tv FOX Friends FOX News May 3, 2019 3:00am-6:00am PDT
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rob: all the way from california to do this. del taco make a lot of money this weekend. it's cinco de mayo. don't drink too much. we will see you back here on monday. carley: "fox & friends" starts right now. ♪ ♪ it don't matter where we go ♪ we always find our way back home. steve: hi, everybody. welcome to our tv juame 3rd, it's a friday. suddenly i feel like i would like to travel out west to del taco and have a taco. ainsley: so much going on the kentucky de derby and cinco de mayo. steve: meantime go to our lead story and we have exclusive video you will only see right here on this channel. mexico is supporting 100 migrants while on their way to the united states.
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will. ainsley: major sign it is keeping its promise to the trump administration. brian: migrant tried escaping overcrowded shelter this morning. griff? griff: hey, brian, ainsley, and steve. moments ago here on the wall is a shelter. take a look at this video. one of the migrants scaling the wall, trying to escape. the officials getting him under control other exclusive video we had yesterday was 93 cuban migrants taken to the airport, put on a federal police airplane and being sent back to coulibaly. to cuba. that a sign to president trump stop the flow of migrants into our country. two nights ago by the way at this shelter we can show you an image of a vehicle damaged. there was a riot. the words of the officials inside telling me here that the cubans particularly got aggressive and were upset.
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we couldn't get in and get a look there we did get you e exclusive video of the other shelter here. it's the one holding so many migrants that are from all over the globe. some 1200 are in here. from countries like pakistan, bangladesh, sri lanka, began darks beganna, somalia and the congo. we talked to a migrant from the congo who has a message from fellow migrants and for president trump, listen. > listen ugly. [[inaudible]] >> our life -- to keep our life. griff: for those migrants that donate there are tents being set up in el paso in the rio grande day sector to house the unprecedented
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overflow of family units that have continued to surge at our border and the tragic news we are learning about today. speaking of family units, a family trying to cross near eagle pass on the rio grande day river a 10 month old boy's body recovered late wednesday night. three others continued to be missing along that river. we will bring you an update from the customs and border protection when we get them, brian, ainsley, steve? steve: all right. all these detention centers and shelters being set up in southern mexico that's in reaction to our president saying hey, mexico, have you got to do more to stop people at your southern border, right? griff: that's exactly right, steve, i went in yesterday, had an off camera meeting with a woman who runs almost all of southern mexico's immigration. she says the plan is to try and keep this surge of migrants in the southern part of mexico for now. brian: wow, griff, thanks. great work. meanwhile, more good news
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for those people at the border who want to find out if families being trafficked or legitimate families looking for asylum. ice will start immediate d.n.a. testing on families. show up, swab your mouth and find out if you are actually relate to the child or children that you are there with. it will start as early as next week. ainsley: a test facility that has been set up in el paso that opens today to help with the surge of migrants that are making it across our border. these facilities have shortable showers, recreation areas, sleeping quarters, they are divided by gender and children and families traveling alone. they are weather proof and climate controlled. we are spending $37 million for every four months to house them there. steve: all right. meanwhile, let's switch geerls. brian: unbelievable. steve: big story on the front page of the "new york times." remember a couple years ago when donald trump said that the government was spying on him? turns out the "new york times" in this morning's edition right here on the front we're going to show you the headline, the i couldn't know line headline, fbi sent investigator posing
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as assistant to meet with trump aide back in 2016. we have been telling you parts of the story for the last year or so. it involves george papadopoulos who got a guy named professor halper a cambridge associate. he said i would like you to come and talk to me about oil leases and mediterranean things like that. i will pay you $3,000. so they start affidavit dialogue. and then eventually the fbi inserted a government investigator into the conversation because the fbi wanted to find out what their links were to russia. ainsley: george papadopoulos met this lady who went by alzra tucker. met at a bar in 2016. he thought it was aide. assistant from cambridge. he knew immediately when they sat down this was not an assistant. listen to this. >> when i met with her and she was very suggestive, as
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can you understand. younger very flirtation. i understood right away this wasn't a cambridge assistant. trying to do two things one to extract information about my professional connections in the middle east and, two, to see if i had any information that she could potentially extract from me about trump and russia which, of course, is nonsense. when the "new york times" suggested in their reporting today that the british were told of this operation i believe the british were actively spying on me as well. brian: i'm fascinated by the fact that the "new york times" think these broke this story because it's in his book. and we have been talking about this for about two years. and you saw dan bongino, among others, leading the charge and nobody was picking this up outside this network virtually. so, i think it's important to understand this happened on september 15th. the fbi seems to me, in my humble opinion, to be covering their tracks, possibly because michael who
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horowitz is about to expose them anyway. essentially what's happening in july ambassador downer went up to his fbi contacts and he is the ambassador to australia located in london. he said i talked to this guy george papadopoulos and he told me russia has hillary clinton's emails. and then the fbi says so concerned about where donald trump's campaign, how they were colluding with russia they were forced on september 1,515th to call of halper, you are a professor. work for us. you dependable. he is energy pert. >> george papadopoulos. send him an email. offer him $3,000. get a hotel invite him to london and ask him do you know about russia and trump colluding? steve: had a couple. brian: astra tucker comes in and flirtation and barely
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speaks english: you are not helping out. carter page, so there was spying going on in the fbi in this story is trying to rationalize why they are doing this thing called spying which everyone thought was made the president seem out to lunch. steve: ezra turk is an fbi investigator. halper is an fbi informant. he has been talking to the fbi for years. they sent her in so that they could have a meeting and she came right out and said was the trump camp working with russia? they did not get any fruitful information. she returned to the united states. the fbi has declined to comment regarding this question. but the big question goes like this, how high does this go? was it james comey who said hey, i think there could be
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spying going on or we should spy on the trump campaign because we think they are somehow tied up with the russians? ainsley: funny you should throw out that name. steve: or did it go higher than that. ainsley: the president sat down with catherine herridge and she asked him a myriad of questions about so many topics. a wonderful interview. he said i have been telling you all along this has been going on. he blames the top guy at the time james comey. listen. >> how did this whole investigation start? because i think it's corrupt as hell. i think what's happened between comey and mccabe and brennan and all of these people. >> if you take director comey out of the equation and his actions in 2016 and 2017, would the country be where it is today? >> i think that he did a terrible job. i would say he probably let led some kind of an effort, the word spying has been used. he probably was one of the people leading the effort on spying. so,. >> that's a very serious
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charge to make. >> i know. we will find out whether or not it was true. i think it could very well be true. but we're going to find out pretty soon. brian: george papadopoulos thinks it was the cia link directly to john brennan obviously and maybe it goes further. this is just chapter 1. a lot of people theorize the "new york times" getting ahead of michael horowitz they are about to totally miss out on the story we have been covering. steve: they have to create a narrative. this is it. >> brian: ambassador downer? who he is? what happened? well i talked to papadopoulos he sat down on couch and writes in his book ambassador downer is somebody in 2006 marshalled together through the australian government $25 million to give to the clinton foundation for what seems to be a good cause aids patients in south asia. there is a relationship there between the clintons and downer. all i'm say something watch how this thing develops at home. home. ainsley: the president talked about that. 18 people involved. they spent 35 to
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$40 million. if you look at all the investigators, many of them were clinton supporters, democrats. most of them were democrats, he said. steve: yeah. the president was up on capitol hill a couple of weeks ago. and one of the reporters asked him regarding, you know, the whole starting of the mueller investigation and all of this. he said do you think the reporter said do you think it reached the west wing of the obama white house? and the president said i don't want to say that but i think you know the answer. so stay tuned. the horowitz report is coming in 30 to 60 days. carley: carley joins us with some headlines. carley: hello, good morning. happy friday. let's get you caught up on other news happening this morning. at least four people are dead following days of violent protests in venezuela. in an exclusive fox news interview. president trump says the u.s. is prepared to act. >> red line in venezuela? >> i don't want to say but we have lots of options and some of them are very tough options. >> is there a tipping point
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for military intervention. >> there is always a tipping. i want to help the people that are dying. >> correspondent catherine herridge will have more of her one-on-one interview with the president in the 8:00 hour. more felons in florida will have voting rights restored as long as their court fees are paid. state lawmakers passing the amendment months after voters approved it. a judge could wave a felon's fee or convert them into community service hours. people convicted of murder or felony sexual offenses will not qualify to get their rights back. and beloved "star wars" actor who played chewbacca peter mayhew has dated. >> chewy, we are home. >> "star wars" co-star billie dean williams much
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more to chewy to me. my heart hurts. i will miss you my friend no. word on how he died. he had undergone spine surgery last year. he was survived by his wife and three children. he was 74 years old. those are your headlines. sad news. what a cool life he had. ainsley: chewbacca voice: i had two little yorkies one of them passed away. i think they are supposed to be like which he baca? remember chewbacca mom? will will. i forgot about her. steve: thank you for the update. have you heard? joe biden does not think china is a threat. >> china is going to eat our lunch? come on, man guess what? they are not competition for us. brian: really? he is about the only one in the world to think so. that's not the former v.p.'s
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brian: really? former vice president democratic 2020 frontrunner joe biden facing bipartisan criticism he's dismissed china as threat including from president trump. >> i view everybody as competition. china, right now we lose 500 billion but for somebody to be so naive and say that cline is not a problem if biden said that that's a very dumb statement. brian: i can't agree more. here to break down is robert w. charles. is biden right or wrong? >> well, obviously he is wrong. on a personal level is he a friendly guy he has poor judgment particularly on foreign policy and the examples are numerous. interestingly, robert gates in his book who criticizes almost smoke two times secretary of defense and cia quoting joe biden has been wrong on almost every
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foreign policy and national security issue for the last four decades. if you go back in time this is a guy who wanted to divide up iraq. he opposed the bin laden raid. firestone iran deal and sending cash to them. back in 1979 celebrated the ayatollahs coming to power because he thought that was going to bring human rights. this is a guy that opposed the defense build up of ronald reagan. he opposed the b-1. he opposed b-2 that brought down that policy direction brought down the soviet union. he opposed the mx missiles. and then get to china. think for a minute what he said on china. china is truly or number one potential adversary and our number one competitor in the world. number two economy in the world. this is a country that right now kills about 13 million children through infanticide or abortion a year on their one child policy. they have about a million peaceful muslims in prison camps up in the northwest for reeducation as good
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communists. they execute about 2400 of their people annually, a lot of them for dissidence. brian: robert, let's add this spying on us every day even with their college students. they are building islands. promised not to put military hardware there it's there. >> right. brian: hemisphere and couple days away from historic, we think, trade deal announcement. for you not to admit that they are a foe incredibly naive. >> they have islands in the south china sea that they built for interruption of international trade. they -- they are pushing the limits on super computing to hack us. they have space weapons that they have tested. bottom line is let's hope we can get a good deal and i think trump is doing the right thing but let's not be naive. brian: absolutely. i was stunned by his statement and see if any of his 21 competitors bring it up on the democratic side. robert, great job. democrats have a new way to
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smear bill barr this chicken. diamond and silk next. ♪ why can't we be friends ♪ why can't we be friends ♪ man: i'm 53. but in my mind i'm still 35. that's why i take osteo bi-flex, to keep me moving the way i was made to. it nourishes and strengthens my joints for the long term. osteo bi-flex. find our coupon in sunday's paper. osteo bi-flex. i was ready to make my mark, but i didn't know how. i was working the same job for a few years. i had a degree and some experience but no career. i opened the careerbuilder app and found an awesome job at a company i love. it even built a resume for me with skills i didn't know i had. i applied with a tap.
