tv FOX Friends FOX News April 11, 2019 3:00am-6:00am PDT
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represent the local museum of art. they ended up doing it anyway. he got his way. jillian: i know my time is up but hear me out. >> i'm so good looking, listen to me talk. jillian: we got to go. steve: good morning, welcome to "fox & friends." we open with a fox news alert. brian: stunner. julian assange is under arrest. ainsley: todd piro live in the newsroom with details. we just got word of this, todd, not too long ago a few minutes ago. rob: within the last 15 or 20 minutes or so. the wikileaks founder arrested at the ecuadorian embassy in london. he had been staying there since 2012 after seeking asylum to escape extradition to sweden where he was wanted on sexual misconduct claims. we are now learning ecuador withdrew his asylum for violating their arrangement but it was unclear exactly how. wikileaks tweeting out, quote: urgent, ecuador has illegally terminated
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assange's political asylum in violation of international law. he was arrested by the british police inside the ecuadorian embassy minutes ago and julian assange did not walk out of the embassy. the ecuadorian ambassador invited him into the embassy and he was immediately arrested. the warrant plifs served on assange dates back to 2012 we do not know what the warrant is for. you will recall over the last few weeks we had heard speculation that this could be possibly happening. that day is here. keep in mind, assange has been in that ambassador for seven years. he is now 47 years old. was granted asylum back in 2012. a lot to follow here on the story. we will keep you post you had. back to you. steve: it is breaking news. todd, thank you very much. i think it's significant though the fact in todd's reporting he talked about how julian assange did not walk out and say okay take me away. it was the ambassador to he ecuador who invited the police. in the writing has been on
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the wall for this guy for a number of months. it was just about a month ago in martha they cut off his internet inside the embassy where he has been since 2012. they said you know what? no more visitors, sorry. ainsley: they didn't open the door and say you are out into the streets on your own. they came inside the embassy see a picture right thereof the police vehicle right outside of the embassy they walked in and arrested him. brian: he has done devastating damage during the state department hillary clinton's reign when he released all of that top secret information that was hacked out. and he has never have to face any jury about that. and he has done a lot of damage along the way. yet, he sat there in that embassy and used his stay by just staying there infin my tum. at one point something had to give. he could end up right on our shores. steve: keep in mind he took refuge there back in 2012 there was a sex assault
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allegation from the country of sweden. and he made the case that if he was sent to sweden he could be arrested by the united states for those diplomatic cables that were published on wikileaks and, of course, so many other things as well. ultimately, the arrest warrant was from 2012 failing to surrender to police essentially. we understand he has been taken to the central london police station and will appear at westminster magistrate's court as soon as possible. jillian: keep in mind ecuador was protecting him he wasn't able to see his family and kids years. brian: pam anderson they were dating for a while which was interesting. that was through the "people" magazine spy scandals. three minutes after the hour. for the last two days a lot of drama from 9:30 in the morning until about 12:00 or 1:00 in the afternoon in washington because the attorney general of the united states showed up to talk about budgets. dollars and cents when it came to the department of justice. that wasn't the exciting part. the more interesting part
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was the mueller report. what went into his four pages and what are we about to see? steve: he was queried by senator jeanine shaheen about his plan to review the department of justice's actions investigating the president. and then that is the passage where he inserted essentially a bomb that blew up washington, d.c. he said spying did occur on the trump campaign and the question is whether or not it was legal. ism. >> spying on a political campaign is a big deal. >> sour not suggesting though that spying occurred? >> i think there -- i think spy diagnose occur. the question whether it was predicated, adequately predicated and i'm not suggesting it wasn't adequately predicated but i need to explore that i think it's my obligation. congress is usually very concerned about intelligence agencies and law enforcement agencies staying in their
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proper lane. and i want to make sure that happened. steve: so there you go. he is not saying that anything illegal happened. he just wants to look into it. one of the senators said so you put together a team. he says i haven't put together a team. i have people looking at what happened. ainsley: and that's good. steve: it is. ainsley: he is concerned about that that that happened. they are going to look into it, get to the bottom of it. it's the word spying that is so shocking. we knew carter page was being surveyed based on the dossier. steve: tweeted out i was wiretapped in trump tower. i'm sure after he heard the attorney general say yeah, there was spying, told you. hello. brian: when you think about -- when you think about mike flynn, how sally yates knew to warn the administration what mike flynn would have been up. to say when you find out what was going on carter page and papadopoulos why is this one word and three
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letters so new to everybody? why is it so foreign? why do people think it's such a third rail? because you weren't paying attention. you only were watching the mueller report as you thought that donald trump perhaps was guilty. you weren't looking at what led to the mueller report. i think we have done a good job on this couch and on this channel of looking at both sides. mr. mueller is looking at the trump tower meeting. mueller wants to know what happened with me relationships with paul manafort. okay. at the same time we would like to know what launched this investigation? we saw both sides u most of us here were not shocked. democrats could not believe what they were hearing. >> the chief law enforcement officer of our country is going off the ralsz. he is attorney general of the united states of america, not the attorney general of donald trump. >> the attorney general of the united states of america believes he needs to protect the president of the united
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states. and i think that's unfortunate. >> throughout this bombshell and at the same time refused to present any evidence of it. that is, in my view, reckless and clearly political. >> this is an attempt to take the attention off that very serious -- these very serious crimes and divert people's attention to absolute conspiratorial nonsense. steve: look, this is what we have believed was going on at the department of justice with the inspector general looking into see if any rules were broken or any corners were cut. mark meadows who has raised questions about the department of justice investigating mr. trump said yesterday, that barr's willingness to step in is massive. trey gowdy had this to say about what we saw yesterday u. >> not a single solitary senate democrat had a problem with bill barr and it's not just barr who is looking into this activity.
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it's also michael horowitz who is as straight an arrow as you will find. it's john huber, former u.s. attorney, lindsey graham, i assure you, is going to look. there is nothing wrong with asking. we ge give these incredible powers to law enforcement. what's wrong with asking what is the factual predicate for investigating a presidential campaign. what surveillance techniques did you use? that's before you ever get to the fisa process. of course you want to know whether or not can you spy on an american or do surveillance on an american absent sufficient factual predicate. >> if a candidate is being spied on shouldn't everyone be concerned about that to find out why that were happening? steve: use the mechanisms of the federal government to spy on a political opponent. unbelievable. ainsley: if the roles were reversed. if we found out that hillary clinton's campaign was being spied on, don't you think everyone would be upset about that? it's such double standard. what's wrong with just asking how this happened, if there is spying, we want to know more information about
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it, period? brian: we knew what took place and to answer the senator from maryland's question why did you present that without any evidence, he said over and over again i'm not going to did into details of the mueller report until we put it out and i'm coming back here may 1st and may 2nd so i will answer specifically then. disingenuous word. other word predicated. we know they were surveying the trump campaign. we know they were looking into it. we know all the people that were there because they have been in trouble -- they have been front and center. in the papadopoulos case he actually went to jail. how did they find out about that? they ended up talking to an ambassador. they ended up listening in. here is what they are saying. they are saying predicated we don't know if it was a good reason for doing that. steve: they wanted to make sure all the regulations were followed. if they were, nobody is in trouble. if they weren't, somebody is going to get in trouble. meanwhile, let's talk about this yesterday down in san pedro, honduras a new caravan formed about 1,000 people gathered outside of a
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bus terminal heading north. most of them as family groups. the president, of course, famously in the last week or so, did and there is the bus depot right there. did suspend payments to honduras and guatemala and el salvador those people want to come to the united states for a better life. >> they are saying hey, guatemala, we are coming to your border. we are bringing 1100 migrants. heading there, mostly on two buses at two different crossing points. brian: another caravan coming should thought be a surprise we were told two days ago that we have a caravan basically coming up once every seven days. ainsley: a full caravan every week. one border crossing. steve: unbelievable. brian: one thing being reported probably if anything get the democrats to come to the table and try to solve this problem is the clog at our nation's ports. we know we do $1.4 billion worth of commerce back and forth. now because all our resources are spread out and fanned off across 2,000 miles to stop the 100,000 plus coming now per
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month, they are slowing down things at the gate. costing automakers, costing commerce billions of dollars. and the automakers are going to feel the pinch at the first. automakers, michigan. exactly the wait times costing money. money affects business. business affects voters. voters will affect candidates. if a candidate is going to come to the table, it's not to build donald trump's wall. it will be to fix the border that's hurting our economy. hopefully this will bring democrats. in. ainsley: president was in san antonio, texas. he said he might have to call up more military. we will get reaction from jay johnson the former dhs secretary under president obama coming up on the show. steve: busy day and jillian joins us with more. jillian: following a number of stories including. this the navy is dropping charges against out officer to help during a deadly collision at sea. brice benson will not face criminal negligence in his role in the uss fitzgerald crash in 2017.
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seven sailors were killed when the destroyer hit a commercial ship off the coast of japan. charges also being dropped against a crew member. they will both be reprimanded. the son of a sheriff's deputy is arrested in connection with to a string of church fires. holden matthews being held on suspicion of arson after three historically black churches were destroyed over 10 days in louisiana. the naacp believes the fires were racially motivated and wants the incidents labeled as domestic terrorism. the family of the marine fdny firefighter killed by roadside bombs in afghanistan will have their mortgage paid off by the steven tunnel to tower. >> we owe it to these families left behind that we are going to make a promise that we are going to take care of them. jillian: the foundation was founded in memory of a fireman who died on 9/11. staff sergeant chris slutman
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and his wife participated in a five k a few years ago. we have a link to help his family on our website, "fox & friends." friends.." ainsley: that organization is incredible. already paid off the mortgage. that family is grieving so much but so helpful. steve: later on in the program today talk to two men who were firefighters with that man. they will tell us all about him. brian: meanwhile 13 minutes after the hour. steve: bernie sanders has unveiled his latest medicare for all plan. griff jenkins was there for the big announcement with bernie and griff joins us live from d.c. ♪ hold tight ♪ hold tight ♪ any way you want it ♪ that's ther enter deep into the enamel surface.
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to take care of yourself. but nature's bounty has innovative ways to help you maintain balance and help keep you active and well-rested. because hey, tomorrow's coming up fast. nature's bounty. because you're better off healthy. ♪ nature's bounty. cancer, epilepsy, mental health, hiv. patients with serious diseases are being targeted for cuts to their medicare drug coverage. new government restrictions would allow insurance companies to come between doctor and patient.
