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tv   Shepard Smith Reporting  FOX News  May 31, 2019 12:00pm-1:00pm PDT

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the charts. we'll have more about that on "the five" later. tyrus, love having you. i'll see you tomorrow night on the greg gutfeld show. thanks for joining us on "the daily briefing." i'm dana perino. up next, here's shep. >> shepard: it is noon on the west coast. 3:00 on wall street where the dow took a triple digit dive after president trump announced new taxes on products from mexico. ahead, how it could affect the cost of your next car or your next beer. plus, there's word cops found new clues in the home of a mom missing for almost a week. now the grandmother reportedly is keeping the five kids underarmed guard. the fda trying to get answers about cbd. the cannabis product. it's in all kinds of stuff from gummies to dog treats. what do it do? is it safe?
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reporting begins now. stocks taking a hit this friday afternoon as we're now in the final hour of a rough day on wall street. that's after president trump fired a new set of shots in the trade war with an ultimatum to mexico. the president is threatening a 5% import tax on all products from mexico unless and until the mexican leaders do more to stop undocumented immigrants from getting into the united states southern border. the tariffs are set to take effect in ten days. they're set to increase by 5% each month. they'd go up to potentially 25% and stay there unless and until the president says the problem is solved. even the talk of those tariffs was enough to drive down stocks. some of america's biggest car companies hit especially hard because of cars they build in mexico and sell in the u.s.
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of course, companies bring all sorts of products across our southern border which means if the tariffs kick in, we could see price hikes. not just on cars but also on meat, fruit, vegetables, beer and furniture. president trump says the tariffs will force companies to move from mexico back to the united states. that's his decision. supply chains are not built overnight and some business groups are already threatening legal action. noting that american families and companies will pay the price. because as we all know, a tariff is really a tax which somebody has to pay. for instance, take an american car company. you raise the cost of bringing the car into the united states by eventually the president says 25% and either the car company eats the cost or more likely raises the price. we have team fox coverage. jeff paul reporting on businesses facing the biggest hit. first, to blake burman live at the white house. blake? >> we've heard from president trump on twitter.
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he's out there on that forum defending his decision to go forward here in ten days time with tariffs against mexico. he's defending himself on two different fronts. the one hand, he says there's a surge at the border that needs to be stopped. he's talking about the flow of illegal drugs at the southern border saying that flow needs to be curtailed. the acting head of the department of homeland security is kevin mcelwene. the acting dh is head said that there's three ways that mexico could potentially avoid these tariffs. on the one hand, he says they need to tighten up the southern border and needs to work with the u.s. on the asylum progress. but yet the white house has yet to set any goals so the tearies don't come their way.
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here's sarah sanders earlier today. >> one of the biggest things they can do, the repatriation of thousands of people coming from central america. return them back home. that would be a very big first step. we've made some process on the asylum but we need to do more. >> mexico's foreign minister is in route to the u.s. traveling to washington d.c. it remains entirely unclear at this hour when he gets here to washington, who exactly he might meet with and when. for mexico's president, he made comments earlier today. he did not back down from president trump saying the america first slogan is a fallacy and he says mexico will not be provoked. >> shepard: lots of critics, huh? >> there are. that includes critics just across is the street here from the white house. the u.s. chamber of commerce, one of the big pro business groups here in washington d.c., they said today when we spoke with a couple of its representatives that they are
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considering taking legal action against the white house. at issue here, appears to be whether or not the president has the authority to go forward with these tariffs. >> the problems that we have migrants crossing the border has nothing to do with our trading relationship with mexico. so to attempt to use tariffs to deal with a border security problem makes no sense. >> so you have the whole issue of tariffs and motion co. set that aside. there's another huge issue as well that is the usmca trade deal. this decision from the president appears to have put the usmca, which the folks on capitol hill will have a say on in jeopardy. for example, iowa's two republican senators today, joy joni ernst and chuck grassley have said that puts their decision in jeopardy. grassley also questions whether or not the president has the authority to move forward with
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these tariffs saying "trail policy and border security are separate issues. this is a misuse of presidential tariff authority and counter to congressional intent. by the way, shepard, in the last half hour here, the republican senator from pennsylvania, pat toomey has come forward saying the president's tariffs threat against mexico is misguided and he says it's congress that should be in the driver's seat as it relates to tariffs. bottom line, we await to see whether the u.s. chamber of commerce files its lawsuit. if it does, the courts could have their say on this one and whether or not the president has the authority to move forward. shepard? >> shepard: blake burman live. thank you. so we reported tariffs are taxes and if put into effect, prices on stuff could go up. team fox coverage. jeff paul with more. jeff? >> yeah, shep, across the board tariff will not only impact consumers but could hard hit many corporations that lean on mexico for production.