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president trump's wins a a personal insult and even blamed hillary clinton. >> meanwhile, democrats, some, attacking the attorney general after he skipped that hearing before the house judiciary committee yesterday. >> he lied to congress. if anybody else did that it it would be considered a crime. >> we should begin the proceedings to remove the attorney general. is he obstructing in realtime. >> chicken barr should have shown up today. brian: unbelievably embarrassing fox nation personalities diamond and silk. so, this guy congressman cohen actually ate fried chicken and day before answering the questions that they say they weren't capable of answering. is he a chicken in your mind, diamond and silk? >> you know, he is racially insensitive is what i think and just can you imagine if
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that was a republican doing that to a democrat? i mean, just think about that for a moment. i wants you all to understand the reason why the attorney general is experiencing all of this slander is because the democrats are afraid. they are getting caught up in the shenanigans who orchestrated and masterminded this russia witch-hunt hoax. and once that comes out, i mean, it's going to blow up in their faces. so what they are going to try do, they are going to try to smear him. they smear him because they fear him. >> that's right. >> they fear him because is he going to get to the truth. this is not about the attorney general taking up for president trump is he taking up for the truth. is he putting the truth and facts out there. >> that's right. >> that's what the american people want to see him do. >> that's right. ainsley: a lot of these democrats keep saying they want to impeach this president. when you ask the american people it doesn't seem to be that's what they want. if you look at this quinnipiac poll 29 percent said yeah, let's impeach. look how many said no. 66%.
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the majority say no. he shouldn't be impeached. your reaction? >> he should not be impeached. he hasn't done anything wrong. >> yeah. >> listen, he ran for president of the united states and won fair and square. >> that's right. >> and for the obama administration, the fbi under the obama administration, to push this on the american people to try to go against the will of the people. >> that's right. >> who voted this man in enough is enough. >> it's enough. >> we, the people, are looking at this here. we don't trust the fbi. we don't trust obama and his administration. we want to know what happened when did did happen and how did it happen. everybody needs to be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law. steve: ladies, a couple weeks ago when william barr the attorney general, you know, he went to capitol hill and he suggested that spying did occur during the obama administration on the trump campaign, perhaps, and we can look into whether or not it was all legitimate.
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well now the "new york times" on the front page they have got a story about how the fbi sent informant -- sent a paid in to talk to people on the trump campaign. federal government spied on the trump pain. >> and why? why was they spied on? who orchestrated that. >> that's right. >> who gave the okay to do that. why did you do that? that's wrong. let me tell you something. when he was running for president he was also a private citizen. somebody come and inform trump something was going on. the chinese spy when it comes to feinstein. >> [inaudible]. >> hillary clinton campaign. >> why didn't do you this with trump. this is wrong y'all. >> yes. >> somebody needs to be brought to the table. >> diamond and silk knew something was going on all the way back december 31st, 2015. we told you all something was not right.
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and look at it something is not right. it's time for these democrat congress to stop all of this investigation. it's time for them to legislate and cooperate with the president of the united states. >> that's right. steve: legislate and cooperate. ainsley: said the same thing in that interview last night. time for us all to work together. steve: diamond and silk joining us from diamond and silk world headquarters. ladies, thank you very much. >> thank you for having us. ainsley: it is time for kentucky derb der news on the race and forecast. you look beautiful. janice: kentucky oaks today in pink in honor of breakfast cancebreastcancer awa. it's raining. we will tell you what the forecast has been the last 145 years of the kentucky derby. stay with us, "fox & friends" is coming right back. ♪
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astrazeneca may be able to help. >> have a blow out, guys. slam your brakes on. drive it. brian: here did you go shot of the morning high school football coach teaching his boys more than just football. ainsley: steve carter assistant coach at athens high school in alabama shows his team thousand how to change a flat tire. steve: previously he taught them how to check the noil their car when they open the hood and how to use some certain household tools. the video posted on twitter has been viewed more than a million times. and you know yesterday we had that christian comic on the program with us and he was talking about look, i'm a millennial, i don't know how to do anything. my dad said go get me the phillips and i went and got the neighbors. ainsley: got the neighbors. that's funny. i think it's so awesome that
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this coach did that teaching the boys more than just about sports because we look up to our coaches and they are so valuable. steve: about life, too. brian: most kids when they get a flat tire take out their phones and hit the uber app. and they get a ride an or call a.a.a. and get the uber app. and don't wait by the car. ainsley: or call your dad. steve: in the future, how many kids are going to own cars and are cars going to be driven by people or are they going to be economists? brian: fly and take up all the roads and grow grass. carley shimkus please work on that. carley: i'm on it good morning, guys. he once threatened to blow up the new york city subways. admitted terrorist could soon walk free. a judge sentencing azazi to 10 years in prison essentially time served. he could have gotten life in prison for plotting the failed attack in 2009.
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but he got a much lighter sentence after meeting with investigators more than 100 times and providing information about al qaeda to the government. azazi originally from afghanistan will be supervised for the rest of his life. he could be free within days. another conflict of interest in the hand links of the jussie smollett case. a chicago judge set to decide whether special prosecutor should be appointed has a son who works in the office top prosecutor kim foxx. judge leroy martin jr. fighting calls for his recusal. he is supposed to decide whether investigation is needed to look into why charges against the empire actor were suddenly dropped. and incredible rescue after a man survives a fall into america's most dangerous volcano. rescue crews into the hawaii volcano. the man plunging nearly 70 feats. he slipped after climbing over a railing at the
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seeming bluff overlook. the man was air lifted to the hospital. norway is having a whale of a time with this suspicious russian spy. huge hit taking selfies with locals. issufisherman finding this last week with a harness labeled equipment of st. petersburg. officials say it looked like a go pro-could have been attached. russia denies using the whale as a spy but norway is still looking into it. those are your headlines. pretty friendly whale there. steve: didn't spy on the trump campaign, right? that we know of. ainsley: unclear. czar. brian: one big. carley: norway. ainsley: look what they just handed me. i think you wore it earlier? heather wore it you wore it. steve: first weekend in may that means time for the big hats the kentucky derby is here. ainsley: time for the hat. watch out, you guys. run for the roses.
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hey, janice. janice: good morning. rob wore one today i'm expecting more from you guys. brian: i'm waiting for the chin strap. janice: i think can i make that happen. 145 years this derby has run. this is the kentucky oaks today phillies run for the hillies. girl horses. all wearing pink today to honorable those with breast cancer. beautiful outfits and pink has. going to rain today for most of the morning. have a drying out period this afternoon. i'm going to a big gala tonight the brown stable gown gala. thankfully going to be drier. for tomorrow's race we are going to be expecting rain all day. another rainy day. i have been doing this three years in a row. we have seen rain on the track last year by the way was the record wettest derby ever back in 2018. we had over 3 inches of
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rain. when you look back in history we also had snow. snow back in 1979, and then the swarmest derby on record was back in 1959, 93 degrees. we are going to get probably into the 60's at best today and tomorrow. and then, again, it's going to be much of a rainy day. a wet track. the horses to watch three of bob bafers horses. roaster e game winner and improbable. if you recall bob bawfer won the triple crown with justified. something that has only been done 13 years. and next hour we have bob baffort here and talk about his horses what he expects the horses are going to do on a muddy track. we have actually seen a lot of these horses racing this morning and getting a workout. a lot of them have their little ears up. that's an indication that they love running in the rainy weather. i can't say that for myself
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but i am glad that i have a hat today. brian: janice, i watched it while you were on with rob and carley, they were training in the pouring rain. janice: yes. yes. they love it a lot of these horses really love it and justify won last year on a muddy track. so we have to see what happens. ainsley: hey, janice. we know everyone drinks the mint juleps. steve: kentucky hot brown big sand wish with turkey and bacon on the top? janice: oh my gosh, where can i get ahold of one of those? ainsley: maybe at the party tonight. janice: i want one. janice: one more i have to tell you, wait, wait, wait. break olives. beautiful hats. ainsley: in brooklyn. they supply hats for department storms all over the country. brian: brooklyn does everything. coming up i have got to tell you over the summer if you
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like fox nation, the fox nation series will stream this america, great from the start to the stage on the 19th bonita springs go to the southwest event center on july 19th. and older on the 20th so i don't have to fly home in between. then in august charlotte, north carolina, the booth play house birmingham alabama and the lyric theater. go to brian kilmeade.com/tour. i will see you live and previews of the upcoming season on fox nation and combine all the books and talk about what's going on here in the news so i hope to see you out there. steve: roadshow. brian kilmeade.com. ainsley: great city. all right. also, it's 20 minutes till the top of the hour. bombshell news on how the feds tried to spy on the 2016 campaign. steve: jason chaffetz is fired up about the spying business. he is going to join us live next. ♪ ♪
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ask your healthcare provider today about once-weekly ozempic®. carley: good friday morning. back with headlines. a shocking discovery for a chicago beauty queen when a bruise on her thumb turns out to be the deadly skin cancer melanoma. she saw it while at a nail salon but didn't see her doctor until it swelled up several days later. melanoma kills more than 700 americans per year. fda is cracking down on popular sleeping pill. demanding medications like ambiance into place a black box label on prescription sleep medications. it warns side effects can lead to serious injury or death according to usa today. more than 60 cases of complex sleep behavior were found over 26 years that could include sleep walking or even sleep driving.