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and deny access to individualized therapies millions depend on. call the white house today. help stop cuts to part d drug coverage that put medicare patients at risk. brian: 17 minutes after the hour. bernie sanders unveils his medicare for all plan that would usher in an expensive government-run single pair system that many seem to want. ainsley: it doesn't seem to faze his supporters. steve: griff jenkins from washington where he is getting support from fellow 2020 democrats except amy klobuchar. hello, griff. >> good morning. government-run healthcare is so popular among democrats even one of sanders' 2020 opponents was willing to stand next to him as relaunched the centerpiece of his progressive platform. >> we are going to end the
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international embarrassment of the united states of america, our great country being the only major nation on earth not to guarantee healthcare to all as a right bill has 14 co-sponsors. government-run, single pair one size fits all no deductibles. kicking 100 million off private insurance plans, cost a whopping $22 trillion. we talked to supporter about it. >> the price tag is by estimate 32 trillion, how do they pay for it? how do we pay for this? >> so what medicare for all is going to be saving so much money in terms of providing benefits for better care, cheaper medication save so much money in terms of reducing the cost of overhead and administrative burden of the current system. griff: some americans are
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fearful this is socialism, this is healthcare like some socialist countries have. what do you say? >> i say socialism in this form is absolutely necessary for our country to be able to succeed. >> everybody that i talk, to whether they be my patients, my family would like to have the right to healthcare. >> it's the social structure the round that are making them so incredibly sick and harder to control their medical conditions. so it's really what i want to do because i think it's best for patients. griff: house speaker nancy pelosi not on board and neither is senate majority leader mitch mcconnell. >> it ought to be called medicare for none. 180 million americans would lose the private health insurance. i want to turn americif you wana into a socialist country in the first step. griff: he is willing to inrevoke to pay for medicare for all. here it comes ready for or not. steve: griff, they say it could increase government spending $23 trillion over 10 years that would be a big
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bill. thank you, sir. ainsley: i think americans just want choice. some americans have private healthcare and happy with it. brian: use private healthcare if bernie gets a way for nose jobs, elective surgery. steve: that's all blue cross, blue shield would be doing. brian: i'm sure it will work. social media executives grilled on the hill pro-life voices. ainsley: one of the people who testified the director of the movie unplanned will join us next. your digestive system has billions of bacteria, but life can throw them off balance. re-align yourself, with align probiotic. and try align gummies, with prebiotics and probiotics to help support digestive health
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legislation makes no exception for rape or incest. this as arkansas' governor vows to sign anti-sanctuary city's bill. the state house putting the legislation on governor asa hutchison's desk. it will block funding to cities that don't allow local authorities to work with ice. right now there are no known sanctuary cities in the state of arkansas. down to you, steve. steve: thank you very much, ainsley. u.s. senators calling out social media giants for alleged censorship of conservative and pro-life messages at a free speech hearing yesterday in d.c. >> abortion is profoundly antiwoman and it's a quote from mother teresa. and this tweet was blocked. now, it is fairly remarkable that mother teresa is now deemed hate speech. >> how is the pro-life side ever guilty of something that equates to violence? it seems to me mathematically impossible to seem that there isn't some subjective judgment calling going on. steve: the twitter account for the pro-life movie
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unplanned was suspended on its opening weekend. one of the directors for the film testified at yesterday's hearing and asked why does this always seem to happen to conservatives? both of the directors and writers of unplanned chuck konzelman and terry soleman join us from d.c. >> good morning. steve: terry, let's start with you. what did they do to your unplanned twitter account. >> they closed us down on monday night. considering we had the account for nine months. it happens on opening night for a movie the most important night of the whole run. steve: right. >> impossible. steve: and i believe, we're looking at a clip right there. i believe twitter said something like yeah, you know, the reason we did that is because somebody who opened the account had done something wrong before so, we just shut it down. right? >> it was actually less than that. they have really given that was for mother error that they had which lasted for many hours later where all
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of our followers were being dropped. we have actually gotten no decent explanation for the original suspension other than it was accidental or mistake. steve: all right, chuck, you appeared as a witness yesterday. what was it you wanted the lawmakers to hear you say about how the social media giants treat people with a conservative point of view? >> well, we are completely blocked at every turn, i mean, our primary difficulty was with google who refused to take any of the advertising for our film. all of our banner ads up until our date of release were refused. and it was done because we were with basically -- they identified us with a conservative issue which is the pro-life side of the abortion issue. they said you are marketing is related to abortion. we said no it's not. it's a film. and they still refused us. steve: kerry, as you were sitting to the twitter representative defend the company and why they
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de-platformed it for people did he make a good case or was it kind of like that's all you have got? >> yeah. it was that's all you got. ted cruz and the other senators would ask him a question and it was the most evasive thing i have ever seen. it was very frustrating because they would say something like do you this? did you do that? and they would do everything but answer the question. it was a simple yes, no. steve: in that little sound bite we played at the beginning, twitter actually blocked a mother teresa quote regarding as hate speech and then at one point he said well, you know, it's back up on the website now. it's back online. chuck? >> well, you know, why should -- why is there this presumption and i had kind of this discussion or argument with the "new york times" reporter last week, they kind of make the case -- they try to make the case well, you eventually get taken care of. and our standpoint is if you are conservative why do you have to jump over hurdles to be heard? why are those presumptive
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obstacles put in your place to start off with? we shouldn't have to defend our right to speak? steve: but, at the same time, cary, have you democrats who say, you know, these conservatives screaming about bias on the social media site. that simply is not having happening. >> if i was a democrat i would say the same thing. because, basically, stifling us, i mean, this is a free speech issue. not only that, they are commerce. investors, people who want to make the movies. and our business is being impeded by these social media conglomerates. >> this was only one facet. we are a block from social media. a block from advertising. fox was the lone exception there along with cbn. many networks refused to take our advertising. >> our music. >> next step blocked by streaming giants. netflix has our no appetite for our film i believe we are the number one independent film that's 139 million subscribers who won't see us and we are expecting that amazon prime
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will do the same thing to us because they are funding a proabortion movie based on an abortion provider network in preroe v. wade, chicago. steve: i had not heard any of that. i'm so glad you were able to bring us your story and talk about your testimony yesterday. chuck and cary, thank you. >> thank you. steve: staggering numbers at our southern border. more than 100,000 apprehensions last month alone. national border patrol council president brandon judd says this crisis sun like any we have ever faced before. he joins us live next. our dad was in the hospital. because of smoking. but we still had to have a cigarette. had to. but then, we were like. what are we doing? the nicodermcq patch helps prevent your urge to smoke all day.
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♪ cal: we saved our money and now, we get to spend it - our way. valerie: but we worry if we have enough to last. ♪ cal: ellen, our certified financial planner™ professional, helps us manage our cash flow and plan for the unexpected. valerie: her experience and training gave us the courage to go for it. it's our "confident forever plan"... cal: ...and it's all possible with a cfp® professional. find your certified financial planner™ professional at letsmakeaplan.org. much media attention focused on caravans from central america. receiving caravan equivalent numbers every seven days. brian: for some reason that wasn't headlines to everybody. it was to us. one of the nation's top border patrol agents sounding the acon the crisis
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at the border. ainsley: show more than 103,000 migrants apprehended or deemed inadmissible last month alone. steve: border patrol also revealing the apprehensions included people from 50 different countries including china, egypt and romania. joining us now with his reaction is the president of the national border patrol council brandon judd who joins us today from our nation's capital. >> good morning. steve: the president said yesterday he might be calling up more troops. if he sent more troops down there, what are they going to do differently than the close to 6,000 we have got right now? >> what we are looking at is all of our resources being pulled from the field as the chief testified that we just don't have the resources in the field to deal with the numbers of people that are crossing the border. steve: manpower? >> yes, absolutely. and what we have to look at is the number of people that are actually getting away,
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evading apprehension. chief ortiz from the same sector said within this fiscal year alone, we have 25,000 people that were able to evade apprehension. those are people we do not know what their purpose for coming into the united states are. we don't know where they are from. that's a very dangerous situation and dynamic we are setting up. ainsley: the president said our military can't act like a military would act. if they got a little rough, everybody would go crazy. what did you think about that comment? do you find yourself changing how you do your job down there because you are worried about how the media will react? >> well, we are always worried about how the media is going to react. we get -- it's so frustrating and disappointing to see that border patrol agents are vilified for strictly enforcing the laws that congress put in place. we're trying to protect the american public. yet, they romanticize those people crossing the border illegally and vilify the
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good guys that are trying to do the job for the american public. brian: pretty amazing, too. big story today about how much this border battle is costing us economically. business leaders, bankers, local residents, mexico's foreign minister, all these people are weighing in on the delays at the border because assets are placed elsewhere. meanwhile cars can't get parts, people can't get food. farmers can't ship out. this is going to have a ripple effect. and maybe that will put politics aside and put money front and center forcing politicians to do something. am i fool liberally optimistic. >> no, you are not. that's exactly what the trump administration is doing. they are hitting the mexican economy in the pocketbook. brian: and ours. >> well, they are. but what that is going to do is force mexico to do their job and step up and start deporting people and enforcing their immigration laws, which then will alleviate the pressure on us. in the long run, this will
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pay dividends. steve: brandon, our last line of defense is the mexican government, the president in the last 10 days, started to exert maximum twitter pressure on mexico. and then in the middle of last week he said, you know, over the last four or five days they have really started coming around. what is mexico doing that you can tell us to help stem the tide of immigrants to this country? >> they are stopping people at their southern border. so, the border between guatemala and mexico, they are stopping people there. and when they are getting passed the border, they are taking those people into custody and deporting them. exactly what they should have been doing from the get-go. this is the pressure that the administration is putting on them. this is the outside of the box thinking. if congress is not going to step up and do their job, then the administration is going to look at the authorities that they have to do what they need to do to alleviate this pressure. brian: what about the changes at homeland as it relates to the border? are they for the better? do you think it was people
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and leadership problem? >> it's absolutely for the better. if you look at secretary nielsen, she is second to none in cyber security. that's where her expertise lies. unfortunately she did not have that experience in border security. so we elevated the commissioner of customs and bordeborder protection who had a career at cbp to face the problems that dhs is looking at in the face right now and that is border security. ainsley: thank you so much for being with us, brandon. >> thank you. steve: jillian joins us with some more news. jillian: good morning. let's talk about this. the commander of the navy seal accused of war crimes for killing an isis terrorist is defying the president. those words coming from eddie gallagher's lawyer saying his client is being treated poorly in hopes of moving him back to the brig. only source of food is convenience store and can't
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call his family without supervision. he was held in restrictive until the white house stepped in. made a plea on "fox & friends" last month. >> i'm in disbelief because it's been a seven month fight. it's been seven months that he has been tragically behind that bars in that terrible place and our family has just been fighting tooth and nail. jillian: gallagher's trial starts next month. a blind man helps take down an armed suspect. training as reserve officer kicked in when he noticed police cars outside a bank in texas. he sat on the suspect's back so the cops could get the situation under control. >> i really felt like it was a god thing. i felt like god said watch and so i stood there and was obedient. >> officers responding to a call about gunshots. the suspects are just 14 and 16 years old. a southwest airlines worker is going viral for helping a
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mom with a fussy baby. flight attendant jessica tending to the little girl named britain holding her and walking down the aisle of the plane. the toddler blowing kisses and waving to passengers. her mom says she was delighted that jessica took her little one out of her hands so she could rest. got to love that so cute. ainsley: that is so helpful. steve: just need a another set of hands. brian: flight attendants know. ainsley: i used to get on planes and i saw kids i hope they don't cry. now that i have one i am so much more understanding and i love all the babies on the plane. steve: hats off to jessica. ainsley: very sweet to do that. brian: hats off to janice dean she has the latest on a bomb? janice: we did think it had the potential to become a bomb cyclone it did not but it is a blizzard. thank you for coming to "fox & friends." what's your name. >> janice. janice: janice? hi? >> hi. >> why are you hear. >> my bucket list.