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the auto industry being one of them. last year cars built in mexico counted for 17% of detroit sales with general motors domestic sales 22% of all cars sold were built in mexico. the u.s. imported $53 billion in auto parts coming from mexico, the highest of any country according to data from the commerce department. if the full 25% tariff were to be enforced, some experts believe the average cost of a car could rise $1,300. >> ultimately u.s. consumers will pay the tariffs or a big chunk of it. companies can try to pass it along. there's pressure to move the cost increases down the line. they can't absorb them without taking business hits to their own profits. >> your grocery bill could be taking a hit as well. mexico is the largest agricultural supplier for the u.s., produce like berries and asparagus could see price jumps
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and avocado prices have doubled the last two months. those prices could keep soaring going to other way, american farmers could face retaliatory tariffs on products that they send to mexico. things like corn, grain, pork and dairy. shep? >> shepard: anything from retailers on this yet? >> yeah, the national retail federation is warning this will add up and raise the cost of living for everyone. companies weighing in. costco says it will already trying to source goods from other countries with the tariffs on chinese imports. the latest announcement complicates those efforts. costco's cfo says prices will go up adding its difficult to predict what the impact will be at this moment. shep? >> shepard: jeff paul live in los angeles. chris wallace in washington, the host of "fox news sunday." what is the politics of this, chris? >> the politics is the president feels that cracking down on the border is one of his main
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campaign promises. what he has promised hasn't happened, the wall, mexico paying for the wall. a lot of it is just personal, not politics. a lot of americans deeply offended at the idea that you're seeing this increasing influx of people coming across the border illegally. 100,000 a month the last couple months. earlier this week, 1,000 people, one group. biggest group ever. a single group coming across the border around el paso. i think the president feels, you know, it takes -- talking about central americans, it takes about three weeks,21 days for folks to get from the southern border of mexico up to the northern border with the u.s. the president says mexico needs to do more to stop them along the way. >> shepard: iowa and pennsylvania pretty important states come 2020. the two republicans from iowa saying hang on with these
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tariffs. does that play a role here? >> not so far. the president's view, you use tariffs not in and of themselves, use them as a weapon to try to bend another company to your will. sometimes it works. in the case of china, it hasn't. in ten days, mexico announces a bunch of moves to try to stop the influx of central americans across mexico to the u.s., he will be seen as a hero. if on the other hand we end up in a trade war -- the money we're talking about here, shep, we import 350 billion a year from mexico. 5% tariff is a $17 billion tax increase on american companies and american consumers. if that goes up to 10 or 15 or 25% as it would be october 1, then you're talking about multiples of that $17 billion. it's a sizing tax increase.