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steve: that is scary stuff. thank you, carley. brand new revelations of how the feds tried to spy on the trump campaign in 2016. the "new york times" on their front page reporting this morning that the fbi sent an investigator posing as a research assistant to meet with then trump aide george papadopoulos in london as part of its probe into ties between russia and the trump campaign. they tried to find some. there weren't any. here to react former utah congressman fox news contributor and author of that book, the deep state, jason chaffetz. jason, good morning to you. >> good morning. good morning. president trump derided when he said hey they spied on me. turns out they spied on him. >> it's highly suspicious. comey, one of the very first meetings with the president started saying, you know, mr. president, there is this dossier out there. i just want you to know. i think trying to lessen the pain. but now we are to the point where not only do we know
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there was spying and this is not necessarily a new revelation. those of us following this know this happened quite some time ago. but you had george papadopoulos saying that the fbi actually sent somebody over there to seduce him. that's his word, and to try to extract information from him. it's quite stunning. steve: jason, you have known this story for -- that's acre before george papadopoulos. you have known this story over a year and i have known this story for a long time as well. why would the "new york times" choose now? it seems like an odd time now to put on the front page, yeah, looks like the fbi put a government investigator into the campaign real close to try to see if they were working with russia. >> there are two things happening, steve. number one, the "new york times" is going to start dropping these stories to try to get out ahead of it to soften the blow. i think when horowitz comes out with his inspector general report and the department of justice
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probably in the next 60 days, make some more stuff public and, number two, i also think that nancy pelosi and the explosions you are seeing over in the house and the attacks on the attorney general barr are a precursor to try to discredit the attorney general because the attorney general in his testimony as kim strawfl points out in the "wall street journal" this morning, i think that he was actually saying and foreshadowing that they are pursuing this story with vigor and i think the democrats are trying again to discredit the attorney general knowing that he is going after the ohr gin of how this whole thing got going. because, it is in nefarious at best. steve: speaker pelosi yesterday said that mr. barr was a liar. it sounds like they may find him in contempt for not turning over the unredacted mueller report. but we have got to remember as well, jason chaffetz, who has watched this investigation started. and people close to the president has said why
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didn't the obama administration, if they knew this might be going on. why didn't they try to protect him? why didn't they reach out and say hey, we think russians are trying to fiddle with your campaign? >> that's what our government is supposed to do. when donald trump became the republican nominee they gave him secret service protection. the cia gives him briefings? why aren't they protecting the president. there is even a scif that somebody has ill intent, they are supposed to go to the candidate, then donald trump and inform him so he can -- they are there to protect america, but, no, look at clapper, brennan, comey, you look at the senior officials. i don't know how high this stuff goes. but, they were not protecting donald trump the nominee. they were actually out there spying on him. and planting stories and leaking stories. the president has been right on this one. it's one of the worst scandals we have ever seen and it's tied to hillary clinton and the democrats. that's the financial trail. that's just the facts. and i think you are going to see all that come out in --
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it's going to balloon in the next 60 days. steve: interesting stuff. we await michael horowitz's investigation he is the ig at the doj jason chaffetz, thank you for joining us today. >> thank you. steve: what do you think about that? email us at friends@foxnews.com. are you making your morning cup of coffee right now? our next guest built her-million-dollar coffee business out of her house. we will continue with our we built this series next. ♪ clap along ♪
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two. -- look at that cute picture. she started a coffee company out of her house six years ago when she started drinking coffee. the company now expected to make $3 million this year. joining us now is the founder and president of smart since coffee laura. thank you for being with us. >> thanks for having me. ainsley: congratulations. what made you want to start this company. >> six years ago i had a great job. working in advertising. i had my son and i just had a really long commute so i -- it just -- i was only seeing my son one hour a day. i was miserable. i decided that was the time to start my own company. unlike many entrepreneurs who have a product they are passionate about or something, i was passionate about starting my own company. i just had no idea what kind of company i wanted. ainsley: i think we are all that way. everyone would love to start a company. how do you do it? >> commerce company that's the way the world was going towards. i buy everything online. that being said you want something easy to ship.
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nothing breakable. i have a marketing background. i understand in marketing i work so hard to get customers and i didn't want it to be a one-time purchase. i want to retain a customer and keep have them coming back. ainsley: coffee is a good way to keep those customers coming back. >> it's amazing, yes. ainsley: i understand thank you notes were to you. >> yes. one thing ecommerce is also automated and faceless. really important to build a brand that's authentic and fun and i'm truly grateful for all the customers. i write thank you notes and connect with them on social and email. anyone who is a customer knows this. important to show gratitude towards each customer so they want to shop with my company and tell their friends about it. ainsley: now you are in walmart and amazon. how do you break into these big companies? >> you know, it's really developing a brand. it's very competitive space. but i created a niche with fun and unique flavors.
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ainsley: tell us about your company. >> yeah. ainsley: flavors and all of that. beautiful packaging. >> drink your dessert guilt free. drinks are sugar free, carb free. chocolate peanut butter. banana cream. you can really indulge and do did guilt-free. my lattes are 70-calories. i don't like to drink calories. so i want you to indulge and have really fun flavors without all the sugar and carbs. so, yeah, that walls my niche. --that was my niche. i developed flavors and brand. ainsley: go on amazon we any box? >> this is our monthly subscription box. i wanted to get into the gift space. everyone knows coffee lovers but what do you get them? >> go in your keurig. >> and we have ground coffee and coming out with caffeinated creamer very soon. i want you to make anything
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super caffeinated. ainsley: that's so great. what's your at vice to other people watching who want to take that leap. >> my advice is don't be afraid to make mistakes. don't be afraid of failure. we all make mistakes. people are so scared of it they don't think what's on the other side of the mistake. it's a learning experience. you get back up. i move forward in a more educated direction. ainsley: if you are starting a company. how do you find a place that will package it for you. >> it is a lot of research. it is. starting any kind of company you have to know your space and find people a lot of phone calls. and the more calls you make the more educated you sound when you are talking. ainsley: started in your basement and now have a big warehouse congratulations. >> thank you so much. what's the name of your company? >> smart sips coffee. ainsley: have a good weekend. we have a big show, we have
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woman: that is freaky. ♪ life is a highway ♪ i want to ride it all night long ♪ steve: well, much drier here in new york city than at churchill downs where janice dean is all morning long. brian: got some contacts i wouldn't be surprised her maybe going into the jockey business it's all about knowing people. ainsley: the winner last year was trying to get us to bay "fox & friends" horse with him. steve: i remember hearing that on the front cover the "new york times" do you see that story right there? a lot of people thought this would never be in their paper. the fbi sent cloaked investigator to question trump aide in 2016. so, in other words, you
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know, when we heard the president of the united states say that the fbi, the government, the deep state spied on me, people go oh, come on. you are paranoid. turns out it happened. brian: believe me, this is just the beginning. and for those of how are about to go story with the "new york times" had, which, to me is, an ongoing justification for what we have been saying has happened on this channel for the last two years as this whole thing has been unwound. people have been focusing on the mueller probe, okay. we had to wait for it to come out after 22 months and $25 million. now that that's out and people are debating and eating chicken in congress. now it's time to look at investigating the investigators. and it looks as though the "new york times" is trying to get ahead of the story they have been ignoring. ainsley: the inspector general is researching all of this trying to figure out how the mueller probe even started. and we all have questions about that. we wanted -- the president says he wants someone to be held accountable for that if you read the story in the
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"new york times." it talks about what happened. and george papadopoulos met with this lady, her name -- she told him her name was turk posing as research assistant meet me at this bar in london, they sit down and he says he immediately knew that this woman, she was really flirtatious. posing as a research assistant and instead she is a government investigator. the fbi sent her to london to understand trump's relationship with russia. steve: that's the key, ainsley. she was sent by the fbi. our fbi to spy on the trump campaign because she was working with this other guy, professor halper who was apparent lay paid government infor a very long time. we know of at least two times, two people that were spying on the trump campaign. but when you watch over the last couple of years, you watch some of the channels and you watch some of the things that people say, that claim by the president that he was spied on has been
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roundly mocked like this. >> president trump has a new favorite word and every time he uses it, he is lying. and that is the word spy. >> the president is tweeting in high gear. he wants you to believe that his campaign was spied on and it's one of the worst things that we have ever seen from government. >> the notion that somehow the fbi implanted, planted someone inside the campaign to spy on the campaign is just not true. brian: it is true. because in this same "new york times" story out today which is really two years old, okay? three years old, it turns out that they were concerned about george papadopoulos, an unpaid foreign policy advisor with the trump campaign and this guy named carter page with the fbi. papadopoulos thinks it's the cia he said that last night. john brennan or james comey's organizations who worked for president obama.
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they are concerned about papadopoulos' links to russia because of something ambassador downer reported to the fbi. ambassador downer is familiar with intelligence sources in america. so on september 15th, they called stephon halper tell george papadopoulos meet me in london i will give you 3,000 bucks. i need your energy knowledge your knowledge of natural gas. he says okay. he shows up. would you meet my assistant first in a bar and they meet and he goes wait a second barely speak english. you are asking me questions about the russians what the heck? next day halper has the same meeting, same tenure. they get nothing from him. next day listen to these james. joseph mifsud and the next name you will hear about ambassador downer. same ambassador that engineered the accumulation of $25 million for the clinton foundation back in 2006. steve: you've got to wonder why is the "new york times"
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putting this story out now? we had jason chaffetz on a little while ago the "new york times" is trying to get ahead the story. at the same time, something else is happening and that is that democrats are trying to discredit bill barr, our attorney general. remember, nancy pelosi yesterday said he was a liar. they where to hold him in contempt because his department, he heads up the department of justice as the attorney general, mr. horowitz is the inspector general of the department of justice. and they are about to take a look at all this spying business and the mueller report how it all fits with the fisa thing and dossier. and jason chaffetz said this as well. >> look at clapper, brennan, comey, you look at the senior officials. i don't know how high this stuff goes. but, they were not protecting donald trump the nominee. they were out there actually spying on him and planning stories and leaking stories
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the president has been right on this one. it's one of the worst scandals we have ever seen. it's tied to hillary clinton and the democrats. that's the financial trail. that's just the facts. and i think you are going to see all that come out in it's going to bloom in the next 60 days. brian: it's not going to be a complete surprise when he gets the information. steve: he has already said spying occurred. brian: right. he got brutalized for it even as late as yesterday. people are going to say wow, i was really wrong about that and say wow, great work by michael schmidt and mark and goldman great work by doing a story that we have been doing at various times over the last two and a half years. steve: i think it was this week though that joe biden said during the obama administration there wasn't even a whiff of scandal. this happened during the obama administration. ainsley: speak of joe biden, another democrat has gotten into the race. his name is michael bennett.