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janice: "fox & friends" on your bucket list. >> yes, it is. janice: love it welcome to new york. take a look at blizzard across portions of wisconsin. i have friends here from wisconsin. look at this. this is south dakota. so blizzard conditions meaning that winds of at least 35 miles per hour for duration of several hours. and it is happening, my friends from colorado all the way up towards minnesota including our friends in south dakota. man, sometimes it snows in april. and here it is. here is the radar. there are your blizzard warnings in effect for six states and we could see the potential for ice as well on top of that. power outages for thousands of people because of this storm system moving north and eastward. and there are your current wind gusts. so certainly that blizzard criteria is being met. we could see the potential for six to 12, even 20 inches of snow on top of what they have already seen. and then on the warm side of this storm, the potential for severe storms including large hail, damaging winds and isolated tornadoes. there is your forecast
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today. look at atlanta, georgia, 81 degrees. we love it all right, thank you, janice for coming. thank you my friends. wave to steve, ainsley and brian, everyone at home. janice: hello, we love our janices. fantastic. hugs, janice. steve: thank you very much. there you go. brian: coming up straight ahead. breaking news, moments ago we told you this is how we started the show. julian assange arrested in london. he was dragged out. so what happens next? judge napolitano is on the case and that's what he looks like. i knew about the tremors.
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but when i started seeing things, i didn't know what was happening... so i kept it in. he started believing things that weren't true. i knew something was wrong... but i didn't say a word. during the course of their disease around 50% of people with parkinson's may experience hallucinations or delusions. but now, doctors are prescribing nuplazid. the only fda approved medicine... proven to significantly reduce hallucinations and delusions related to parkinson's. don't take nuplazid if you are allergic to its ingredients. nuplazid can increase the risk of death in elderly people with dementia-related psychosis and is not for treating symptoms unrelated to parkinson's disease. nuplazid can cause changes in heart rhythm and should not be taken if you have certain abnormal heart rhythms or take other drugs that are known to cause changes in heart rhythm. tell your doctor about any changes in medicines you're taking. the most common side effects are swelling of the arms and legs and confusion. we spoke up and it made all the difference. ask your parkinson's specialist about nuplazid.
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does this sound dismal? it isn't. ♪ ♪ it's the most wonderful life on earth. ♪ ♪ jillian: good morning to you quick hollywood headlines right now. no special treatment for brad pitt at community meeting. check it out. >> i see my time has expired. >> thank you, i know it gives me great pain to say wrap it up, mr. pitt. we only do one take here. >> the actor getting cut off at a board of supervisors meeting in los angeles.
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pitt pushing for county officials to approve $117 million to renovate a museum. kind of funny. and could we soon be keeping up with the bardashians she wants to become a lawyer. she had to think long and hard about this. she did begin a four year apprenticeship with a law firm in san francisco last summer. kardashian played a key role in helping alice johnson get her prison sentence comutted by president trump. brian: she a lot brighter than people know. i tell you i bet she she does it. steve: julian assange has been arrested in london an hour and 10 minutes ago taken into custody ecuadorian custody where he has been living in refuge since 2012. ainsley: police served assange with a warrant back in 2012. brian: judge, help us with this. you host liberty file. i recognize you from the app. judge napolitano. >> i have interview you had. brian: can't use the picture
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yet but he was dragged out in cuffs. >> he was dragged out because knowing him and of course we all know him, i have interviewed him many times. he is of the belief that if he voluntarily went out or cooperated with them he might be waving his claim to unlawful arrest. they literally carried him out. is he technically arrested on a bail jumping violation, which is a very, very -- brian: they got rid of the sexual assault in sweden. steve: they didn't drop the case they just resined the charges. >> there is no basis to arrest him in london for the sexual assault investigation in sweden. he apparently has been charged with something in the united states. we'll don't know. because of this inadvertent release of a warrant for him. that is probably the true reason for his arrest. he will probably be extradited here. we will see the indictment. and we will probably have a show trial. jillian: judge, why wouldn't he give himself up initially and go to trial? because he hasn't seen his family or kids all these years. knowing it's just a delay. >> i have to tell you, in my
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opinion julian assange is a hero. what he published was truthful information that the american public and the world had the right to see. he is a publisher just like we are. brian: judge, he exposed state department secrets the world had no business seeing. when you have private communiques with our officials they should not be expotszed or else we will never have private communiques. >> i agree that will diminish the private communications. just as if we working for fox news received secret information, my god the public has to know. this the person who gave it to us commits the crime the publisher does not commit the crime. ainsley: if he is guilty, will they use him as an example? >> i would think so. if he is guilty i don't think he will see the light of day again. steve: if he is brought to the united states, you know, he is going to say i can't answer questions about where i got this stuff because i'm protected by your first amendment. >> correct. so i'm not going to tell you how i got hillary clinton's emails we got them and published them. brian: ecuador president says we will only put new
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british custody if you promise not to release him to a third party. might be just his word that he got from britain. we will see what happens. >> i don't think that promise is enforceable, brian. brian: 13 minutes before the bottom of the hour. steve: want to hour. bill barr said spying did occur on the campaign of donald trump. big question though, judge, and we have already seen the sound by the is whether or not the protocols were in place where the department of justice followed the rules or did somebody break them? >> okay, so two things. there's another big question. who did the spying? if the intelligence community, american or foreign was involved, i don't think we will ever find out about, this they simply will not let it come to light. when president trump offered last year to reveal all the fisa information strzok and mccabe and those characters gave. brian: the world went crazy? >> correct. he was talked out of it. by whom? intelligence agencies, domestic who work for him and foreign. the other question, the one steve raised is intriguing. if they gave garbage
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information to fisa. and fisa gave them a warrant, it is a valid warrant and the spying, i hate to say this, the spying was lawful. is that then is on the fault of the judge who accepted the garbage who didn't look at it critically. steve: it's got to be verified. >> didn't ask questions about it. steve: that garbage has to be verified. >> yes. that's what the attorney general said when he said is there a predicate. he meant was there valid, lawful evidence given to these judges or was it garbage? brian: if the british helped our intelligence agencies spy on the trump administration and they don't expose that it's going to happen again. they are not going to back off. they wants trump out. >> do you really want to open up that can of worms? brian: i got a can opener, i'm willing to use it. >> what you say is absolutely correct, brian. if a foreign intelligence agency did help the fbi spy on president trump. we will never know. steve: that's a big if. >> you and i covered it. [laughter] , that was two years ago. brian: that was you. [laughter] >> i took the heat.
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ainsley: judge has liberty file on fox nation. thank you, judge. brian: we will watching. >> thank you, guys. steve: have you ever felt returned out at the office? >> get some coffee? >> i have got to get out of here. i think i'm going to lose it. >> sounds like somebody has a case of the mondays. >> if you are burned out at the office, you are not alone. 95% of hr leaders blame burn-out when people quit. ainsley: that's a great movie. how can you beat it? we'll tell you. that's next. ♪ ♪ don't go hitting that panic button ♪ it ain't worth spilling your dreams ♪ everything's gonna be all right ♪
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ainsley: well, if you are feeling burned out at work or at home, you are not alone. 95% of hr leaders blame burnout for low workplace retention. our next guest says what you're really experiencing is not burnout, it is build up. here to explain and share his tips on how to beat it all is host of the ken comey show, mr. ken coleman himself. >> always good to be here. ainsley: good to have you here and the whole ramsey team. so many people go to work and hate their jobs like when they're there. saw that clip from office space. or watch the office. many of us can relate to that we just feel burned out. we are not really burned out. >> burnout happens when we are dead. so let's just be honest. when we are done the flame is extinguished. you are not burned out build up on your heart. you don't love the work. and there is multiple reasons for boulevard-up that will make you feel like oh, i have just got to leave. this is not right for me.
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i want to caution people. ainsley: what do you do about it. >> look at the causes. most people have build up on their heart because there is no connection to the work. they are good at their job. but the results of the work don't matter deeply to them. we all want to feel significant. so if you don't care deeply about the work, you are going to begin to feel like the work doesn't matter, and you don't matter. that's a big cause for build-up. another one is a toxic environment. this would be poor leadership above you, or the people around youlettenlet let's be honest if you are trying to avoid a leader that will make you not want to go into the office i can't do that anymore. that makes people feel like burnout. ainsley: people can't quit their jobs they have a family toll support. >> that's right. how do we remove build up on the heart. let's at least take it to our leader. here is what i am experiencing. this is affecting my ability to do the work well and enjoy the work. if there is no relief from your leader, which this happens a lot. now we want to change our
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perspective. gratitude. like you said, many people just can't leave today. they have got to take care of the bills. let's change our perspective. at least i have a job that's taking care of me. it's temporary. so i'm grateful for this job. that will make me a little bit less feeling burned out. and then we can begin to look for a change in location. some people, ainsley, feel burned out like they need to change careers i tell my radio callers some are you are doing the right thing in the wrong place. change location. teachers, i get this call all the time. ainsley: i know. >> they feel like i have got change careers. if i remove this, this, and this from you, would you love teaching children, they all say, absolutely. if you think you are burned out, let's look to your heart. what's causing the build-up. ainsley: great radio show. thank you for having such a positive attitude and sharing it with us. >> thank you. ainsley: julian assange will be coming back here to the united states. breaking news on his arrest coming up next. former homeland security
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♪ ainsley: right to a fox news alert. steve: julian assange you, the founder of wikileaks is under arrest on a u.s. extradition request. we have got brand new video showing the wikileaks founder. there he is right there. the guy with the white beard and the white hair screen right being dragged out of the ecuadorian embassy about 90 minutes ago. brian: ecuador changed leaders and the new leader not a big big fan of julian assange. greg palkot in london. that's pretty sensational video. seven years in coming. >> pretty sensational video indeed. we met him a few years ago. in pretty good shape. grizzly and haggard like he has been in a room for the past seven years. across the street from the her rod's department store as he has. again, it's the wikileaks
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founder arrested today by scotland yard. police going actually into the ecuadorian embassy. ecuadorian government giving him permission. they haven't liked him for many, many months now. as you say with a change of government they really didn't like him. again, this was an agreement between ecuador and the authorities here. they say he violated the rules of his asylum seeking. and the u.k. says he has violated the rules of a bond. basically he jumped bail back in 2012. and he has been on the run ever since. assange famous or infamous, depending on who you are talking to for the leaks coming from his wikileaks organization. classified information about the iraq, afghan war. classified state department cables coming with the help of at that time bradley manning. most recently in 2016, he was involved in the leaks of the democratic national committee. the dnc. and the hillary clinton campaign. he is actually been fleeing
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sex assault charges, specifically, sweden, it happened in sweden several years ago. and he was running from them but, in fact, he always said that he was actually running from possible extradition to the united states, that they were trumped up. most of those charges have gone, but, in fact, right now, he is facing certain possibility of court proceedings and possible jail time here. his lawyer has said and this is what you guys are picking up, his lawyer has said that there is a u.s. extradition order out on him to go back to the u.s. and face these charges. we have no confirmation of that. but there have been various reports that, in fact, the trump administration after their -- well, their love of those dnc links have turned on him and realize what kind of classified information he has been putting out there over the years. how he has been endangering both military, state department officials, as well as guarded sources out
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in the field. so, right now, he is in police custody. he is in a jail. in central london. they say he is going to be hauled into court very quickly. that is a specific thing. he has cost the u.k. government and security forces, police here, millions and millions of dollars. they have been guarding that place, waiting for him to come out. to snag him for the past several years. and now he could be facing more, guys. steve: all right. greg palkot live in london with the very latest. thank you. they were standing outside the police were waiting for him to slip up and walk out the front door. they didn't have. to say because the ambassador ambassador actually invited them in. also the president of ecuador tweeted out. they revoked his asylum because of repeated violations to international conventions and daily life protocols. what's curious is mr. assange's attorney saying he was arrested on u.s. extradition requests. keep in mind, it was back in
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november that we discovered, by accident, when the prosecutors accidentally let out the fact that they had filed criminal charges against assange, it was supposed to be sealed, but it was made public, and now we know that if he is -- if he is extradited, -- go ahead, brian. brian: 2487 days, seven years. this is way overdue. keep in mind there is a reason why russia has never protested him. he evidently has a source in russia that was providing all types of information for him if he presented russia and their secrets. this guy is as bad as it gets. he has hurt us severely. the first thing he did in 2010 publish video what they claim was us killing civilians in iraq. then they released communiques with iraq, afghanistan, state department, stuff about the wars, our views on other governments was causing extreme embarrassment. most of those documents were provided by chelsea manning
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so manning since has been exonerate you had. i don't know if that's going to play into his case. but he breached bail in the u.k. that's one thing. extradition request by the u.s. is another. evidently the ecuadorian leader did request that if he was to be arrested, he wouldn't be sent to a third party. we will see. ainsley: looks like is he pointing his finger at something and saying something. look as lot different now when sean hannity interviewed him or judge napolitano interviewed him. clean shaven and sitting in front of that screen that he would have with the drip behind him. nau it looks like he hasn't shaved in a long time and saying something to the police officers there. but he believed his cause, he believed in his mission. even though he might have broken the law in doing it he believed what he was doing was the right thing to do. so much so that he had to leave his family. he was hold up in the embassy. couldn't see his kids all these years. steve: while wikileaks is famous for publishing things, when you look at the fact that the doj charges
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were accidently revealed last year in november, that brings up the fact that, keep in mind, he has been suspected of aiding the russians in interfering with our elections in 2016. brian: yep. steve: of all of his deeds that he has published that perhaps is the one that the department of justice is going to go after him on. of course he is going to be in that london magistrate's office very shortly according to greg palkot and probably hear the u.s. case, at least a headline. ainsley: you mentioned what his attorney was saying about the u.s. extradition request as well as breaking the uk bail conditions. his attorney says he is being arrested for that as well. brian: pam anderson tweeted out an old photo of him in latin it says underneath truth will prevail. we will see. he published documents hacked from john podesta as well as the dnc and he claims when he came on our show that he has no noe russian leaks. amazing how russia doesn't seem hack to be wikileaks.