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if the ploy works and he gets mexico, the president gets mexico to crack down on those people coming across the country illegally, then it will be a big success. if we end in a trade war as we have with china, not so good. >> shepard: of course, nothing has happened. it's talk, talk only unless and until that changes. but the effect of this, whether for the good or bad or by design or not is that the discussion from two days ago, the mueller report is sidelined and it's about tariffs, this is a president that is very good about narrative and the narrative has changed. >> no question about it. the president at times as you point out, chooses to create one controversy to distract from another controversy. i have to say, this is quite a controversy. the stock market going down 300 points. you know, you have republican senators and some conservative
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pro republican business groups and companies all crying out about it, it's a pretty damaging bright shiny object. >> shepard: and when the chamber of commerce weighs in, in the past, historically over my 20, 30 years, republicans tend to listen to that. >> certainly some republicans do. a lot of the trump base, you know, isn't going to care much about the chamber of commerce. if they're action it, then i'm for it. but you're right, a lot of main street and wall street republicans will be very concerned. not so much of what the chamber of commerce says but what it means with a threat to american companies and american consumer. >> shepard: a beautiful weekend in our part of the world. hope it is for people all over the country. chris has a very busy weekend. this sunday, chris talks with mick mulvaney, the acting we have of staff and doug collins of georgia, the ranking member
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of the house judiciary committee. that's on your local fox station on "fox news sunday." chris, we'll see you on the next "fox news sunday" the you're not watching college baseball or the yanks and red sox or something. chris is hosting another presidential town hall. kirsten gillibrand, democrat of new york, live from dubuque iowa at 7:00 eastern on this channel. so 7:00 eastern, 6:00 central. then chris will need a nap. no no? >> and some soup. that's the question. do you nap or not. >> shepard: what time is this "fox news sunday" go to tape? we used to say that. what time do you produce that program? >> what time do you produce your program? it's live on television. >> shepard: it's not live everywhere. >> i understand. it's live some places. 9:00 a.m. eastern, 8:00 a.m. in dubuque, iowa. in oxford mississippi, what will
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that be? >> it's in a memphis station there. i don't know. i can't go to the baseball tournament this weekend for reasons that we'll get to at another time. more news, i promise. aspirin re and i just didn't listen. until i almost lost my life. my doctors again ordered me to take aspirin, and i do. be sure to talk to your doctor before you begin an aspirin regimen. listen to the doctor. take it seriously. front slams on his the hbrakes out of nowhere. you do, too, but not in time. hey, no big deal. you've got a good record and liberty mutual won't hold a grudge by raising your rates over one mistake. you hear that, karen? liberty mutual doesn't hold grudges. how mature of them!
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which may worsen kidney problems. i discovered the potential with ozempic®. ♪ oh! oh! oh! ozempic®! ♪ ask your healthcare provider today about once-weekly ozempic®. >> shepard: a story we've been following now. police in connecticut are investigating the disappearance of a mother of five children reportedly found blood while searching her home. that is according to the hartford current newspaper. this as crews expand their search for the woman across state lines. cops say 50-year-old jennifer dulos went missing after dropping her kids off at school a week ago today in new canaan, about 30 miles north of new york city. they found her black suburban empty at a park a mile from her home. dulos and her estranged husband have been locked in a custody
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baitle since they filed for divorce in 2017. laura ingle reporting live in new canaan this afternoon. laura? >> hi, shep. this home here behind me is where jennifer dulos has been loving. she vanished a week ago today. we heard there's more beyond the traces of blood in the house. there's evidence to believe that she may have been a victim of a violent crime. the 50-year-old mother of five children, including two sets of twins was last seen friday morning dropping her kids off at school around 8:00 a.m. she failed to show up for two appointments that day. by 7:00 p.m., her friends became worried and reported her missing. her suburban was found near a local park where police were handing out flyers to every car and bicyclist going past the park. jennifer dulos filed for divorce from her husband in a 2017
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divorce proceeding and the two have been locked in a bitter custody battle ever since. today, one of our producers went to his house in farmington. our producer was told to leave and he called the cops on the reporters. he said they won't comment on anybody that they consider a person of interest or about any evidence in this case so far, shep. >> shepard: so not much from police. i understand there's been a statement from the missing woman's family. is that right? >> yeah, we just got this within the last hour. as the family and friends of jennifer dulos thanked investigators for their work around the clock in trying to find her, they added this. the love and concern for her children and the community efforts to help locate jennifer have kept us going. police be assured that jennifer's five children are safe and well-cared for. a candlelight vigil was held.