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he is a senator. you know him if you live in colorado. but doesn't ring a bell if you probably don't live in that area. but there are six other senators or he joins six senators that are democrats running for president. steve: he put out a four-minute video yesterday. he has had quite a personal story in the last year he beat prostate cancer. they were able to get it early and he is completely recovering. however, he does face an uphill battle when it comes to fundraising because there are so many darn people running on the democratic side. brian: if double figures, 20, 22 people. michael bennett someone who is kind of interesting. younger than joe biden and they say he is somewhat moderate from a purple state in colorado which leans blue. ainsley: some of the younger ones put their name out there recognizable. if they know they are not going to win. you get a cabinet job. then your name is more recognizable and then maybe you can run in the future.
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president trump was asked about this last night in that interview with catherine herridge. listen. >> >> another democrat entered the race today. it joe biden's nomination to lose? >> biden seems to have a lead. i would be very happy if it were biden. >> happy, why? >> i think he did a bad job. i would be running against. >> you think he would be beatable. >> or bernie. i think it's between those two. i don't see anybody else. >> who would you rather face? >> i don't want to say that to you but i don't think it matters very much. i think we are going to do well. brian: joe biden is interesting. is he going after the president. ignoring the rest of the field. you may like that or not. the rest of the field is not ignoring him. looking into his son's links to china investment and ukraine investments and what he may have done on air force 2. including 22 people who want the nomination. number three looking at how bad the economy is and how
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unfair the tax plan is the president is not worried about that. his foreign policy is china not a threat are you kidding me? to me, that is a pretty occasional. ainsley: rumors he didn't get in last time because of the death of his son but also because what scrutiny that would be placed on his family members, on his son most parents would say you can attack me but don't attack my kids. i wonder if his dad said go for it run. we will face it. steve: one of the things people want to hear joe biden talk about is immigration. that's where we turn right now. brian: exclusive video you will only see on fox news. mexico is deporting nearly 100 migrants while they are on their way to the u.s. steve: a major sign that the country of mexico is trying to keep its promise to help the trump administration in stopping people in mexico, not allowing them to come to the united states. ainsley: griff jenkins is down there. he will joins us live in mexico as the border crisis turns deadly unfortunately in the rio grande.
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griff? griff: unfortunately it does, ainsley. good morning, brian and steve, near eagle pass, texas wednesday night late a raft carrying nine individuals believed to be a family capsizing, border patrol agents trying to do what they could but a 10 month old boy infant died, drowned in the river. three remain missing. we have reached out to customs and border protection. for more on that we will bring it to you as we get it here in southern mexico. near the mexico and guatemala border. mexico is doing its part. although a migrant trying to escape the walls here. officials getting him before he was able to get out. that's mexico detaining migrants from making their way farther north. this as we get this exclusive video of mexico deporting 93 cuban migrants sending them back to havana. they were held in this facility behind me where just two nights ago there was a riot. we saw the shift change happening here about 30 minutes ago. the mexican police bringing out shields from their duty.
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we saw a vehicle yesterday damaged in the riot two nights ago. so we weren't able to go in here. we did go in another shelter. got an exclusive look at the number of families in there. 1200 in total. and they are from all over the world to include congo. this is one of the migrants out of that shelter now. his name is marcus. here's what he had to say. [inaudible] griff: u.s. border. they are sending us tents in el paso in the rio grande valley to deal with the sunk that continues there, guys. brian: mexico is like why don't you change your policies like did you with us. we stopped the surge in mexico because so open to central america. you are causing the problem in our southern border, right, griff? griff: yeah. what doesn't make sense, brian, is that you can easily cross that guatemala into mexico border as we demonstrated a few days ago.
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but, yet, once they get here they are trying to control them. it's all part of the president lobe door taking a different tact trying to be friendly to the migrants but you have to crack down. ainsley: letting them cross and then. unbelievable. steve: headlines with carley. carley: a second military judge is leading the repeatedly stalled war crime base at guantanamo bay. keith parrelaa group. presiding over the death penalty five men planning the terror attacks. original judge retired. a bill to ban sanctuary cities in florida one step away from becoming law. allowing local and state law enforcement to cooperate with ice. republican governor ron
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desantis is expected to sign it. democrats oppose the measure saying florida would become the republican's, quote, deportation and family separation machine. president trump officially nominates kelly knight kraft as the new united states ambassador to the united nations. she was a former u.s. ambassador to canada. if confirmed she would be failing role formerly held by nikki haley. the position has been left vacant since the former south carolina governor resigned at the end of 2018. and those are your headlines. steve: busy morning. carley: absolutely. steve: thank you very much. ainsley: 13 minutes after the top of the hour. democrats threatens to hold attorney general bill barr in contempt. brian: but ken starr says barr actually deserves an apology. he joins us live next. we have to be able to
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he is obstructing in realtime. >> chicken barr should have shown up today. steve: and congressman cohen actually ate a piece of chicken in the meeting room. blasting attorney general barr for skipping a hearing in front of the house judiciary committee. committee chair now threatening to hold barr in contempt if he does not meet certain demands. is the left overplaying their hand. here to weigh in fox news contributor and former white water independent counsel judge ken starr. ken, good morning to you. >> good morning. steve: all right. so he didn't show up yesterday. why? >> well, he told the committee very clearly he is within his rights in saying so, look, i will answer the questions of duly elected members of congress. but not your hired guns. and so, you know, we just have a standoff here. he has rights. the committee has rights as well it becomes a matter of a washington power play. steve: there are 18 lawyers who are members of congress, what's one other -- what difference that doss that make? are they worried he is going
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to commit purge have any. >> you mean in terms of the perspective? steve: a perjury trap? >> at this stage, everybody is very well advised to be on guard, be very careful because they are already calling the attorney general of united states ohio think is an honorable guy, trying to do the right thing, a liar. be cautious and say, look, we will go by the traditional rules here. steve: emit flood who is the president's attorney sent a scathing letter the day after the redacted version of the mueller report was released to the public and he said mr. mueller was playing politics with what they came up with. he said submitted the findings to the attorney general that are, part, truth commission report what do you make of that. >> i think emmet flood is on to something.
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this obstruction is very odd thing. what is the purpose of this entire exercise? your job was to make a call, bob mueller. steve: either there was obstruction or there was not. >> correct. as opposed to a longest say on one hand and on the other hand it is a failure to do his job. i can understand the charge that it has become a political document since it has almost implicit invitation to go to the house of representatives. a road map so to speak. steve: o man o man. judge star, thank you very much for making a studio call today. >> thank you, steve. good to be with you. steve: alabama democrat defending abortion by saying some kids are just unyou wanted. the niece of dr. martin luther king jr. has a powerful message for him. alveda king live next.
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>> you get to play again tomorrow. steve: time for jeopardy numbers 21. how many consecutive wins for jeopardy contestant james holes houser. he has the second longest winning streak in jeopardy show behind mr. jennings who won 74. five how many days per week wants to deliver mail. due to drop in. package delivery would be changed to seven days a week. they are always busy with amazon. finally, there we go right there. [laughter] they have got literally 1,000 pieces of tape on the floor. ainsley: i know. steve: 46 how many stores cvs plans to close due to
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poor performance. the pharmacy chain has over 9,000 locations nationwide. they are easier to find than the tape on the floor. in the meantime ainsley over to you. steve: brian used to say that he is the best. ainsley: i'm the only one who hasn't done it yet. i'm telling you always something. ainsley: it is hard to find. all right, steve. great job. ainsley: now to a serious story. growing outrage in the state of lamb where a democratic lawmaker is under fire for controversial comments about the abortion ban passed by the state house. if signed, it will make abortion a felony and could jail doctors up to 99 years. state representative john rogers who you see there saying quote some kids are unwanted so you kill them now or you kill them later. you bring them in the world unwanted, unloved, you send them to the electric chair. so you kill them now or you kill them later. here now to react is the niece of dr. martin luther king jr. and fox news contributor alveda king. good morning to you. thanks for being with us.
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>> good morning, ainsley. so wonderful to talk about this particular difficult subject. ainsley: it is a difficult subject. what was your reaction to that that representative in alabama said? >> ainsley, when i immediately heard those remarks from the representative in the african-american community in alabama, i thought about planned parenthood started out birth control with margaret sanger. she said they were going to need some talking heads and in order to get that they were going to cultivate negroes with scholarships and grants and awards and those kinds of things that could best carry their message which it was a secret message of je eugenics. we will have elected officials saying better to kill them now in the womb than kill them later when they grow up or you have to over ohio a legislature was saying you have got to go
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ahead and give black women the right to have abortions because they were so mistreatied as slaves. that kind of thinking is a misplaced compassion. and i knew that immediately. and i said wow, he has been indoctrinated pretty well with the you agai ewe yen nics d genocide. compassion does not require the death of anyone. compassion brings life rather than death. if someone is unwanted or unexpected pregnancy many people know that i had two abortions myself long ago without this understanding. so there is a better way to serve women, the babies in the womb. the dads, the families than to kill a person. we can deliver mercy without killing people. ainsley: what do you say to those folks who do agree with him? if you look at the numbers they are staggering. the number of women getting abortion unless our country. many of them because they can't afford to have their kids and they think this is a better route, unfortunately?
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>> you have heard me say jesus loved the poor didn't kill the poor. poverty wouldn't be killing poor people or killing babies in the womb. if there is rape or incest all these terrible things. there have to be better solutions. pregnancy care centers offer good solutions. adoption agencies, all of those types of things at the national day of prayer at the rose garden in the white house, the president, of course, reaffirmed his commitment to serving women, babies, children, families from opioid crisis, unexpected pregnancies, incarceration. unjust incarceration. there is a way to serve humanity. even the wonderful immigrant that needs help. there is a way to help people without killing people. ainsley: thank you so much. >> and old people. let me mention that i'm 68 years old. don't kill old people either. ainsley: you are not old. thank you so much for being with us. we will continue to keep our audience posted on what happens in alabama. the house voted on this 74-3. that was the vote.