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steve: meanwhile, the attorney general, bill barr was up on capitol hill talking about all things invariably. a lot about the mueller report and also, you know, he is being asked some questions by a senator about his will investigate the president. he revealed that spying did occur on the trump campaign back in 2016. and mr. barr said look, here's the thing. we don't know how it started. ainsley: she is a senator, a democrat from new hampshire. her name is jeanne shaheen. listen to her question and how he responds. >> spying on a political campaign is a big deal. >> so you are not suggesting though that spying occurred? >> i think there was a spying did occur. yes, i think spying did occur. the question is whether it was predicated, adequately predicated and i'm not suggesting it wasn't adequately predicated but i need to explore that. i think it's my obligation. congress is usually very
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concerned about intelligence agencies and law enforcement agencies staying in their proper lane. and i want to make sure that happened. brian: a little bit later jack reed followed up on in this was the big news to come out. he says i have no specific evidence that i can cite right now. i do have questions about it he said are you putting a panel together? he says not yet. so do you have interest in this but you don't have evidence? i have concerns about various aspects of it listen, on may 1st and may 2nd. they will have the chance to ask them with the 400 pages mueller report out if there is one redaction they will have a problem with it there is going to be many. they are working on it now. one thing clear for william barr. is he not going to be rattled. he knows the law inside and out. he understands this case. he got a heads up before the 400 pages came out about where it was heading. ainsley: like the judge said earlier even if they did get permission to spy or to survey, if a judge allowed that to happen, then we can question why that happened. he is saying it might not be
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illegal. if a judge says you can do it, you can do it. even though it wasn't verified. brian: meanwhile the democrats went crazy about this and wanted to diminish his credibility. suddenly. listen. >> the chief law enforcement officer of our country is going off the rails he is attorney general of the united states of america. not the attorney general of donald trump. >> the attorney general of the united states of america believes he needs to protect the president of the united states. and i think that's unfortunate. >> throughout this bombshell and at the same time refused to present any evidence of it. that is, in my view, reckless and clearly political. >> this is an attempt to take the attention off that very serious -- these very serious crimes andy vert people's attention to absolute con spur toler
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nonsense. steve: attorney general said he considered spying on a political campaign a big deal. yeah, do you think? here is jim jordan of ohio. >> remember what chuck schumer said two years ago about then president-elect trump. he said if you mess with the intelligence community, they have six ways from sunday at getting back at you. bill barr is going to find out if that statement was actually carried out. that's what i so appreciate at what the attorney general said. and i think the american people appreciate it, too. when you stop and think, about they want an attorney general who is focused on accountability and the truth. that's exactly what bill barr is going to get. to say he is going to find out if what chuck schumer said two years and three months ago if in fact that's what took place and all the things you just went through, it sure looks like it did. it sure looks like it. brian: christopher wray's fbi is working very well with him. he wants to find out what happened at the upper levels. i thought that was a done deal that we're all curious about that. looks like half the country wasn't and was surprised by that statement. which i found surprising. steve: sounds like mr. huber
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and mr. horowitz are working behind the scenes. we should know more about any possible misdeeds in the next cup perform months. ainsley: if we don't want it to happen again we need to find out the root of it and hold somebody accountable. we will all be able to read the redacted report in a few days. let's hand it over to jillian who has headlines for us. jillian: today a twice deported illegal immigrants grant accused of murdering a nanny will face a judge. he is accused of kidnapping, strangling and sexually assaulting care lien okono on a job in new jersey. her body was found floating in a lake. the suspect from honduras could spend life behind bars if convicted. an american charges could put him behind bars for life. this is a high school yearbook photo of the michigan man captured in syria last year. the feds say he trained with terrorists for three years in addition to providing material support to isis. his family claims he is innocent. saying he was kidnapped and held against his will. well, she is known for
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movies like breakfast at tiffanies. it turns out audrey hepburn also played a very secret role. >> like tiffanies. >> tiffanies? you mean the jewelry store? >> that's right. i'm crazy about tiffanies. ainsley: according to an autobiography writer hepburn was a spy. says the actress volunteered for the dutch resistance movement during world war ii while the netherlands were under control nazi control. isn't that interesting. steve: she was one of the most famous people in the world and yet a spy? jillian: allegedly. ainsley: everyone loved her. steve: very elegant. ainsley: what an icon. just you wait henry wiggins. brian: bernie sanders revealing latest medicare plan for all. what's in it? and will any of it work? we will break it down next. ♪ ♪ allergies with sinus congestion and pressure?
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so simple, so good. get the recipes at walnuts.org. it comes to the investigation into this president? do you really believe attorney general barr read a nearly 400-page report in one day? and that his 4-page summary is the whole truth? i'm tom steyer, and i'm organizing an effort to to release the full mueller report now and let the american people decide. if you think we have a right to read the report for ourselves, you can call the attorney general at this number. our tax dollars paid for the report. don't let him cover up the truth.
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>> healthcare is a human right, not a privilege. the american people want and we are going to deliver a medicare for all single pair system. steve: there you have got senator bernie sanders yesterday revealing his new medicare for all plan. but what's really in it? and would it work to all of us? the president of the foundation for research on equal opportunity owe vic roy joins us now from arizona. good morning to you. >> hey, steve, how are you? >> i'm doing okay. let's talk about three things that bernie was talking about yesterday. first of all, he announced it would be a government-run healthcare system that would actually save us money what do you say about that? >> well, you know, the government already spends in america $1.5 trillion a year subsidizing healthcare. so it's not that we don't have a government funded system. what bernie is advocating for is if you like your plan, tough luck,
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180 million people with employer based insurance with individually purchased insurance, the 22 million with medicare advantage they won't have that anymore it will be replaced with something bernie likes and you may not. steve: blue cross, blue shield they would wind up covering like nose jobs and plastic surgery and stuff like that. things that the government-run system would not. also, owe vic, he says that it will improve -- what do you think about that. >> so many americans are not on single pair medicare coverage. they are on private plan medicare. medicare advantage. 22 million seniors, more than a third on r. on medicare advantage. under bernie's plans, those plans would be abolished, taken away from you and replaced with something that's actually a lot different from the way medicare works today. steve: here is one thing that everybody understands. the amount of money it's
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going to cost you. it will not cost you a nickel in out of pocket expenses. >> yeah. that's actually a complete lie. right? so, okay. you might not have a co-pay at the doctor's office, but you're going to have major out-of-pocket expenses. they are called taxes. taxes that you are going to have to pay to fund the bernie plan are going to go up probably about double. everyone's tax also go up by about 11% or 12% as a percentage of your income. plus there will be a surtax. the plan would increase total federal spending by 71%. so, yes, you are going to have a lot of out-of-pocket expenses you will send them to the irs. steve: there you go. avik here is the thing though, when people who hear it people not as understanding about all the issues as you, they are going to hear hey, you will get free healthcare. anything you need is going to be free. that sounds great. until, of course, the tax bill comes, if you pay taxes but nonetheless, that's going to be a problem for
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republicans because the democrats are saying we are going to cover everybody, not going to cost you a dime. >> that's a great point, steve. so this is the thing that republicans should do. republicans should not say medicare for all or single pair healthcare or government run healthcare is bad. they have got to tackle the problems that americans actually care about which are the high cost of healthcare. there are a lot of things you can do to reduce the high cost of healthcare. a congressman in arkansas named bruce has recently introduced a bill the fair care act tackle the high cost of hospital care the high cost of prescription drugs but do so in a way that keeps your plan, doesn't take it away from you. steve: let's see what happens. bernie has rolled out the latest medicare for all program and now people are starting to look at it avik roy, thank you for joining us live today from arizona. >> thanks, steve. steve: 7:20 now in new york city. he was a marine, a new york city firefighter and the father of three girls. this fallen hero is now being remembered for his life of service. two of his fellow
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brian: he was a marine and new york city firefighter and father of three young daughters on monday christopher slutman was one of three killed by taliban terrorist in afghanistan. ainsley: he dedicated his life to protecting others and those that he served with in new york are remember remembering his courage and conviction to serve his fellow americans both at home and abroad. joining us now from ladder company 27 where slutman served one his good friend bobby use ti ustice and mr. gard
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fitzgerald. thank you y'all for being with us. sorry for your loss. i know you were good friends with him. what was he like. >> he was a great man. manual of integrity. he was what every man should aspire to be. he was a marine, a fireman. everything he did was working towards his family. he wanted to maximize his friewnts marine corps. he wanted to retire from the marine corps and fire department. put all his efforts -- he put the maximum effort in everything he did. in the end, it was all for his family. brian: do you remember his his reaction when he knew he was going to be redeployed again. >> i don't know anymore personally the president of the union bobby would know more about that. i'm told that he was a guy of service and he never shied away. so i would imagine as he did before, he just jumped up and got ready to go and made his plans.
