debate is heating up as many democrats take aim at the trump administration's decision to separate children from their families at the border. here's democratic senator jack reed. >> it is not the law. it is the president's policy. in fact he has stated it's been reported in the press that he's using it as a negotiation tool. he is using it to intimidate families so they don't come across the border. he is using it as a political ploy. it is not the law. to say it is the law is misrepresenting the facts. jon: let's bring in congressional reporter for usa today, eliza collins. this is a confusing story. you hear points from all sides. is senator reed right? i was under the impression it is the law. it just depends on how it is enforced.
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>> well, the administration started this zero-tolerance policy. that is a decision that they made previous administrations have not done that. that basically says anybody who is coming across the border will be apprehended. where the confusion lies is that there's a decade's old court ruling, so it is not a law, that basically said that children cannot be in tough conditions. they basically cannot be in detention for long periods of time. so with the zero-tolerance policy saying everyone has to be apprehended and these families, and these kids cannot stay in detention for very long, families are now getting separated. jon: the optics are everything. republicans can't be happy with how the optics look for them right now. >> absolutely they are not happy. we saw paul ryan last week saying i don't agree with this. we have seen republicans kind of all across the spectrum say this needs to be fixed. but there's not very much they can do unless they team up with
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democrats on legal -- on legislation basically that would make it law to stop this. there are democrats that have a bill that would halt this, but right now that is not a bipartisan bill. they are all just kind of waiting. jon: but democrats -- well generally seem to be running to the border for photo opportunities to decry what's going on there. >> democrats are absolutely jumping on this. we saw obviously today's father's day. it is father's day weekend. optics, that makes it a little bit worse even. democrats are at the border. there's a detention center in new jersey there are some democrats at. they are there. they are exactly doing that. they are pointing this out. they are calling out republicans for not standing up to the president on this. president trump keeps saying it is the democrats fault but it doesn't exactly ring true because it is the policy and democrats know that. >> in the past if a family arrived athe border, they would essentially if they made it across in the united states,
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they would essentially all them to say right as a family unit and say come back and appear in front of an immigration judge at some point down the road, many times they didn't do that. >> exactly. there was -- i mean, i'm not super familiar with every case obviously, but there was a lot more freedom for people that came in as families, and so -- jon: bringing your kids in used to be sort of an inducement. there was almost a reward for it. >> well, that's what what the administration is arguing. they are saying that everyone needs to be treated fairly. people were taking advantage of the system. we've seen attorney general jeff sessions say if you don't think this is fair, you don't want to be separated from your kids, don't cross the border illegally. jon: the democrats don't seem to be inclined to help out the republicans right now on this particular issue. >> well, it's sort of -- that's where we get back to the complex nature of immigration legislation, talking solely about the house, we saw
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congressman mccaul talking about it. there's the dreamers, daca, congress has been trying to find a solution. right now there are two republican bills trying to address that issue while also funding the president's border wall. democrats do not agree with either bill. so those will have to be passed republican only in the house which the senate they do need democrats, so unclear how those bills will go there. so it's really just -- it is a mess. jon: yeah, but after some confusion earlier in the week, the president has said that he does support either one of those republican bills, whichever one does make it through the house, but as you point out, getting it through the senate is whole other thing. >> exactly. that helps the mccaul bill that the chairman was talking about earlier. it's the more conservative bill.
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it doesn't have enough support within the republican caucus. they have not voted on it because it did not have support. it will be voted on next week but it is not expected to pass. the other bill is sort of the compromise republican bill. it is the result of moderates and conservatives having negotiations, but that bill is not even clear if it is going to pass even with the president's support because a lot of conservative groups feel that it goes too far on the legal protections. it could be up to 1.8 million dreamers which they feel is too many. jon: you are going to be working overtime covering congress for usa today. eliza collins, thank you. >> thanks. jon: a major expansion of one of the biggest ports on the east coast is on time and on budget. the overhaul of the port of virginia basically widening and deepening the channel is key to increasing business and allowing larger modern day ships to safely dock there. fox news correspondent douglas kennedy gives us a closer look. >> deepening and widening the
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port is vital not only for commerce but also port safety. >> rick wester is the captain of the port of virginia, responsible for the safety of cargo ships in and out of norfolk. it's a job that's been made more difficult by bigger and bigger boats. so today's cargo ships are double and triple the size of the biggest ships you had ten years ago. and your channel is just too narrow for some of them. >> yeah, the ships are getting bigger and bigger. and so the biggest one is about three or four times a week whenever they enter or leave port, i have to impose one way traffic because it's just too narrow for them to meet any other ships. >> and the channel here is also only 50 feet deep which means many of these larger ships would run aground if they came in fully loaded. so the big ships here draw about 55 feet. >> right, these ships draw 55 feet, we don't allow them to come to port drawing that much so they would run aground. they can only partially load