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they approved that bill in the house and now it goes to the senate. the only way a woman can get an abortion in this state if this passes is if her health is at risk. thank you so much, alveda for being with us. have a great weekend. >> thank you. ainsley: most exciting two minutes in sports. janice dean is live from churchill downs with a preview of the kentucky derby. janice? >> hello i'm with the legendary bob baffort. thank you for coming in the rain, my friend. >> it's wet and not letting up. janice: i'm sorry. i'm apologizing right now. stay with us. we will talk about three or four horses in the derby. okay? you brought your umbrella? >> i'm not going anywhere. ♪ ♪ man: i'm 53. but in my mind i'm still 35. that's why i take osteo bi-flex, to keep me moving the way i was made to. it nourishes and strengthens my joints for the long term. osteo bi-flex. find our coupon in sunday's paper.
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steve: actually foreigner sang that song in front of our building. speaking of the first time. there is a new poll out by one poll and what they looked at were a series of firsts. and if you could take the things out of the teleprompter i'm going to query ainsley and brian. ainsley: okay. steve: they asked a whole bunch of moms at what age should certain things happen. ainsley: okay. steve: play along at home. at what age should kids be able to get themselves dressed? ainsley: three and a half, four? brian: i would say 4. right before kindergarten. steve: i'm with you on that. the answer according to them is 7. ainsley: 7? brian: what? steve: at what age should kids be able to use the internet with some supervision? ainsley: the internet with some supervision? well i mean a lot of parents put the phone in front of their kids and let them watch cartoons. steve: all the time will. ainsley: that happens young. brian: 6.
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steve: according to them 9. later. this is a question brian and i faced three times at what age should your kid get their first cell phone? carley: 13. ainsley: ninth grade. 10th grade, 15. brian: i hate to tell you, fourth grade. steve: early. according to the survey age 12. ainsley: really? brian: should or do. steve: should. they talked. ainsley: that's sixth grade. steve: they talked to a thousand moms. final question at what age should kids be able to earn their own money but just to get some money? ainsley: i was seventh grade. baby-sitting in fourth and fifth grade. brian: working paper 13. that's when i had it. i think today. >> 20ish. steve: brian you are right on the nose. 13. kids should be 13 on average when they start to earn
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their own money. ainsley: when should a girl shave her legs and get her ears pierced, carley? carley: when they're hairy. my sister got her ears pierced when she was an infant. i think i was 7. ainsley: mom said i had to wait until middle school. brian: what about nosed pierced? carley: that was never allowed you are grounded for life. ainsley: i went to theater school one summer my rebellious thing got a second pierce in one of my ears my parents picked me up. she said i should just rip that out of my ear. mom, this is better than what a lot of people are doing. carley: a lot of kids are very addicted to facebook and i have a story that is related to that big tech crackdown. facebook banning several accounts deemed dangerous as part of its new hate speech policy. anti-semitic nation of israel leader louis farrakhan alex jones and former breitbart news editor
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myelo all kicked off. this coming as "the washington post" sparked backlash for calling farrakhan far right. they have issued a correction. a mom who paid 6 and a half million dollars in the college admission scandal say she go was fooled. she thought it was a donation going towards scholarships and athletic program at stafford stanford un. accused of paying getting in the school. dozens of actresses are charged in that scandal. might erase mystery as they consider getting rid of murals commemorating former president george washington. traumatizing students in local community as one shows president washington as a slave owner. the painting has been at the school since it was built in 1936. stop what you are doing. take a look at this. alligator caught on camera
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trying to ring a doorbell. you can see the 6 and a half foot beast climbing up the south carolina home. it left some scratches on the door before professionals took it away. the woman who lives there just moved into the house and called the whole thing a great adventure. at least she has a good altitude about it. steve: where did you get the reporting that the alligator was trying to ring the doorbell? ainsley: what if someone came to the door to open the door and there was the alligator. south carolina they are everywhere. carley: probably like hill ton head. steve: at what age should you open the door for an alligator. ainsley: never. carley: never. steve: carley, thank you very much. the beginning of may time for the big hats. the kentucky derby is this weekend. ainsley: janice dean is live from churchill downs with legendary bob baffort who owns three horses in the kentucky derby. hey, janice, you look
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beautiful in your pink. janice: hello. yes, mr. baffort, how does it feel? triple crown last year justified. roaster, game winner and probable. i saw improbable and roadster earlier on. how are they doing in the mud. >> it was raining pretty hard. i usually don't take them out when it's raining like that. we had to get them out. i checked with my son bode he said you have to train in the rain. he wants to be just like you. janice: he can replace me at any point your son. >> man, it was really pouring down. went around there. they handle it they are used -- they have been outdoors all their life. we didn't do much with them. just stretch their leg as little bit. janice: how do you feel on derby day if you win a derby with one of these horses fifth win and tied for most ever. >> it will be my sixth.
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janice: sorry, sir. >> don't short me. those were hard. janice: sorry. >> you know what? to me, it's all about my -- the owners of the horse, the clients, i want them to enjoy the derby experience. my job is we got them here, now we want to make sure the horses show up. they run their race and they have a nice trip. and so, you know, worry about the weather a little bit but you can't -- whatever i don't have control of i don't worry about. janice: all right. so it's going to rain this morning tomorrow it's going to rain in the morning and then it will be a drier track. you can check with your son for that on me. how do the horses -- i saw them this morning. what do you do on derby day for them? >> on derby day we take it easy with them. we will walk them in the morning. we won't bring them out here. and then, you know, if it's raining we will bring them up light blanket sheet so they don't get too wet. my wife jill has to decide what she is going to wear
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according to the weather so she brought enough clothes for a month. with women, you have all the shoes and everything. japan january i'm glad you know that about us. very important. >> i just change ties. that's all i do. janice: congratulations, sir, let's hope for a sixth win. >> we need it. we want a sixth win. janice: fabulous. mr. baffort, thank you for coming on "fox & friends." >> thank you. janice: i will see what i can do with the b. the weather. brian: best in the business. janice: he is the best in the business right here. brian: good luck, bob. steve: meanwhile, 20 minutes before the top of the hour. you know the story he faced down evil inside a synagogue. now that rabbi has a call-to-action for our nation next. >> if something good could come out of this terrible, terrible horrific event, let us bring back a moment of silence to our public school system. in true british style,
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♪ ♪ carley: quick headlines to get to. the state of west virginia reaching a 37-million-dollar settlement with the country's largest drug distributer. mckesson corporation is accused of shipping millions of addictive opioids to residents without investigating suspicious orders. they denied any wrongdoing. and for the first time ever the head of a major pharmaceutical company is convicted for fueling the opioid crisis. john kapoor of insist therapeutics and others all found guilty of bribing doctors to prescribe fentanyl spray. their actions have killed tens of thousands of people. steve: steve thanks, carley. heroic rabbi faced down evil shooting in poway, california speaking alongside the president in the rose garden yesterday and shared this message with the world. >> my life has changed
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forever but it changed so i could make change and i could help others learn how to be strong. many have asked me rabbi, where do we go from here? if something good could come out of this terrible, terrible horrific event, let us bring back moment of silence to our public school system. brian: wow, here to react "fox & friends weekend" co-host pete hegseth. pete, a lot of time cursory day of prayer this person comes on this. was much more than that. pete: it was amazingly powerful. if you didn't get the chance to see it go back and watch the president. steve: he wasn't supposed to come up to speak. pete: he wasn't supposed to come up and speak and neither was the iraq vet or border patrol agent came out in that synagogue shooting. this rabbi took a moment where he could have just talked about what happened. did he talk about the victim. then he turned around and said where are we as a society that we have ripped god out of our public schools? and if you think of it this way, in 1960, the new york board of regents, this state, had approved prayer in school.
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and in 1962, in the case called engel vs. vital they called it unconstitutional. is he not calling for christian prayer or jewish prayer or muslim prayer in schools. he is saying a moment of silence which if you look at the first amendment congress shall make no law to abridge made no law respecting the establishment of religion or prohibiting the free exercise thereof. steve: a moment of silence is not a religious anything. pete: no, it's not. it's something that can be allowed and should be allowed frankly for conservatives, for believers, for patriots two things should be on the table to push even harder, one a moment of silence. this is a moment to talk more about why have we ripped god completely out of schools? and if you don't want to say anything for the moment of silence you don't have. to say the other one is the pledge of allegiance. a lot of our schools no longer say the pledge of allegiance. which we added under god to in 1952 because we were battling the godless communists. so this is a front line in our public schools and god bless the rabbi for talking
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about it. ainsley: some people make better decisions because they have god in their life and knowing this they believe a god will hold you accountable if you don't do the right thing. pete: a higher purpose. if you don't have a higher purpose or moral compass you need the government to tell what you to do. ainsley: teaches to you love others. pete: humbles you we go through strife and decisions in our life. turning to god is something we should training kids to understand leverage later on in their life. ainsley: do you understand kids are not growing up with the values of our founding fathers? pete: they are not teaching our founding fathers. they want to rip mural down of george washington depicts things we don't like today. teach what wasn't good back then and explain what makes mother exceptional. steve: and in a moment of silence the teacher goes okay we have a moment of silence. some people might pray. so some people might plan their day and up to each person. pete: it would be great to see this administration make this a big issue. talk about defending the
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pledge of allegiance and moments -- challenge it at the supreme court. dare the supreme court to knock down a moment of silence. local school districts should be able to choose. this. brian: in the meantime i love what florida is doing allowing teachers to get trained to shoot back at the shooters in the schools. i think that synagogues, places of worship are going to be looking into getting some type of security and protection. pete: federal government doesn't get to control our lives. they can't be there to save the day. federalism is the idea that local control is the best. if florida wants that in local school districts want that they should be able to have that if they want a prayer or moment of silence they should be able to have that hold officials accountable who say we are not going to say the pledge of allegiance. check it out today. they probably don't say the pledge every day the way we used to. that needs to change. brian: one thing that shouldn't change you have to work the weekend. pete: i do. brian: 8 hours. >> that's a lot of time on tv. one of these weekends you are coming brian to visit us. brian: you never know. pete: you have south
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carolina and you from florida. dan crenshaw, congressman is going to be on the program this weekend. i know you guys with janice on the derby. we are having our own derby challenge. ed is here. he likes to think that he wins every once in a while. pete: 2019 has been my redemption year. ainsley: how are you doing on live horses? pete: i have no idea. it's probably not live horses. steve: how about a mint julep drinking contest? pete: that, i would win. brian: you win every day. steve: pete, we will be watching you kicking off tomorrow 6:00 a.m. pete: thanks. ainsley: what does amazon know about you? turns out a lot. how can you change that? kurt the cyberguy is next. ♪ ♪ i always feel like ♪ somebody's watching me ♪ and i have no privacy ♪ y pay for what you need. nice. but, uh...