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brian: you fill his shifts when the military calls? >> yes. the fire department is very good about that. with the members that we have that are in the military. there is hundreds that are serving in the military past and present. and then so, they go out and the rest of the members pick up the shifts as they come down. ainsley: bobby, we do a lot of work with tunnel 2 towers. we interviewed the man after he started that after he lost his brother who was a firefighter running through the tunnel to the towers to save the other people. tonight we have a charity event we are involved in and he is going to be on the show tomorrow. whe contacted his wife guess what? you don't have to worry about any more house payments we are going to pay off your home. what was your reaction and the ladder company's reaction? >> i mean, we were just honored and appreciative as possible. if you look at some of the photos we gave. one of them is chris running the tunnel to towers race.
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ainsley: that's his wife i assume. >> yes. his wife shannon and, yeah, he was an avid runner. ironic that he actually ran that race before. and we are just very, very fortunate that the foundation was able to pay off chris' mortgage. brian: next day after we found out he was a firefighter we had video of the bunting going up on the firehouse in the bronx. tell us what that means to the fdny when you lose one. what do you guys do? >> it's an honor and it's to show the public that this house is mourning. chris was a member of two different firehouses. he formerly worked in ladder 17. that house is mourning also. the bunting was hung on bobby's firehouse on ladder 27. great turnout by the members. and they showed their respects and watched the bunting being hung and short prayer. talked to the media and described what kind of man chris was and his legacy and how he will never be
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forgotten and then we move along. ainsley: we love to hear stories about men like this. because they are just so amazing. i grew up in a house with a man like this, too. who served our country and worked three jobs to put all of us through college that's what he wanted to do for his girls. he seemed like wanted to retire from both income from both to take care of his girls. tell us what is he like. >> he has a wonderful family. just like he protected everything. he protected his family. protected his country and protected the great city of new york. and, you know, he loved them dearly. he spends as much time as he possibly could with them. he worked as hard as he possibly could to spend as much time and provide as much as he could for them. brian: what i always hear from firefighters like that is your family. you have a family at home and get to know each other's kids. when you go to work it is like a family. it's more than even a team. you talk about that? >> yeah, i mean, it's a bond of brotherhood. a band of brothers. and, you know, chris was
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entrenched in that. you know, he wasn't a native new yorker but he moved to new york city to be a new york city firefighter and be part of the best fire department in the world. and when he wanted to joint military, he wanted to be a marine. he wanted to be, you know, he was a passionate man, a humble man, he was a go doo your job kind of mantra dry. ainsley: when this story broke. a lot of were putting up until it was confirmed. concerned about who the other people were, too. we wanted to remember them as well. during the commercial break you pulled out a piece of paper of the name of his friends also killed. it's important to remember them. can you pull out that paper and just list the names of the individuals. >> i was told that chris would want them remembered as much as he is he is getting a lot of accolades for being the marine he was and being a new york city firefighter but the other lost marines were corporal robert hendrix from long island. ainsley: he is the one with the mustache from locust valley, new york.
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>> that's correct and sergeant benjamin hymes from york, pennsylvania. so three tragic losses and we owe them a lot of respect and to mourn them and to remember their families. brian: a reminder we are still at war. this is the longest war we have had in our country's history. and three more people just paid the price. ainsley: i know he and his family watch fox news. so please give his wife our best and let us know if we can do anything. >> a lot of down time in the firehouse. chris used to watch fox news. only two channels he watched and turner classic movies was the other. ainsley: keep watching and let us know what we can do. >> thanks. >> thank you so much. brian: you are welcome. the tunnel 2 towers pledged to pay off the slutman family mortgage to donate go to tunnel 2 towers.org. ainsley: julian assange arrested at the embassy in london overnight. brian: reaction from jeh johnson who is in our green room next. [knocking]
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brian: we are back with a fox news alert. julian assange arrested in london, wikileaks founder taken into custody at the ecuadorian embassy right there. ainsley: his lawyer tweeting moments ago from assange the u.s. warrant was issued in december 2017. and is for conspiracy with chelsea manning in early 2010. chelsea manning leaked a trove of classified materials to wikileaks and is currently now in jail for refusing grand jury testimony. steve: we don't know what assange is being charged with officially yet by the united states. he is headed to a courtroom right now in central london. the department of justice here in this country is aware of the arrest. let's bring in former secretary of homeland security under president obama, jeh johnson. jeh, good morning to you. >> good morning, thanks for having me. steve: sounds like the united states, it was revealed accidentally, he has been charged, we don't know exactly with what yet. we are asking for him to be extradited here it sounds
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like he is in trouble with the chelsea manning thing. >> well, first, i have to go back to the prior interview. chris slutman. i know someone who is in his unit in the marine corps in afghanistan serving in afghanistan right now. and he is a reminder that so often reservists in their private lives are also giving back, also serving the country as a firefighter, as a police officer emergency response. so a hero like that is serving the people in multiple ways so, julian assange. don't know whether or what he has been charged with his attorney in that tweet appears to acknowledge there is a u.s. warrant for his arrest, i night disagree with judge napolitano but i don't believe julian assange is a hero. brian: what did he do? he exposed secrets, communiques war documents. he exposed video with the pentagon, published them. how did he hurt our country? >> apparently aided and
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assisted in the leak of classified information at some point there may be a debate whether he was a journalist and that was journalist activity. i do not regard him as a hero. brian: is hacking okay? hacking is not okay. hacking into a computer without one's consent a federal crime. steve: chelsea manning and other instances for instance the hillary clinton email it is suggested other people gave him the information and then he simply was the conduit to get the word out. he was the publisher, albeit online. >> there may be a claim that what he was doing was legitimate journalist activity and what constitutes a journalist is a more complex question in the age of the internet but i do not regard him as a hero. ainsley: so what will happen next? if he is facing charges in america and charges in the u.k. do they try him there first? how does that work? >> apparently he wanted in
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sweden for sexual assault charges. and if there is an effort to bring him to the u.s. there will be a lengthy extradition proceeding in which he will have certain rights. and i suspect that will take quite to some time to litigate. brian: one of the reasons we brought you here you are one of the few experts to know what it's like to have a crisis at the border. are we at a crisis at the southern border of america? >> brian, by any measure 4,000 arrest in a day, 100,000 in a month, that's the population of the city of albany, new york that suddenly shows up on our southern border in one month is a crisis. and it's a crisis because it overwhelms our border patrol and our immigration officials' ability to deal with it and it's a crisis because you have to absorb that population somehow into southern border towns. and so it overwhelms the humanitarian effort on our southern border it overwhelms our dhs personnel
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frankly it all emanates from the crisis that's been going on for soil time in central america. that's the most violent region of our world right now. and so one of the things i i have been saying continually, publicly, is that if we are going to be able to deal with this problem, we have to address it at the source. a lot of people don't want to hear that they want quick, easy answers. they want some legal lever to pull. to fix this problem emanating from central america, we have got make the long-term investment in addressing the poverty and violence in that -- in those nations. it can be done. a planned colombia. it requires a sustained political commitment through i expect multiple administrations. ainsley: there is some in the obama administration also agreeing with you there is a crisis. few democrats that have said that the majority you are saying it's manufactured. when you see these numbers and increasing by almost 30,000 people from february to march, if it continues to
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increase that much, as we go into the summer, warmer months when it's easier for them to walk and to come up to the border, how are democrats going to continue to say that? we are a long time away from the election. are they going to continue with that narrative because people are frustrated. >> look, this is, in my view, having owned this problem for three years. ainsley: um-huh. >> first, i know what 1,000 a day looks like. i saw it myself. border patrol holding stations. i cannot begin to imagine what 4,000 a day looks like. it must overwhelm the system. i think we have to get away from democrat vs. republican and crisis vs. no crisis. this is a crisis by any measure. brian: right. >> the solution inevitably is bipartisan. it has to be bipartisan. brian: it was for years it? >> requires a change in law. steve: you have been talking about the politics it would be great to take the politics out of it. you know, we are in a year before an election year. and donald trump has made this one of his central i and he would like to do
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something about it democrats and you are reasonable and you know they don't want to give him a win. the problem is you have to change the laws the way they are otherwise you put one foot on u.s. soil. >> what part of that do you want me to disagree with? look, my advice to the president, to the congress, to my democratic friends in congress this is a big problem. and this is the kind of thing the american people look to their political leaders to fix. the fix is inevitably bipartisan. it must be bipartisan. when i was in office, i worked with a republican house for the entire three years i was in office. and for two of those three years, a republican senate. the need for resources. >> the call for additional resources. the calls for changes in law require a bipartisan approach. i recognize it's a year before an election. we are ramping up for a new
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election. people are going to neutral corners. steve: they are not so neutral. >> they are going to their corners, this is a big problem. and it is times like this when the public should say to their leaders we need to you come together and fix this. brian: right. they would probably listen to you because you are experienced. in 2014, how did you handle the flood and congress responded what changed with the reinterpretation of the flores amendment in 2015 that would make that impossible today? >> we could spend another hour on this but basically we had a crisis in 2014, not as big as this one. we basically did three things to get the numbers down. a, messaging about the dangers of the journey don't come here. you are not eligible for daca, two, we got the mexican government to help us on their southern border with central america which is a much smaller, more discreet border.
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three, we expanded our detention capability, specifically for families. that was controversial but it got a lot of people's attention. so by late summer 2014, the numbers were down and they stayed low for the next year, year and a half, lower than we had seen anything since the 1970s. now, the moral of the story, however, is and this is something i learned through hard lessons. you can do things to change enforcement policy that will have a short-term impact on the numbers to drive the numbers down. so long as the underlying problems exist will revert back to longer trend lines. that's what president trump is seeing right now. 2017 he came into office. the numbers dropped off sharply as soon as he reached office and for a year he had a great talking point. they are reverting back to their longer term trends and
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fact higher than anything we have seen in 12 years. steve: 30 seconds if you could talk about the problem at the source. how does the united states help for instance those triangle countries turn off the magnet here to keep the people down there? >> aid with a lot of strings attached. it can be done. i'm told that the limited amount we have already invested we are beginning to see some positive signs. so cutting off that aid is the exact wrong thing to do in my judgment. brian: right. yeah, we will see what happens, jeh you are the voice of reason through. this you need to be out and center more. brian: we are neighbors, walk right in and we will put you on. a couple of skyscrapers away. steve: meanwhile, switching gears. the opioid is growing. now they want to treat addiction with medical marijuana. ainsley: is that a good idea. the doctor who invented narcan is here to discuss it next.