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both coming in and leaving. they're not fully using their capacity. >> over 114,000 u.s. businesses rely on goods from the port of virginia. but the channel has limited its ability to expand. one of the reasons why dredging and widening the waterway recently caught the attention of president trump. >> that could be one of the best in the world if they invested not that much money relatively speaking. >> virginia has already secured 695 million in private and state investment, and they are asking for 300 million more from the feds. you have almost 2 million containers coming through here every year, and you're trying to add a million more. >> yes, with almost 8% growth last year, we've got a plan for the future. we're on our way to being the second biggest port on the east coast. >> kathy vick is the spokesperson for the port and she says the new channel will allow capacity for a new terminal, which could conveniently be built from the dredge material. >> it's about global trade for
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america with 37% of our cargo going into the midwest on rail, it is really about reducing prices for consumers. >> she also says the federal and local investment will create more than 54,000 jobs. both in virginia and across the country. on the james river, douglas kennedy, fox news. >> now to the new book three days in moscow, our bret baier takes a look at the role played by former president ronald reagan in bringing the cold war to its end and the subsequent collapse of the soviet union. bret zooms in on that fourth and final summit in moscow between reagan and gorbachev. here's part of a one-hour special highlighting those historic three days. >> you once called him a principaled pragmatist whose strongest suit you said was knowing what he believed and why he believed it. >> he had a system of going about things, number one, be
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realistic. number two, be strong. not just military strength, economic strength, but then more than that, have strength of purpose. number three, figure out what it is that you want. once you've got all that straight, sit down and negotiate. then you have a hand to play. jon: three days in miss cow, a -- in moscow, a fascinating look, that airs tonight at 8:00 and 11:00 eastern here on fox news. police are revealing what led to a shooting. we are at the scene with the latest. plus a community in mourning. as final arrangements are made for two sheriff's deputies shot and killed in the line of duty. !
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jon: funeral arrangements announced for two kansas city deputies killed in a shooting on friday. deputies theresa king and patrick rohrer will be remembered in a joint funeral service set for thursday. king and rohrer were killed in a shooting while transporting a prisoner from a court hearing back to jail. investigators say another inmate might have gotten ahold of one of the deputy's guns and began shooting but the incident is still under investigation. new jersey police now saying a quote neighborhood beef is what led to a deadly shooting at an all night arts festival in trenton. gunfire sending people scrambling for safety. at least 22 people were hurt including a 13-year-old boy. bryan llenas is in trenton with the latest. what do we know, bryan, about how this started? >> good evening, jon. well, look, prosecutors say that this art all night festival was not the target of an attack. rather innocent festival goers were caught in the cross fire in
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a gang dispute. at about 2:50 a.m., there was shots rang out at this art festival. 22 people were injured in the chaos. 17 were shot including a 13-year-old boy whose condition has been upgraded from critical to stable. one 33-year-old male suspect who was released on homicide charges in february was shot dead by police. two other suspects were wounded and are at the hospital. police say the festival turned once fights began inside and out of the venue. >> prior to the shooting, members of the trenton police department informed the event organizers that the event needed to be shut down. there was a report that the mood inside the venue had been changing. >> and police say that the event organizers were in the process of shutting the event down, but it was too late. witnesses described the panic as the gunfire began. >> people just start running around like cray sazy -- crazy
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pushing and shoving and then i heard the gunshots. it was such a way to bring everybody together and it is ruined. >> and look, multiple firearms jon were found here including an illegal high capacity magazine. police also say that some of those injured were shot in the cross fire by police officers, off-duty police officers who were shooting back at these gang members >> so if it didn't have anything to do with the actual festival, what are the event organizers saying about it? >> well, john, look, they are saying that they are deeply shocked and saddened by the shooting. they also say though that this art all night festival was a celebration for this community, one of music and art and that they are again shocked by this, but they also say that they have the resolve now to make sure this event continues next year, that this is a bright spot for this community here in trenton. we did speak though to one
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neighbor who said she had been complaining to mayor of trenton for years that this art festival had turd into more of a drunk event than anything. this is going to be a hot topic in this community at least until this event perhaps happens against next year. jon? jon: bryan, thank you. terrifying moments at a tourist hub in northwest china. a group of people riding in an elevator when the ceiling suddenly collapses on them. at least nine people are hurt. first responders had to rescue several of them trap you should the debris. no word on what caused it. and a warning to beachgoers this summer. be on the lookout for jellyfish in the water. more than a thousand people have reported being stung on a florida beach just this week. scientists say the number of jellyfish is increasing in different parts of the world, but it is not clear yet if it is a global event. if you do get stung, experts recommend dousing the area with vinegar to neutralize the
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tentacles before trying to pull them out. well, the garden state seeing plenty of green this weekend as the worup gives legal sports betting a big jump-start. plus, the last day of the u.s. open proving to be quite the wild ride. big moments from today's final round next. it's easy to think that all money managers are pretty much the same. but while some push high commission investment products, fisher investments avoids them. some advisers have hidden and layered fees. fisher investments never does. and while some advisers are happy to earn commissions from you whether you do well or not, fisher investments fees are structured so we do better when you do better. maybe that's why most of our clients come from other money managers. fisher investments. clearly better money management.