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♪ ♪ brian: is amazon all-knowing depending on how much you shop watch and read with the ecommerce giant. the more tracking your habits according to a brand new report. so, can we protect our privacy in this day and age? here with some time some insight is kurt the cyberguy. >> i thought you were going to say time love and tenderness. brian: we just don't have the time. >> alexa, amazon, amazon owns alexa the app. inside their device. kindles, we shop on amazon galore. what happens when you take a look at everything amazon owns and you start to profile us. it's a mountain of private data that can tell, for example, if i, for example, have a kindle and i read books through amazon. they know what sort of literature i read. they know how much i read. they know when i read.
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they know if i am able to finish a book or not. they can tell what we're about to do next on any form of triggering be it on, say, prime video where we may watch am i a binge watcher or not a binge watcher? all of this may seem innocuous. that's helpful. look at the web stream right here. brian: this is you, kurt? >> this is genuinely my log on on amazon as if i'm going to go shopping on the app. on ipad. i was looking for a soap that didn't have a reaction. they are now pushing these to me. this may be a convenience to a lot of people. i just bought that travel hanging bag. i did shop for a pair of shoes for somebody and i'm looking for a giant duffle bag. add all this stuff up together though, and then you start selling it to advertisers and that's what amazon is now doing. they are going from huge to enormous. if there are not already mountains enough in retail or media, they are now going to start allowing access through advertisers. brian: if i'm looking for
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genes, wrangler i want to advertise to me as opposed to jeans to help me. >> they may know more about the guy who buys jeans and buys this book and likes this movie. brian: when we have a conversation and maybe thinking about getting a landscaper or redoing the driveway and things start popping up about patios. >> layer on you like jeans, you like this book and political leanings, you may have this sort of medical issue, and now you start to say okay, and this is what he asks of his voice device at home when is he home during these hours and they bought ring, the doorbell company. so now they have access to 30 to 120 days storage of every video of coming and going of your house. where does it stop? brian: right. you are always trying to help people. if you are offended and worried about what we just told you. >> here is a way to reign it in. delete the browsing history when you shop on amazon. that has pluses and minuses,
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turn off the shopping history so it's not recording you when did you go shopping on amazon. again pluses and minuses not going to suggest things to you if you turn this off. at the same time it's not going to record this and sell it to somebody else. alexa, just use that hard physical mute button and delete the alexa voice recordings regularly inside that app. really that's the scariest part i think you brought it up. all these things people are saying. brian: good luck with your travel bag and board and the soap. great job. great advice. by the way reached out to amazon they had no comment but i'm sure they will post something a little bit later about some book i should be reading. president trump firing back at democrats who are calling for william barr's job. the president sat down with catherine herridge. great interview. she joins us live for her one-on-one with the number one. dad: oh, hey guys! mom (on speakerphone): hi! son (on speakerphone): dad, i two goals today! vo: getting to a comfortable retirement
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brian: is there a chance bon jovi is watching? ainsley: there is always a chance. steve: you're looking live at churchhill downs, tomorrow, 6:50 p.m., the most exciting two minutes in sports, the kentucky derby. as the case last year it is raining. ainsley: a wet track. oh look. vineyard vine tractor. brian: very nice. ainsley: today is the race for the phillyies. brian: i'm concerned they're running hours in the rain. steve: brian, the horses live outside. they're okay with that. brian: they live standing in the barn. there is roof on a barn. if you own a horse in the
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kentucky derby, keep them indoors. it is pouring. steve: they will hear from you shortly. we have big news. brian: that is my signal. house democrats are reportedly in talks with robert mueller testifying on capitol hill. ainsley: our own catherine herridge sits down with president trump in exclusive one-on-one interview. steve: she joins us live in washington. the president is shutting down the democrat as crusade to find collusion. he says it is over. reporter: they still want to bring in the special counsel. there are negotiations going on. the democrats aiming for a short timeline. attorney general william barr testified he doesn't have any objections to mueller's testimony. barr refused to testify yesterday leaving a empty seat at house judiciary committee a long with a lot of theatrics, they voted to allow questions from committee staff lawyers. that deviates from the standard
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format. we asked the president yesterday if the attorney general made the right call. >> well i think so. it is not up to me. it is up to him. they were going to treat him differently than they treated other people. of course we've been treat the differently to start off with. we've gone through some investigations, everybody, so ridiculous. no obstruction. no nothing. there has been no nothing. there has been no collusion. there never was. they knew that from day one. reporter: are you saying the house committee should be satisfied with the findings in the mueller report and not do independent oversight? >> they should be satisfied, somebody told me maybe $40 million on the mueller report. reporter: larger question whether the question will block any testimony from the former white house counsel don mcgahn. democrats consider mcgahn a essential witness. the president told fox that he believes the issue and mcgahn's
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testimony is settled. >> he testified for 30 hours. reporter: is the answer know. >> i can let him, everybody else you can't, he specially him he was counsel. they testified for many hours all of them. reporter: as far as you're concerned it is done. >> one can and the others can't. reporter: is it done? >> it is done. nobody has ever done what i have done. i've given total transparency. it never happened before like this. reporter: former fbi director james comey who wrote in "the new york times" this week calling the president, quote amoral, mr. trump suggested answers are coming soon whether surveillance of his campaign was legitimate and properly predicated. >> i think that he did a terrible job. i would say he probably led some kind of an effort, the words spying has been used. he probably was one of the people leading the effort on spying. reporter: very serious charge to make. >> i know. we'll find out whether or not it was true. i think it could very well be
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true. but we'll find out pretty soon. reporter: that appears to be a reference to the upcoming inspector general's investigation and conclusions on the fisa surveillance process. so the surveillance warn process for the trump campaign, carter page. the attorney general as you know testified, may or june when these reports will start to roll out. steve: this dovetails, catherine with what "the new york times" has on its front page. according to "the new york times," the fbi spied on the trump campaign! reporter: what is key about that "new york times" report it goes to this i am form man, stefan halper. what we found that halper is the common link between many of these episodes. not only george papdopoulus, the campaign aide, but also sam clovis. also interesting enough, former national security advisor mike flynn. we found in our reporting a russian woman alleged to be a
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honey pot with flynn which was not the case had specific contact with halper as well. goes to the issue of the ci investigation. really, i don't want to say the word stinks, that is not the right word, you can see how it was brought and how they were using individuals to do that. brian: you have company for the first time. "new york times" and "washington post" decided to join you on the story. where have they be been? do you find this astounding that this is new news that you have had for a year. reporter: i don't really want to comment on their reporting except i know that our team here, pamela brown, sid, we've been really pushing hard on these documents and when you look at the paper trail, you can see that there really was something amiss. just think last week with the vice president and the text messages, with lisa page and peter strzok talking about infiltrating the vice president's office, looking at demeanor. kinds of agents they would send
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in. this is so off the reservation, coloring outside the lines. that is not a political thing. that is not standard procedure. these are things they will look at. ainsley: we want to find out how this all began. the president even said that in your interview. do you think the horowitz report will bring all of this to light? reporter: i don't think the horowitz report is the end. this is the opening of this chapter. what has my attention the way which the attorney general spoken about this in very serious matter. appears to put resources behind this he is really focused in on the central question, which is whether, if there was surveillance which we all accept there was, whether there was strong intelligence and it whoo they say properly predicated. in other words, it was really authorized and legitimate or whether that was driven by politics. one final point i want to make on this. when you look at the special counsel report they refer to the
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dossier as steele reporting. this really caught our attention because without more context you don't understand in the mueller report that steele reporting is just not information coming from an outside source. you would already have to know what the sort of foundation or the genesis of that was. so again, you have to look threw these documents carefully, look for information, clues like that. steve: great reporting all along. congratulations for the exclusive with the president. reporter: i appreciated the opportunity. steve: let's bring in geraldo, fox news correspondent at large. the big news is that the fbi sent the investigate are right up to george papdopoulus, met him in the hotel. victoria toensing who has been our your show a million times -- >> a,. steve, him. they were not concerned she wrote, setting him up for the
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fbi, she says. what do you think of that? >> steve, there is a couple things. the extent of the counterintelligence investigation into the trump campaign and the trump presidency is extraordinary. i want to know very much the four corners of that, of that operation. how deeply did they penetrate? how you know, aggressively were they spying? how many different agents, how many different informants? here is where i think the story will go from here. there is now reporting that robert mueller, the special counsel, knew a year ago, a year ago that there was no collusion with the russians. he knew a year ago, there was no collusion with the russians. did he tell the president of the united states that they had found no collusion? did anyone say, hey, by the way, mr. president, you're in the clear? no. for a year they let the president of the united states
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dangle, worried that the intelligence apparatus of the united states government, the department of justice was probing every aspect of his presidency. so i mean, were they looking for president trump or people around him to prevent an investigation into a non-crime? in other words. >> were they trying to entrap the president of the united states to commit obstruction, to attempt obstruction? when you think about it, aren't we on the same team here? aren't we all americans. not like we're talking about, you know the nazis or the mafia or you name it. this is the fbi investigating the president of the united states. they find evidence to clear the president of the united states but they don't tell him. leaving him to dangle. all of this noise that you hearing now, forgetting it was about collusion, wasn't it?
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wasn't it supposed to be about the allegations or the appearance that the president of the united states was conspiring with our dread enemies, the russians, to fix the election? if that is what it was about, they knew he was cleared they should have told him. brian: geraldo, lastly real quick, the term spying on the trump campaign, does this prove the president was right, there was spying on the trump campaign and all those people really owe the president an apology that mocked him? >> an apology at the very least. they spied on the trump administration in a way that was unprecedented. it was extraordinarily. they owe the president an apology. ainsley: thanks for being with us. have a great weekend. >> you too. brian: unbelievable news. ten minutes after the hour, carley chum discuss you have other news. this has been fascinating. carley: this has been. geraldo did a great job breaking it all down. a second military judge leaving
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repeatedly stalled 9/11 war crimes case at guantanamo bay. the marine colonel keith will preside over the death penalty case involving five men of accused of planning the terror attack. the original judge retired. fox news alert, this is a live look at a massive fire burning out of control in memphis, tennessee. crews battling the flames at a downtown apartment building t was reportedly set to open this fall. several streets in the area are closed. it is unclear what started the fire. at this time thankfully no injuries have been reported. miss usa crown as new winner! >> is, north carolina. [cheering] carley: a lawyer from charlotte taking home the title. a highlight from the night was nick lachey serenading the women during the evening gown portion.