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brian: according to the cdc more than 2 million americans with opioid use disorder. 2017 more 47,000 died. now states are looking to treat opioid addiction with medical marijuana. other states like maryland, connecticut, new hampshire are also considering similar laws. is this a good thing? let's ask someone who knows dr. roger crystal inventor of narcan and ceo of opiate pharmaceuticals. doctor, is that the right direction you think we should be going using medical marijuana to get off opioids. >> thank you. we should take a step back and consider how the opioid crisis has become what is now a fentanyl crisis which has been the overuse of opioids alongside insufficient regulation and increased availability of opioids in this country. our concern is a company seeing that wider use and
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availability of marijuana. not to say whether it should or shouldn't be legalized when we think about its use of treating opioid addiction we do have concerns because there isn't sufficient evidence certainly not sufficient for the fda to approve this as a medication at the moment for it to be used. brian: i don't understand the theory behind it medical marijuana get off the addiction is the hope to curtail the craving by the opioid by giving you the marijuana? >> we are not exactly sure because these trials haven't been done extensively and certainly not to what would woud be required for the purposes of fda approval. we do hear and it's encouraging to hear that some people do find benefits from using it, so i'm not going to be sat here today it does not work. for me, physician by background and as a father with daughters, and if one of my daughters was affected
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by an opioid use disorder fortunately they are not. i wouldn't be thinking medical marijuana as a first port of call. brian: what would be the exact next step to find out and answer those questions as a clinician. >> as a clinician important patients with opioid addiction who therefore have a chronic brain disease are treated in the same way as another patient with a chronic medical condition. for example, diabetes. we know that we can't cure diabetes but we can control blood glucose in the same way that someone with an opioid addiction can't be cured entirely but can be medically managed and have their disease well under control that would be seeing an addiction specialist and taking appropriate fda approved medication. brian: last liberation how great does it feel to invent narcan and knowing you have saved some lives. >> i'm honored and privilege to be in this situation. we are looking beyond that our concern is are we having a cannabis crisis in the making. we are developing a medicine to treat acute can that boyd
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overdose for this condition. brian: another self-inflicted wound it seems. dr. roger crystal thanks so much. you do great work. >> thank you, brian. brian: straight ahead one of the top prospects in the nfl draft just deleted a tweet supporting president trump. carley shimkus has the story and she has fulfilled that promise ♪ i'm living on god's time ♪ i ain't going to waste one breath ♪ this is not a bed... it's a revolution in sleep. the sleep number 360 smart bed, from $999... senses your movement and automatically adjusts on each side to keep you both comfortable. and snoring? how smart is that? smarter sleep. so you can come out swinging, maintain your inner focus, and wake up rested and ready for anything. sleep number is ranked #1 in customer satisfaction with mattresses by j. d. power. save $400 on select sleep number 360 smart beds. only for a limited time.
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the stand they are taking on issues. we support them in if the fact that we feel that they're leaders. ainsley: that is anna wintour the vogue editor and chief she is coming clean why only certain first ladies make the cover. steve: what's up with that with reaction lighting up social media carley joins us now. is that why they don't put republicans on the cover? carley: it is political. yeah, michelle obama was on the cover three times. she talked about working with her. she said that most people -- most first ladies that come in to be photographed are really safe. they want the jacket and the pearls, but she said michelle obama was so much fun to work with fearless when it comes to fashion. she loves clothes. do you know who else is a bit of a fashion miss that? steve: melania trump. carley: there you go. she will never be on the cover. ainsley: she is admitting it? >> anna wintour and vogue like to take a stand when it comes to politics.
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janice said we will never read your magazine again choose to pick sides and eliminate half of america instead of being 23450u central and fair what a shame. another twitter user writes nothing wrong with that freedom of speech, freedom of press, don't agree with her that women are best supported by the democrats but that is her opinion and wish she could look objectively though. brian: international supermodel on the cover good luck with that pivot to football. carley: nic bosa is his name ohio defensive end expected to be a topic in the upcoming draft. he did an interview with espn and said he felt obligated to delete some of his political tweets ones where he supports president trump and he criticized his colin kaepernick saying i had to. there was a chance i might end up in san francisco. was it a good idea? so let's see what people are saying about him deleting his political messages. now people are talking about
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it. kevin says good for him. it's his right to support our president. no one harassed athletes that supported obama. our media and social justice warriors have ruined free thought and expression. another twitter user sad to think a college athlete should be so concerned about w. political bias. a lot of people do say though it's better when athletes and actors don't get political. i'm sure that's what nick bosa was thinking. brian: chris evans captain america broke up with tom brady. carley: i heard that. he might have to break up with him. brian: wow, the bromance over. carley: have to wait and see if he gets more political or less political. i think with him it was a locker room decision he didn't want to cause any controversy. you can't blame him for that. steve: social media, thank you very much. ainsley: i'm sure his agent gave him that advice. steve: fox news alert. julian assange the founder of wikileaks arrested in london and about to face a magistrate there. we are live with the breaking details next live from london.
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steve: it is 1:00 in the afternoon in london, england and this is a fox news alert. brian: julian assange, you're looking at him, under arrest after being dragged out in handcuffs on extradition arrest to the united states. ainsley: looks a little different. greg palkot in london with breaking details. reporter: this story got much more interesting in the past 45 minutes or so the uk government confirming they hauled julian assange out of the ecuadorian embassy in part on request by the united states. in part because the u.s. wants to extradite him. police went in about 10:30. he had been whod up in the ecuadorian embassy for seven years. ecuador said he violated the rules of his asylum. they were howing police in. he look very griz i willed, haggard, long beard.
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assange, famous or infamous depending who you're talking to. releasing classified information on his wikileaks site on iraq, from the pent bonn. he had help then with bradley manning. most recently though he was involved in 2016 it is alleged with the release of dnc, democratic national committee cables and messages as well as hillary clinton campaign messages and believed he was involved with russians on that. he was here fleeing sexual assault charges in sweden. that had been longstanding for years. those have long been dropped. he faces here, jumping bail charges. so he does face a criminal assault, a criminal charges here in the uk but, again, just in the past few minutes confirmed what a lot of people had suspected that the trump administration would like to get hands on him.
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it is leaked last november, some information that said that perhaps they want to go after him on espionage charges, again for the leak of information from the state department, from the pentagon and also from political circles. political circles which involved the russians. he will be appearing in court, guys, we have learned in about an hour time. we should hear from an official from the, from the theresa may administration in about an hour's time. but don't expect him to be hopping on a plane very, very shortly. these extradition measures can go pretty fast but you got to believe any lawyer assange can get his hands on will try to fight it with everything they have. brian: greg, this is situation he is kept in prison while he awaits his day in court you would imagine? reporter: absolutely. they say he will be in court as soon as possible. we're told within an hour. this could be a chance to figure out exactly what is going on, maybe how fast this thing will
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be moving. steve: no kidding. greg palkot live in london, thank you very much. as depicted right there, julian assange's lawyer says the warrant is regarding conspiracy with chelsea manning back in 2010. it brings up possibility of being charged with the espionage act. keep in mind chelsea manning leaked to wikileaks hundreds of thousands of diplomatic cables and whatnot, was prosecuted for, on those grounds. that is ultimately looks like the government case. chelsea manning had the stuff. gave it to mr. wikileaks, that is the story. ainsley: i wonder if he will say where he got the evidence, where he got the information, was it from russia or someplace else? brian: for the podesta dnc acts he got a pardon. very ungrateful pardon from chelsea manning.
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continues to say bad things about him and act relatively on stannantly. the brittish prime minister says this is no hero. russians accused the british of strangling freedom by arresting him and pulling him out of the embassy. isn't that interesting, the way they are going to bad for a guy who says he has no relationship with russia but they seem to be very interested in his welfare. ainsley: we'll continue to follow that we'll keep you posted. in washington attorney general bill barr was grilled in front of congress yesterday. testified for a long time and he had something interesting to say that has gotten the attention of most people around the country. he was asked by jeanne shaheen, who is a democrat a senator from new hampshire, did spying occur. watch this. >> spying on a political campaign is a big deal. >> so you're not, you're not suggesting though that spying occurred?
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>> i think spying did occur, yes, i think spying did occur. >> let me -- >> the question whether it was predicated, adequately predicated. i'm not suggesting that it wasn't adequately predicated. i need to explore that. i think it is my obligation, congress is usually very concerned about intelligence agencies and law enforcement agencies staying in their proper lane and i want to make sure that happened. steve: that is where it will to behind the scenes at the department of justice. they're looking at genesis of looks what he is referring to the carter page application for the fisa warrant which allowed the government to spy on the trump campaign. so now, as you look at things that the president has said over the last couple years, where he said i was wiretapped in trump towers that could be exactly what he is talking about. ainsley: doesn't necessarily mean it was illegal. the judge said we're trying to determine if it was predicated. we had the judge on earlier, listen if they go to the fisa
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court with unverified dossier, if the judge allows them to survey someone, that is not illegal. if the judge gives the go ahead. brian: john brennan says, i'm very interested how often his name comes up with michael horowitz, he says for the attorney general to imply or to say there was spying domestically, he knows the language very well and he knew the terminology, he knows what it connotes, extra legal activity taking place. so he is somebody that if he is somehow doing something that he is not proud of he is somebody that is going to come front and center. if he is totally clean on this we'll find out. as international aspect comes through, who was talking to papdopoulus overseas? what was professor halper was doing, doing work for fbi? he seems to be around with carter page as well as george papdopoulus, lindsey graham regardless of what the attorney general says he is pursuing how this whole thing started. >> which is great because a lot
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of people feel there were some bad actors in the department of justice and the fbi. so behind the scenes between michael horowitz, the inspector general of the department of justice and also mr. huber, who is looking into all sorts of things that could be criminally active, sounds like we could eventually know what is going on but of course the department of justice and the fbi never confirms an investigation. never say in public, yep, they're investigating xyz. they just do it. >> that was happening in washington yesterday. meanwhile the president was in san antonio, texas talking about border and immigration. there is another caravan in. hundreds carrying children. they told guatemala we're coming in, there are 1100 of us, we're heading into your border. let us in, join us. steve: that's right. the president might call up more troops. he also tweeted this out. i think what the democrats are doing with the border is
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treasonous. their open border mind-set is putting our country at risk. will not let this happen. we had jeh johnson on with us about 40 minutes ago, former homeland security secretary under president obama. he looks at the numbers and they are gigantic. he says it is time to take politics out of all of it. >> 100,000 in a month. that is the population of the city of albany, new york, that shouldly shows up on our southern border in one month. this is a crisis by any measure. it's a crisis because it overwhelms our border patrol and our immigration officials ability to deal with it. it is a crisis you have to absorb that population somehow into the southern border towns. it is times like this when the public should say to their leaders, we need to you come together to fix this. brian: right. now they have to fix it because it will cost money. huge story today about the delays at the border on both
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sides. because the checkpoints are clogged. resources are fanned out. dealing with thousands of refugees expected to be over 100,000 this month. maybe even hit the mark already before april is through. the 2,000-yard, 2,000-mile boundary they say is being hampered and therefore, it looks like delays to especially automakers. it is going to hurt farmers. the $1.7 billion a day in commerce is going to be curtailed. if you hit the economy of the cities and states, many of which are in trump districts, democrats won this cycle, you do nothing, this is no honker about the president and a wall you don't want. this is now about the economy and a human catastrophe and no one is going to point fingers, especially if you continue to understand what is happening inside these holding areas where these families are being kept, they're being overwhelmed now. you have got to wonder from a health perspective how soon it will be until we hear about a
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catastrophe, what they might be bringing across the border anyway because they're not inoculated like we are. ainsley: why jeh johnson said it's a crisis. i agree with the president. it is not manufactured. it is not just immigration. we're talking about drugs coming over the border, health care and men and women and children involved. women allegedly getting assaulted coming up to the border. in addition to all the business and money can be lost if we close the border. brian: more military goes to the border as well. the president made that clear yesterday. on top of that, every day we go by where the president doesn't write up what he wants, hand it to congress, put them on the clock i think is a day wasted. steve: president made it clear last week he was thinking about closing the southern border. there was great outcry. it would destroy the economy between the two countries. he gave mexico one year on the clock. ainsley: i agrey with jeh johnson democrats republicans have to come
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together together because it affects our country. brian: i'm talking about policies lawmakers have to accept or reproject. not southern border. something they have to do. ainsley: change the laws. steve: we'll keep you posted as we always do. meantime that is jillian's job. she joins us with headlines. jillian: starting with this, the navy is dropping charges of the officer at helm during a deadly collision at sea. commander bryce benson will not face criminal negligence in the crash of the uss fitzgerald. the destroy her hit a commercial ship off the coast of japan. charges were dropped against a crew member. they will be both reprimanded. two strikes were hacked down because of their footprints. they dispatch ad helicopter over the california mountain. the pair was found sitting at a campfire. hikers say they got lost on a trail. they're reunited with family and friends after five days in the wilderness. they're lucky.