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jon: it's been just over a month since the supreme court cleared the way for states to legalize sports betting. and in new jersey, the world cup is proving to be a big money draw for both gamblers and the garden state alike. a fox affiliate reporter reports. >> both exciten and stress come annually with the world cup, but this year with these soccer fans, there's money on the line. does it make you more nervous now that you have money on the line? >> of course. yeah, they better win so i can make some money. >> this is the first place you can legally bet on s here in new jersey. and while you can pretty much bet on any sport, the average person here today says it's all about the world cup. >> germany, brazil, spain. >> it's been a little over a month since the supreme court gave the power to legalize sports betting to the states.
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new jersey's governor phil murphy was swift to get things up and running. he signed the bill into law on monday. it was open by thursday. >> people are driving in from other states. they are comingown early. depending on when a game starts you get a big influx when the games start because they want to bet. >> the company that runs it says saturday's crowd is one of the largest he's ever seen. >> keeps bringing people back. you see people running from here to the horse racing >> all that money he says will help boost the economy. >> when you have people coming for sports betting, it helps every facet in the economy in the area. people eat in your restaurants and stay in your hotels. >> while it is all in good fun, it is important to remember to always gamble responsibly. >> it is great for the state. great for the community. gives people a safe place to come and enjoy and watch a couple sports. >> in oceanport, new jersey.
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jon: the u.s. open wrapping up in historic fashion as the first back-to-back winner in three decades. jared max is in south hampton new york for us. jared, some golf history made today, huh >> yeah, how about that, jon, first back-to-back win since 88 and 89. it came down to the end. brooks who won the title last year, the u.s. open champion with a score over par. final leader board, bs today finishing at 1 over par, and that was good enough to win this tournament. it's the first time since 2013 when justin rose won the open that the winning store was over par. fleetwood shot a 63, tied the best score ever at u.s. open. finished at 2 over. dustin johnson shot a 70, blew a four shot lead he had today. patrick reed was 4 over par. tony finau was plus 5. adds we look at the final
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leader -- as we look at the final leader board. curtis strange, who was with us on fox news just a couple of days ago, talking with bill hemmer and now curtis strange comes up once again because we go back to the last time we had a back-to-back winner. brooks koepka, our u.s. open champ for 2018. jon? jon: the difference in scores from yesterday to today, jared, truly remarkable. what happened? >> if i could quote the old comedian george carlin there seemed to be less wind out there today because the scores were so much different. take a look at some of these differences between saturday and sunday. jordan spieth was 19 shots better today. patrick rogers made up 16. tommy fleetwood with 15 shots better. phil mickelson, 12 shots better today. no wind. also they watered down the greens overnight, jon. they also fixed some pin placements. can you imagine at the nba finals, game one, the basket was 11 feet. game two, it moved to 10 1/2.
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that's almost what happened with the pin placements and why the scores were s better today. jon: what else are they going to remember about this u.s. open? >> phil mickelson yesterday, that very odd move on his 48th birthday, the ball was sailing off the green. he said he didn't want to have to keep hitting it back, and he went and he hit it again. a lot of controversy. some folks thought he should have been disqualified. the usga said here the rule and this overrides the other rule so he shouldn't have been disqualified. they let him play. look what he did today. i don't know what that does for mickelson's legacy. i wonder. also for the usga because we had an inconsistent week here on the course with the scoring. >> yeah. all of us know how he felt at that moment. >> yeah. we've all been there. jon: yes, we have. jared max, thank you. some small animals getting in on the world cup excitement. how they are helping to predict the outcomes of the matchups. to your bumper, cause....
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let's meet, only at a sleep number store. i'm still giving it my best even though i live with a higher risk of stroke due to afib not caused by a heart valve problem. so if there's a better treatment than warfarin, i'm up for that. eliquis. eliquis is pro to reduce stroke risk better than warfarin. plus has significantly less major bleeding than warfarin. eliquis is fda-approved and has both. so what's next? seeing these guys. don't stop taking eliquis unless your doctor tells you to, as stopping increases your risk of having a stroke. eliquis can cause serious and in rare cases fatal bleeding. don't take eliquis if you have an artificial heart valve or abnormal bleeding. while taking eliquis, you may bruise more easily and it may take longer than usual for any bleeding to stop. seek immediate medical care for sudden signs of bleeding, like unusual bruising. eliquis may increase your bleeding risk if you take certain medicines. tell your doctor about all planned medical or dental procedures. eliquis, the number one cardiologist-prescribed blood thinner.
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ask your doctor if eliquis is what's next for you.
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jon: a big matchup tomorrow for england in the world cup. as they are set to take on tunisia and some british meerkats seem to think england will take victory. they are forecasting 2 nothing victory which is the score the last time the two teams met back in 98. tomorrow night's game starts at 7:00 p.m. eastern on fox.
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that's how fox reports this father's day, sunday, june 17th, 2018. i'm jon scott. thanks for joining us tonight. "fox news sunday" starts next. >> i think comey was the ringleader of this whole den of thieves. they were plotting against my election. >>reporter: we will discuss the fallout of what it means for the mueller's special counsel investigation with congressman trey gowdy. chair of the house oversight committee. it's a "fox news sunday" exclusive. then president trump with words of praise for kim jong-un after the singapore summit. >> he speaks and his people sit up at attention, i want my people to

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