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he covered the pageant with his wife. crist will compete for the miss universe title. she is gorgeous. carolina girl. ainsley: thanks so much. brian: thanks, carley. exclusive video you will only see here. mexico deporting nearly 100 migrants making their way to our border. usually they come to our border. something has changed. griff jenkins live. it has that 'fence' in the middle. it gives a nice smooth shave. what do you look for i want free access to research. yep, td ameritrade's got that. free access to every platform.
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♪ steve: just moments ago five deportation buses have left an overcrowded shelter in southern mexico. this is exclusive video. you're only going to see on fox news. ainsley: it comes as mexico deports nearly 100 migrants from the same shelter. brian: hopefully they go back south. griff jenkins join us as the border crisis turns deadly in the rio grande river. reporter: that's right, it did turn deadly. a tragic reminder how dangerous the journey is. on wednesday night a group of nine migrants crossing rio grande river near eagle pass, texas, a 10-year-old boy drowning. three were missing. they are still doing recovery
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efforts, searching for those three missing. we learned they were all from the country of honduras. but, just in the last hour here, in the southern part of mexico, we have seen five buses of migrants leaving this shelter right here. they were holding up papers, they are handcuffed. banging on the windows. they did not want to be deported. papers holding up, we believe mostly, if not all from cuba. they're holding up papers believed a work permit. they felt they should not be deported. 24 hours ago we got exclusive video 93 cubans being deported here at the tap -- tapachula airport, being flown back to havana. things in the shelter have been very rough. two days ago they had a riot in here. why they're deporting cubans on faster rate. this shelter has mostly cubans.
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we got a look at the other major shelter, it tells the story of a very global migrant community. we have people, we saw people from literally every country. can think of not only central america, pakistan, sri lanka, bangladesh, ghana and congo. congo is is having an epidemic of ebola cases. we spoke to one person from congo. his name is marcus. are you aware of the scare migrants carrying diseases that migrants could bring to the united states. he said this, listen. >> it can go to every place. it is bring the another sick to another country. that's why ask for help, if they're trying, if there is possibility to go there without
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sickness. reporter: this as they are setting up on the border in el paso, in the rio grande valley, tents to deal with the tune of people coming across the border, guys. steve: griff jenkins. great reporting this week. you reported yesterday how there had been an ebola scare. you were there for a fight earlier in the week. for two bucks you rode a raft from guatemala into mexico like many do. reporter: steve, it tells such an interesting story because there is not enforcement on the southern border, just 25 miles south where i am. so the migrant flow is is unimpeded. when they get here internally they're cracking down. they see a trend of a lot of cubans. i asked townspeople, mexican residents, do you wish your southern border would be tightened a more security there. they said yeah, they keep coming. there is no signs of them slowing down. steve: no kidding. ainsley: griff, thank you so
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much. steve: grater reporting. ainsley: 20 minutes after the top of the hour. marine sergeant john peck lost his arms and legs to an ied blast in afghanistan. he said things got so bad he wanted to die. he received a double arm transplant. now he is is spreading his message of hope. he joins us live with an extraordinary story of survival. ♪ this and even this. but i don't have to clean this, this and even this. because the self-cleaning brush roll removes hair, while i clean. - [announcer] shark, the vacuum that deep cleans, now cleans itself. what sore muscles? what with advpounding head? .. advil is... relief that's fast. strength that lasts. you'll ask... what pain? with advil.
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a judge could wave a felon's fees or convert them into community service hours. people convicted of murder or fellly sexual offenses will not qualify to get their rights back. florida is also a step closer to banning sanctuary cities. the state legislature passing the measure allowing law enforcement to cooperate with i.c.e. republican governor ron desantis, that man right there, is expected to sign it. democrats say florida would become the republican's, quote deportation and family separation machine. ainsley, brian, that is some of the news. ainsley: thank you, steve. a recent -- john peck's journey since his second tour of duty and nearly cost him his life. >> sergeant peck very nearly pave his life for our country, suffering injuries in iraq and afghanistan. john comes home to 2500 square foot smart house built especially with him in mind. >> he is one of the first of the
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amputees to emerge from war. >> john peck about 14 months ago. >> he will get placed on a transplant list for his new arms. >> u.s. marine john peck celebrating a successful double arm transplant. ainsley: that is amazing. in 2010 while serving in afghanistan, a ie. d explosion left sergeant peck as quadruple amputee. he underwent groundbreaking transplant, receiving two knew arms. brian: that is the his new book, rebuilding sergeant peck. how i put body and soul back together after afghanistan. sergeant peck joins us in studio. privilege to have him here. one. finest reporters in the country,. griff. you were on this story together. >> we've been friend since 2012. we met each other in buford, south carolina. that is where john came to the
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independence fund and asked for a track chair for the first time. we're about to buy our 2,000th track chair. the john is the reason the track wheelchairs, let him tell the story how it changed his life. those chief chairs, that fox and "fox & friends" so instrumental changing people's lives is john peck. ainsley: tell us your story. what happened to you in iraq. then what happened to you in afghanistan. >> in 2007 i was in al-anbar. we were doing a night patrol. we are heading back in our base and i was in lead vehicle machine fun. nighttime, we rounded a corner. rolled over an ied. short story is i lost 21 years of my memory, short term, long term, short term, long term memory gone. don't know how was. couldn't remember my name. about two years of therapy i decided to re-enlist. that was a hard fight. and went to afghanistan where on
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may 24th, 2010, i stepped on a ied, pretty good finding them apparently but in the wrong way. i immediately lost my right arm just above the elbow. my left arm was amputated before the for arm. had degloving but they had to amputate, i lost too much blood and too much damage. right leg was amputated just above the knee. my left leg was amputated in below the knee. and i caught a lovely flesh eating fungus that ate my left leg. brian: you went through major depression. >> major. brian: how did you get it turned around? >> i think it was a lot. at that point i was grasping as straws. one day i closed my door as soon as i got from therapy. i was sitting at my window looking out. i saw this wounded guy. he got up, i thought he was going to throw himself in the street. he got up and this little girl came over, grabbed his hand and
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then next thing i know, his girlfriend or wife came over, grabbed his hand. okay. if this guy can find love, so can i. and from there i just started to open up to my physical occupational therapist. it wasn't all about me at that time. i asking them, how is your day going. they're like, wait you're actually talking to us, not about you trying to throw yourself down a flight of stairs. this is good. that started from there. ainsley: your life left you through all of this. you found love again. >> yes. ainsley: you're married to jessica. >> we call each other penguin. ainsley: tell us about the arm transplant surgery. how are they able to do that? >> it is long grueling surgery. i've been in rejection since september. dealing with it slowly. it was 16 hour surgery for me. it was a lot of team of doctors. i think there was over about 20 doctors. they had to switch in and out at the time t was just a lot. when i woke up, i mean, of course i had all the meds still
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in me. i had nerve blockers all this different stuff going on. here with my hand, gently used arms, looking at them, investigate them as a marine and stuff like that. it was slow. and i got the surgery in august. i couldn't move my fingers, i couldn't move my left finger until december. it was a little bit. brian: your brain is doing it. >> that is good thing. brian: general it was important for you to write the forward. you and gary sinise. >> we wrote the forward. i met john at the gary sinise concert, lieutenant dan band concert. we've been involved ever since. my children known him since they have grown up. we've been at walter reed christmas parties every year since then. he spoke at the cause dinner. a group volunteers up at walter reed where my children work. he is on a speaker circuit. doing worldwide speaker's
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bureau. they came to their school in sixth grade they spoke to the school ahead of arm transplant. the kids raised $1000 for d.c. school. ainsley: we have the amazing profession we meet the most fascinating people, travel around the world in many cases. you met this amazing american who sacrificed everything for our country. how has he changed your life? >> he changed my entire family's life. i mean we would not be the same without knowing john peck. whenever we hit a bump in the road i think, let's think about what other people have gotten through. one thing i want john to tell, but what are you going to do with these new arms? first thing he told me, he wants to be a chef. ainsley: really? >> my doctors are definitely scared about that. i'm able to hold a knife. they're scared i will chop off a finger. one of my nurses, let's go skiing. we can put you on a ski. i would break an arm, but you guys are afraid me cooking. brian: absolutely. no one should get in your way.
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no one should doubt you will be a chef in some way. ainsley: it comes out on tuesday. brian: buy it now. preorder it. ainsley: rebuilding sergeant peck. >> thank you, guys. brian: thanks, sergeant. meanwhile 30 minutes before the top of the hour. jobs report is about to come out. we'll bring you the numbers of the at least what the prompter says. ainsley: stuart varney sanding by with the analysis. that's next. allergies with sinus congestion and pressure? you won't find relief here. go to the pharmacy counter for powerful claritin-d. while the leading allergy spray only relieves 6 symptoms, claritin-d relieves 8, including sinus congestion and pressure. claritin-d relieves more. has been excellent. they really appreciate the military family and it really shows. with all that usaa offers
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who used expedia to book the vacation rental that led to the ride which took them to the place where they discovered that sometimes a little down time can lift you right up. flights, hotels, cars, activities, vacation rentals. expedia. everything you need to go. steve: we are back with a fox news alert. the april jobs report is really good. it is just released. take a look at that number. it was much bigger than i thought. brian: you would think the troops were coming home after world war ii. the u.s. added 263,000 jobs in april, much more than the 185,000 jobs predicted. ainsley: wow the unemployment rate is 3.6%. that is down from march. steve: that is the lowest number since december of 1969.