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former white house counsel connected to paul manafort will soon be charged much craig greg made statements during a. the team called this is misguided use of prosecutorial. face of infamous game show canned of the 1950s, has died. charles van doren captivated a contestant on 21, winning more than $100,000 over 14 weeks. turns out he knew the answers all along because the producers gave them to him. he was portrayed by ray fiennes on the 1994 movie, quiz show based on the scandal. he was 93. ainsley: stephanie, our producer telling us you have to see this movie. i never saw it. she says it was great. steve: it was fantastic. ainsley: "quiz show" i remember
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it. never saw it. is it funny? steve: no, not really. it's a drama. a dramedy. 13 minutes after the top. hour. ainsley: bernie sanders unveiled his "medicare for all" plan. what do his supporters think. we sent griff jenkins to find out. reporter: how do we pay for this? >> "medicare for all" saving so much money in terms of providing benefits. >> socialism in this form is absolutely necessary. steve: there is more where that came from. griff jenkins joins us live from d.c. to hear what those folks have to say next. ♪ the best simple dishes ever? great tasting, heart-healthy california walnuts. so simple, so good. get the recipes at walnuts.org.
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♪ thank you so much. battery charging. ♪ ♪ steve: in our nation's capitol yesterday in the dirksen building on the senate side, bernie sanders unveiled his "medicare for all" plan, the latest one that would usher in some say an expensive government-run single-payer system. brian: but that doesn't seem to phase his supporters. ainsley: that's right. griff jenkins joins us from washington where sanders is getting some support from fellow 2020 democrats. it was funny to see them next to each other at podium, two people
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running against each other. reporter: it sure was. prospect of government-run health care is so popular among democrats one of bernie's 2020 rivals was willing to stand there next to him as he relaunched "medicare for all." >> we are going to end the international embarassment of the united states of america, our great country, being the only major nation on earth not to guarranty health care to all as a right. reporter: gillibrand only one of 14 cosponsors, elizabeth warren, cory booker. no premiums, no deductibles, effectively eliminating the private insurance industry. the price tag? a whopping $32 trillion. so we talked to the supporters about it. the price tag is by estimates 32 trillion. how do they pay for it? how do we pay for this? >> what "medicare for all" will
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be saving so much money in terms of providing benefits for medicare, cheaper medication, it will save so much money in terms of reducing the cost of overhead and administrative burden on the current system. reporter: some americans are fearful this is socialism, that this is health care like some socialist countries have. what do you say? >> i say socialism in this form is absolutely necessary for our country to be able to succeed. >> everybody that i talked to, whether my patients, my family, would like to have the right to health care. >> it is social structure around that are making them so incredibly sick, harder to control their he medical conditions. what i really want to do. i think it is best for patients. reporter: could it become law? not on majority leader mcconnell's watch. >> it ought to be called medicare for none. 180 million americans would turn into a private health insurance. want to turn america into socialist country, this is the first step. reporter: house speaker nancy pelosi says she is not on
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board either. one thing for sure, this is the direction they're headed for the 2020 democratic primary. guys? steve: griff, thank you very much. of course nancy pelosi not on board because she wants to prop up the affordable care act, obamacare, which she says just needs some fixing. brian: can't have both. ten minutes before the bottom of the hour, senator ted cruz grilling twitter executives about censoring conservatives. >> this represent the policy of twitter? >> i have not seen that quote, sir. >> do you agree with it? ainsley: dana loesch had her own problems with twitter. she is here to react to that next. ♪ state of the art technology makes it brilliant. the visionary lexus nx. lease the 2019 nx 300 for $359 a month for 36 months.
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♪ steve: time for your news by the numbers on thursday. the first number is 327,000. that is how many trucks ford is recalling for a second time. engines in some f-series pickups could catch fire. inspection after the first recall may have made the problem even worse. so trucks for ford, they want them back in the shop. next one million, how many pounds of unsold pot is available in oregon. the marijuana industry is producing more than the state can sell. oregon is backed up by thousands of license applications. 1600. that is the perfect score a florida teen earned on the s.a.t. jacob harrison said he studied took practice tests but was still shocked that he got a 1600. a perfect. congratulations. ainsley: facebook and twitter executives grilled on capitol hill for allegedly censoring
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conservative voices in a hearing led by senator ted cruz. >> recently the ceo of twitter, jack dorsey said, quote, i don't believe we can afford to take a neutral stance anymore. i don't believe we should optimize for neutrality. this represent the policy of twitter? >> i have not seen that quote, sir. >> do you agree with it? >> that is not how he is building the platform. brian: here to react, nationally syndicated radio show host of the dana loesch show, dana loesch herself the dana, did you feel as though they got successful grilling yesterday, did the twitter executive? >> well, good morning to you all. i definitely think there were some very interesting questions that were asked that seemed to be, answers to those questions seemed to be a little different than the ones they have been asked previously. the big thing coming up, one of the things cruz is alluding to, something that i know you have spoken with senator josh hawley,
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he is definitely talked about, whether or not twitter with its behavior still merits protection under section 230 of the communications decency act. this is ultimately the thing that separates twitter and facebook and other platforms being considered publishers, with that all the liability that publishers have. if they are just the public square with no political animus, they are not incorporating bias the way they operate or how they select certain tweets or certain posts to appear, like, coming from the waterspout, that is one thing, that is the forum but if they're considered a publisher, imagine the liability that they might assume in that case. i don't know how any platform could continue to operate under such liability. that is the big question that some of these senators are raising. i have to say, you know these social media platforms, i'm a small government person, i don't want the government to regulate things but however they're not
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helping themselves at all with the behavior and the way they're answering some of the questions. steve: dana, that particular provision you're talking about, that limits the liability they would incur if they were sued. >> right. steve: the government started that back in the day to help grow the internet. now the internet is gigantic. they have to figure out how to regulate it. >> right. yeah. exactly. of course there are some cases, i know everyone is familiar with the case of the canadian feminist meghan murphy, she has no ill will, asking genuinely from a am deckic purpose, transgenderrism, how is it that someone identify as such claim to be such when they weren't born in certain way? she was suspended permanently. she is filing suit. that is one of the more high-profile cases. twitter amended its terms of service to include behavior i guess, they thought it was out of bounds for meghan murphy to have a conversation bit,
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genuinely intellectually based one. brian: every time i see a twitter executive or facebook, remembered what happened with the irs. they had a in 2010 so much success sidelining president obama's agenda. the irs started scrutinizing tea party organization. as the scrutiny got underway, tea party organization never got underway. they had no impact. the investigation petered out. guess what, facebook, had so much to do with the president's success, now so much of his support is being sidelined while executives seem to deny. they are getting what they want playing out the clock, showing up in hearings like this but nothing changes. the election gets closer and closer. >> yeah. it is all about changing the company culture. i appreciate that jack dorsey is having a conversation about it, how much is motivated by genuine concern for fairness represented on his platform. he is the only one who knows
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that. i just wish the culture at twitter is changed. you can't look at number of accounts that have been suspended the way things are promoted of the case in point what was it, planned parenthood spent something like $126 million on ads, on twitter i believe last month where live action is banned from being able to purchase any ads at all whatsoever. look what happened to the unplanned movie, their twitter account on opening weekend. there is lot of examples, they really need to explain a little bit better than algorithm mistakes. steve: took down one of motherter ricci's quotes -- mother teresa's quotes because they said it was hate speech. ainsley: umanned was number four, top independent movie this year. not putting on netflix. definitely a political agenda. dana, good to see you. >> very much so. good to see you all as well. steve: 8:30 here in the new york city. the southern border is already
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at a breaking point. now there is a new caravan heading north from honduras. we'll tell you the latest as we get reaction from newt gingrich. he is next. ♪ organic plant food and soil that finally work. ♪ ♪ and work... and work. ♪ ♪ and yes we did say organic. for twice the bounty, guaranteed. miracle-gro performance organics. organics finally grow up. and up, and up.
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his own specific health needs. at humana, we take a personal approach to your health, to provide care that's just as unique as you are. no matter what your name is. ♪ ainsley: we are back with a fox news alert. julian assange is arrested in london this morning. the wikileaks founder was taken into custody at ecuadorian embassy. you see him being escort escorted out there. it announced it has withdrawn assange's citizenship as well. steve: his attorney called his arrest quote, unprecedent the better by the united states seeking to extradite a foreign journalist to seeks charges for publishing truthful information. brian: a quote from assange. the u.s. warrant was issued in december 2017. for conspiracy with chelsea manning in early 2010.
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ainsley: chelsea manning leaked a trove of classified material to wikileaks. is currently in jail for refusing grand jury testimony. steve: we don't know what assange is officially charged with yet. he is currently at the courthouse in london. we should know shortly. brian: look at him there. a mess. justice department is aware of the rest. we don't know everything yet. bring in newt gingrich to get his take. newt, is this guy a hero or is he a villain? >> if you believe in national security, if you believe in the safety of the united states he's villain. i think it is a very good thing that the united states government is communicating that may take a while to get to you, but if you violate our secrets, if you endanger our national security, if you put the country at risk, we're going to come after you until we get you and i think, that is exactly the right approach. nobody has the right to leak secrets that could endanger
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lives and in fact could endanger the whole country. brian: the president actually pardoned mysteriously chelsea manning for doing that reportedly giving to it wiki cooks. i wonder if that plays a role in his court case? >> i have no idea how the lawyers will try to play this out but i think, if you go back if you look how much damage was done by all of these leaks, how many people who cooperated with us. brian: yep. >> were suddenly exposed, how many of our allies were offended, these, this is not a game. this is not somebody's right to go off on their own. at the heart of the civilization has to be a set of rules and some kind of accountability. steve: he is going to be appearing in court shortly in london. once we get word what is said we'll share it on the channel. newt -- >> let me point out. not just a law-abiding nation
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like the united states, or a dictatorship like russia. putin is sending people out to poison people we're extraditing into a courtroom. there is huge difference, constantly remind the peep between dictatorships and rule of law. brian: let me bring you to this quote. russia is accusing the british of this hour of strangling freedom. >> well, look i think you have to assume both the russians and chinese they will say anything they want to say with no relationship to truth and you shrug it off. the russian case, i have a new novel coming out called, collusion, the russians try to poison the u.s. senate. russians tradition of killing people with poison, other devices it is real, it is current, it happens now. when they complain about something like this you have to relax and realize the total hypocrisy of their system. ainsley: so barbaric. we're so grateful to live in this country.