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stuart varney came into the studio couple minutes ago. saw the number. got a great big smile. >> this confirms we're now in a prosperous society. our growth in the economy is confirmed by the growth in jobs and the rise in wages. this is a very strong report. brian: what about the wages? >> wages up, over the past 12 months wages are up 3.2%. that's strong. it is the strongest rate of gain in roughly a decade. puts the lie to what joe biden was saying about, you know, wages are stagnant. he said wages are stagnant. they're not. they're up 3.2%. a very solid gain. what gets me 263,000 new jobs in one month. that is extremely strong. ainsley: is it tax reform? tax reform do this? companies can play employees more money. >> yes. it is tax reform, deregulation and a pro-business president trump. you wrap it all all together, what you have got is a very,
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very strong economy and a terrific labor market. brian: saying february and march have been revised. we added 16,000 additional jobs on top of that? >> yes. brian: this is pretty incredible. waynes are going up for all sects people, not just rich people, those hairball middle class people and horrible working-class people are getting more money now, right? >> this is prosperous society. this report confirms it. it is very, very strong. i don't know how the stock market which react to this. there is a political message here, president trump's policy, cut taxes, cut red tape, it is working. you have a very strong expansion of the economy. i think it is the best labor market i've seen in last four years in america. steve: stock futures are climbing on the jobs data. stock market will probably open up. >> it should. i had should. very strong. brian: stuart, a couple things, are earnings in companies coming in stronger than they thought over last two weeks? >> yes. brian: the other one would be if
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we're growing at 3.2% the fed said we're not going to raise rates. some said that was bad news because the president wanted them to lower rates. >> you're not, very probably not going to get the federal reserve cutting interest rates when you have got an economy this strong. that is probably not going to happen. some people thought we might get a rate cut. i don't think we will, given what we've just seen from the economy. don't let that detract from what a great report this is. this is very strong. steve: how many minutes until the president tweet this is out? >> about 30 seconds. steve: thank you, stuart. ainsley: more jobs more money. we'll watch you at 9:00 a.m. steve: more stuart. >> that's right. steve: time for more carley who joins us right now. carl arm we have more headlines. listen to this actor ashton kutcher could be called to testify in a murder trial. the man known as the hollywood ripper is accused of killing two women in california. one of them used to date kutcher, was killed on a night they were supposed to go to a
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grammys party. prosecutors believe the actor could be a key witness in the 2001 death of ashley ellerin. kutcher reportedly went to her home on the night she was stabbed 47 times. no one answered the door. tragic. country music star wynona judd is working with the white house on a new criminal justice reform project. judd works closely with groups that aim to transition inmates into society sew stemming from her daughter's eight year conviction after drug arrest. she didn't reveal any details. students at this new york university have mandatory class this is summer. all sophomores at recognize polytechnic institute are required to pay tuition. no exceptions for students who want to work over the summer or have summer internships. the program is meant to keep students focused on their
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academics halfway through the college career. a cop is going viral for combining safety with songs. watch this. ♪ >> this is officer weaver. thank you so much for watching. now it is raining today. remember that when our windshield wipers are going, our headlights are on. carley: he seems like a lot of fun. catching people with songs follows them up with information for his illinois community. those are the headlines. people like him make the world go round. i love that. steve: people will tune in to see what song he is is singing. he was lip sing ising, wasn't he? carley: i think so. brian: sounded like a deejay. ainsley: he did a good job. thanks, carley. brian: we owe you a favor. 21 minutes top of the hour. can you go home now? >> not yet. about an hour. brian: this number is stunning, in less than six months i.c.e. released more than 161,000
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migrants into the united states. what is it going to take for this crisis to be taken seriously on capitol hill? ainsley: former kansas secretary of state kris kobach is next. steve: let's travel down to washington, d.c., who check this with sandra smith who is on the north lawn. white house. good morning to you. >> huge number, this is what everybody will be talking about this morning. we'll talk to vice president mike pence a short time from now inside of the white house. surely the administration will want to take a victory lap on that. we will dig in, however, to flat wage growth. a lot of folks were looking at the jobs report to see if wages budged. we'll talk to him about that surely markets like it already. dow futures indicating a triple-digit gain on the open. we'll watch that. we'll want to ask the vice president about the latest in venezuela, what the administration goals are there. mike pompeo saying this week, all options are on the table. it has been a huge week with the
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william barr testimony that was and then was not. we'll ask him about that as well. in all of this as the vice president heads down to louisiana to tour three black churches that were burned down by an arsonist. so we will be talking to him ahead of his trip down to the, down to louisiana. so a big morning here at the white house. it is certainly a big jobs report. we'll be covering all of it here. a short time from now, mike pence 9:30 a.m. eastern time on "america's newsroom." thanks, guys. i was made to. it nourishes and strengthens my joints for the long term. osteo bi-flex. find our coupon in sunday's paper.
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cbd oreos, ordering at the drive-through is about to get easier. mcdonald's adding new men use to use artificial intelligence to suggest items for you. they can recommend an item based on the time of day or even weather. it is being rolled out at 700 restaurants. i'm hungry. steve? steve: no kidding. i'm ready for a big mac. look at this number, 161,000 illegal border crossers have been released to live freely inside of the united states since the month of december. despite warnings from the border agency and trump administration, congress has no solution. if this does not constitute a crisis, some wonder what does. we have former kansas secretary of state kris kobach joins from us our nation's capitol. good morning to you. >> good morning, steve. steve: 161,000 people. i.c.e. said we have no more room at the inn.
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let them go. where are they? >> they are all over the united states, steve. we got news april was recent record month, more than 100,000 people arrested at the border. we have two months in a row over 100,000. there is no more bed space at the detention center. we have to address the crisis. most are making fraudulent claims of asylum. they have no basis for it. they claim it. they're being turned loose in the united states. come back in six years for the hearing. meantime we're giving out work permits to most of them. we have to stop giving out work permits and food stamps. we have to stop giving out benefits. we have to stop turning people loose in the united states who probably have no basis for claiming asylum. steve: i have a feeling you like what the department of homeland security is about to do. that is to start a pilot program where when the people come into the country, cross illegally, we're a family unit. we have a child here. we're all related. now apparently the border patrol
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will do 90-minute dna test to find out whether they're lying about that. >> i think it's a great idea. we've seen many, many cases where it is discovered after the fact either the coyotes put together a minor with a person who is an adult. they came in, conspired together when they left the home country. they're all kinds of fraudulent claims of not only asylum, but fraudulent claims the minor belongs to some sort of a family unit. we have to stop the abuse of our system. it has gotten out of hand. the cartels know how they can abuse the system. steve: people coming into the country, not trying to apparently, they don't have a child, make the asylum claim, apparently now they will train the border patrol agents, on the spot, accurately ask the questions whether or not they should be able to apply for asylum. so in other words, they will be able to say right then, you know what? you should, that is valid claim or, not, sorry you're going to
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have to go. >> there is a two-step process when you claim the asylum. first step is credible fear. does the person have credible fear they may be persecuted for membership in a social group in their home country. that could be done, will start being done by border patrol staff. that will allow these initial hearings, if the answer is no, then that person needs to be shipped home. the second stage asylum hear something is way in the future. i believe we have to have processing centers, keep people detained, temporary facility is, process the claim with immigration judges near the border because, right now the message is getting out to central america, come to the united states, make a false claim. they will turn you loose, they will if i have you food stamps and a work permit which is crazy. we have to stop the madness. steve: we see images of with hundreds of thousands of people heading our way. kris kobach, thanks for joining us today. >> my pleasure. steve: thank you, sir. meanwhile, first weekend in may. it is kentucky derby time.
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♪ [cheering] brian: get ready to place your bets. the 145th kentucky derby is one day away. we're counting down to the fastest two minutes in sports. steve: janice dean got an inside look at the derby museum with a very special guest. she joins us live from a soggy churchhill downs. janice: it's a soggy one but not put aghdam per on our spirits. yesterday we got to see the wonderful kentucky derby museum. before bob baffert the trainer we interviewed in the 7:30 hour.
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we talked to wayne lucas. fell in love with him. take a look. oh, my gosh we're here in the kentucky derby museum here at churchhill downs. ♪ so i see here you have a replica of the starting gate. what do they say in racing? and they're off. let's go. ♪ tell us about the museum. this is obviously the winner's circle. >> we're in the winner's circle. 225,000 people come to the museum every year all around the globe. this is our chance to experience the kentucky derby. janice: i didn't know there was a my see sum here. >> let's check out your announcing voice. janice: i love that idea. they race towards the finish line. triple crown winner, justified. this literally is the trophy room. >> yes it is gorgeous.
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it is brand new. we have all four justify's triple crown derbies. janice: all hours win the three races they get this baby. >> justify is the only horse that has gotten this model of triple crown trophy. let's play some who are shoes. these are winning shoes. yes, they are worn by justify in the derby. janice: i can see the mud. >> when i think of the kentucky derby, i think of hats. has its own exhibit. >> you will see anything from the outlandish, gorgeous, lots of feathers. lots of roses. you will see lots wacky things. wacky hats. janice: i feel like go big or go home. you pulled some hats for me? >> just for you to try on. you like to shop. janice: i can't wait.
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let's do it. ♪ >> one of the greatest trainers of all time wayne lucas. janice: you're here, just for me? oh, my gosh. nice to meet you. will you show me some of your trophy as, sir. this is insane. >> this part them. janice: part of them. what are your favorite horses. >> the four derby winners. they probably stand out. ainsley: they put a wall what you do still every single day and you get up exactly the same time i do every morning. >> usually first one to open the gate on the racetrack even at 84. said he will up, ride a horse every single day. i love to be out there close. janice: tell me what it is like to be at kentucky derby. >> everybody has a dream. it became my reality. you can't capture that in a bottle. if you could, you could make a
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lot of money. janice: back in the saddle. thank you so much for taking me around. this is amazing my see jump. >> yes, happy derby. janice: happy derby. i will be back. giddyup. >> they're off. steve: that's cool. janice: yes, oh, my gosh, so much fun. thank you to rachel collier for the tour. go ahead, brian. brian: i'm not sure putting your hand up in the air twirling it is the way to win a race. that is the way you chose to win a virtual race. janice: that's what i do out here. i go like this. also thanks to wayne lucas as well. a amazing trainer for letting us in. steve: janice, thank you very much. we'll step aside. more in two minutes. janice: happy derby, whoo! ♪
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live studio audience friday, may 17th. email us your name to friends live @ fox news.com and you could be with us on studio f in a friday. >> bill: good morning, everybody. fox news alert. economy is booming and americans are working. april jobs numbers out and they're big. unemployment rate following to a 49-year low. 3.6% and that's where we begin this morning. split broadcast today. i'm bill hemmer live in new york city on a friday. sandra, you look great at the white house, good morning. >> sandra: good morning, everyone. i'm sandra smith and we're live at the white house this morning. a warm morning here in washington less than 30 minutes from now i'll be speaking live with the vice president, mike pence. on our agenda certainly will be this robust jobs number and the booming american economy. where the administration sees this going next, to
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