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we are getting word a lot of people want to come into the country, many more. a new caravan is starting down in honduras. they're heading to guatemala. they are 1100 migrants, coming on two different buses at two different crossing points. we're told they want to come to america. your thought? >> the gallop world poll asked how many people would like to move to the use, i think the number was 165 million worldwide. those democrats who are for open borders are i think insane. and between bad judges who abuse their power and the congress's unwillingness to fix the law, the word has gone out across central america, hey, you may get there. the americans are dumb enough, if you get there you might be able to stay. so why not? i think, if you had a shot. >> if you were living in a poverty-ridden country, surrounded by drug cartels, have very limited future, watch tv,
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see america, you say why not take the risk. the truth is president trump is 100% correct. that we need an effective wall. we need to change the laws. we need to recognize how much judges collectively screwed this up by establishing rules that are impossible. we need to have a system that protects the united states. steve: we need mexico to help us. newt, thank you very much for joining from us palm beach gardens down in florida. folks, if you are into podcasts, check out newt's world podcast. available wherever you download. ainsley: hand it over to jillian, who has headlines for us. hello. jillian: you have to see this. a semi-truck plows into a school bus and flips on its side. the deadly crash caught on cash dash-cam a in maryland. did you see that? the tractor-trailer hitting a car and killing the driver. unclear what caused the crash. the bus driver, two high school students, three other people were taken to the hospital with
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non-life-threatening injuries. that is scary. georgetown students will add a new fee to pay for reparations. it would charge each student 27.27 cents. it refers to the 227 slaves they sold in the 1898. it would be the first policy of it us kind at a major u.s. school. if passed by students it will need to be approved by the board of trustees. next time you talk to alexa, you might want to think twice. bloomberg reports amazon has thousands of workers listening to private alexa conversations. the goal to improve the speech assistant and understand human speech better. they can review 100,000 audio clips per shift. amazon said employees do not have direct access to information to identify the person or account as part of this work flow. a great white shark swims toward as diver with its mouth wide open. the terrifying pictures taken by
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an under water photographer off the coast of australia. the 11-foot shark driving to the diver's cage turning feet away from the camera. calling it a wild experience. i don't know about that one. ainsley: i don't know how you get the nerve to continue to stand there, get ready to take that or swim or tread. steve: we need a bigger boat. brian: too many sharks in the ocean. i said that over and over again. janice dean has something unrelated. janice: wondering how you would make that happen. it was a beautiful thing. hi, everybody, how are you? thank you for coming making it mostly sunny here on the plaza. happy birthday ladies. what's your name? kathy. janice: where are you from? >> tennessee. janice: what have we got here? happy birthday. this is a nice gift. fabulous. say hi to everybody. let's take a look at the maps real quick. i have to talk about a blizzard happening across the country. look at the temperature
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difference. cold across the northern plains and upper midwest. six states under blizzard warnings from colorado up towards minnesota we have not only feet of snow in some areas and gusty winds in excess of 35 miles an hour. blizzard conditions last throughout the day into the night as the system eventually exits. it will still remain cold look at that snow in april. sometimes happens, my friend. we have a lot of power out ages. 81 in atlanta? that is where i want to be. big wave to everybody at home. thanks for coming. what a beautiful audience we have outside, steve, ainsley and brian. steve: thanks to everybody dropping by the world headquarters. tomorrow, live show here on "fox & friends." studio audience. ainsley: 41 minutes after the top of the hour. attorney general william barr making a stunning claim about the trump campaign. >> i think spying on a political campaign is a big deal.
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i think there spying did occur yes, i think spying did occur. ainsley: guy who did work for the campaign, the campaign manager, corey lewandoski here to react. hey. ♪ well, here's to first dates! you look amazing. and you look amazingly comfortable. when your v-neck looks more like a u-neck... that's when you know, it's half-washed. try downy fabric conditioner. unlike detergent alone, downy helps prevent stretching by conditioning and smoothing fibers, so clothes look newer, longer. downy and it's done.
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♪ >> i think spying did occur, yes, i think spying did occur. whether it was predicated, adequately predicated and i'm not suggesting it wasn't adequately predicated. but i need to explore that i think it is my obligation. unauthorized surveillance, i want to make sure there was no unauthorized surveillance. steve: the attorney general dropping a bombshell yesterday as he sets the report straight about spying within the trump
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administration, the campaign that is to say. former campaign manager corey lewandoski joins us live. >> good morning, steve. steve: the attorney general says spying did occur but he doesn't know whether or not it was legal? >> number one we know it was not legal. spying on americans citizens on domestic soil because you don't like our politics by definition is illegal. the real question attorney general barr has to determine how high in the previous administration did it go? did barack obama know about this? was this rogue operation by ben rhodes, national security advisor. comey, clapper, brennan, that team was authorized to do it. where did the pressure point come from. that is what attorney general barr wants to find out. who authorized when they authorized and did they know about it. steve: is this the spying president talked about, early on march 4th, 2017, typed out on twitter, terrible, found out obama had my wires tapped before the victory.
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nothing found. this is mccarthyism. we never had verification he had his wires tap, is that what he is talking about? >> i think he was talking about that, steve. you remember the mainstream media went apoplectic about this. donald trump is making these gross accusations with no foundation ever. fast forward, two years later we know spying was taking place. we know they did it in violation of the constitution. even if they applied for a fisa warrant to spy on americans they did so because they didn't like our politics. this is trump derangement syndrome. the president knew about it back then and the american people are learning about it now. steve: the whole idea that an administration would spy on a political opponent, if true, that would be just in annals of political scandals, that would be right up at the top. >> this would be, look, we asked the president about this dave bossy and i in our last book, do you think barack obama knew? we put a verbatim response. he said, yes he knew.
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if he had done this to his democratic opponent as president of the united states it would be called treason. >> the president thinks barack obama was involved? >> 100%. he absolutely thinks this went directly to the top of the previous administration. there is no way an opportunity like this to spy on a political opponent was not vetted at the highest levels of the government, whether susan rice or the deputy national security advisor ben rhodes or barack obama himself. somebody sanctioned this. his department of justice filed an application to spy on guys like carter page, corey lewandoski, jared kushner, ivanka trump everybody else at the campaign because they didn't like our politics. we're american citizens. we fought for what we believed in. if the criteria is we don't like your politics, we can spy on you, guess what, democrats better be very concerned. steve: do you have confidence bill barr the attorney general will launch some sort of behind the scenes investigation to figure it out? >> not just him but the inspector general of the department of justice michael horowitz will come out with a
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report, next 60, to 90 days. people like comey and strzok, page, all indicted or referred for criminal prosecution. steve: we will find out in if they have some evidence. corey lewandoski thank you very much. >> thank you. steve: tom shillue, host of "the quiz show," he is member of two barbershop quartets. we celebrate national barber quartet day live. somebody that loves barber shop quartets. they are here live. >> he will we'll sort out the julian assange and bring you latest. bill parr testimony still being picked yesterday. chairman of committee, jerry moran is our guest. bernie sanders pitches "medicare for all." we have a big three hour tour for you. see you in ten minutes top of the hour.
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♪ ainsley: in honor of national barbershop quartet day tom shillue brought his quartet, it is called scully square, to perform on "fox & friends." steve: tom joins us right now. introduce us to your quartet. >> this is bob, he sings baretone. steve sings base. matt sullivan sings tenors high notes. steve: you guys have been together since high school? >> sung together in the boy's room in the high school. >> nix connect co. brian: should have been in has? >> this is what we do. we were bad dudes. steve: absolutely. >> walk on the wild side. brian: you're involved in two quartets. which one do you like better? >> this is our original quartet.
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old pictures of us, harm noising back in the 1980s. this is the original quartet. my old pals from high school. ainsley: did you see the movie the breakup? >> i did not see the movie. ainsley: you didn't? got to watch it. there is a quartet on there. not the lone rangers, but the lone, it was really funny. i shouldn't have asked that. i thought one would have seen it. steve: because national barbershop quartet day, would you sing a song? >> sure. give us a note. brian: we'll get out of the way. here they are. ♪ ♪ no need to come back at all, let's take a powder for boston
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chowder, let's get away from it all ♪ ♪ we'll travel around from town to town, we'll see every state ♪ ♪ i repeat i love you sweet, so sweet, in all the 48 ♪ ♪ my darling let's go again to niagra, this time we'll look at the false, ♪ ♪ let's get get out of our rut he, let's get away from it all ♪ ♪ we'll travel around from town to town, we'll visit every state ♪ ♪ and i will repeat i love you sweet so sweet in all the 48 ♪ ♪ my darling, let's go again to niagra, this time we'll look at the false, let's leave our rut hut dear, get out of our rut,
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let's get away from it all all ♪ ♪ let's get away from it all [cheers and applause] patients with serious diseases are being targeted for cuts to their medicare drug coverage. new government restrictions would allow insurance companies to come between doctor and patient. and deny access to individualized therapies millions depend on. call the white house today. help stop cuts to part d drug coverage that put medicare patients at risk. it's going to be passover in just a few days. and these people are in desperate need. these are very difficult times for israel and the jewish people. as the government spends more and more of it's resources for battling terrorism.
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in their struggle for survival. many of these people are ill they're sick, they're alone. they don't have the money to afford things that many of us, most of us, take for granted. people, who don't have enough money to even buy some matza the unleavened bread as the bible describes it. israel and it's people need your help now. you can make a life changing difference by calling and saying that you give a $25 food box to help a family in need in israel. thank you and god bless you for your support. and back pain made it hard to sleep and get up on time. then i found aleve pm. the only one to combine a safe sleep aid, plus the 12 hour pain relieving strength of aleve. i'm back. aleve pm for a better am.
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>> by the way, tomorrow from this studio we'll have another one of our famous live studio audience programs. brought to you tomorrow by our friends at federal express. >> fantastic! >> we love fedex and we love all of you and can't wait to have many of you in our studio tomorrow. >> in the "after the show show" tom shillue will you teach how to sing? >> we'll teach you how to swing barbershop. >> sing us out right now. ♪
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>> bill: nice sound. fox news alert now out of london. police have arrested the wikileaks founder julian assange on a warrant from the u.s. we could soon learn the charges against him. breaking news, good morning, everybody. if you're waking up major headline throughout the day. bill hemmer live in new york city. sandra has the day off. >> julie: i'm julie banderas in for sandra. assange was carried out of the ecuador embassy after the south american nation withdrew its asylum. >> bill: greg palkot is tracking this now. what have we learned? >> i think they're moving very fast in london. we understand that julian assange will be appearing
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