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community members say this can't happen. >> i'm always around town. go out late at night. it's scary. >> it's terrifying. to think that that happened. that that would tear apart that family. >> so as we move forward and into the weekend, we've heard that search efforts to continue. we've seen a lot of police presence here. we know they've been back in the park looking for any sign. shep? >> shepard: thanks, laura. cbd oil, they say it's good for swelling and joint ache. it's in about everything these days from body lotions to candy. is it safe? you figure so, right? since it's everywhere. the feds are trying to answer those questions now as they start to tackle cannabis regulations. we'll have the latest move next. this is your car.
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mmm, mmmm. bon appetite. make time for what matters. pause your wifi with xfinity xfi and see the secret life of pets 2 in theaters. >> shepard: the feds are taking the first step to make new rules for cannabis products, including cbd. the fda had their first hearing on that today. cbd is an ingredient in marijuana and hemp. it doesn't get you high. it the thc that does that. now the feds are trying to clear up the confusion about the legal status of the cbd. hillary vaughn reporting live from fda head quarters outside the district. hi, hillary. >> hi, shep. ever since congress gave cbd the green light, products have popped up everywhere containing cbd to makeup to lotion. people use cbd oil to put it in their coffee, pet food. consumer watch dog groups warn that with all the products available online, they're
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causing hazards to consumers because products that are bought are being tested positive for other hazardous ingredients that could be dangerous to consumers. >> these people have been operating for years. okay? they've ignored you. i urge you, clean it up. redeem yourselves and go after this criminal industry. it's damaging our children. going to meet with a lot of smooth talking lobbyists here. going to spin a lot of [bleep] about their products. keep these people in mind. >> so with all the products out there, scientists and doctors testify today say they need to know how much cbd is too much. can a consumer use cbd lotion, for example and then also consume it in an edible product? they say they don't have that information yet, shep. >> shepard: i heard farmers were at the hearing, too. >> yeah. there's a ton of money in this cbd business. in fact, a lot of farmers are
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switching over their crops to grow hemp to be used for cbd. cannabis research firm projects that this industry will be worth $22 billion by 2022. of course they showed up to urge the fda to tread light on regulation. farmers make more per acre growing hemp so they're making the switch. >> nearly all. when you talk about a economic driver, another gentleman said it today, you can make $30,000 an acre or $60,000 on cbd products. you make $700 an acre on fiber. nearly all of it is cbd production. that's globally. >> right now, china supplies 50% of the world's cannabis. farmers here say they have a chance to keep up with that, shep. >> shepard: hillary, thank you. a lot in china but a lot in oregon. in fact, there's apparently so much weed in oregon that even if
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growing stopped today it could take more than six years or smoke it or eat it or do whatever you do with it before hey run out. that's according to the state's liquor control corporation. that's why some lawmakers are pushing to curb marijuana production. now it's estimated the supply is twice as much as the demand. state lawmakers are considering a bill that would give officials more power to deny new pot-growing licenses. supporters are worried their could sell leftover marijuana on the black market. people that were denied licenses to legally grow it could just grow it illegally instead like people have done since the dawn of time. the ecig maker juul could be
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opening a store. juul stores will sell tobacco, mint and menthol flavors, not the fruity flavors that appeal to kids. they won't allow anybody under 21 to come in the doors, this is two weeks after north carolina is the first state to sue juul accusing them of marketing and selling to young people. in response, company reps tell fox news "while we have not seen the complaint, we share the attorney general's concerns about youth vaping, which is why we have been cooperating with its office and why we have taken the most aggressive actions as anyone in the industry to combat youth usage." a live report from arkansas where historic flooding has now breached a levee.
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that's coming. and beach front ghost town. remember the horrible hurricane in mexico beach and the florida panhandle? this is not video from back then. this is now. the community is devastated. and was from that cat 5 storm. we'll go back. our own -- who was it? phil keating was there the day it happened. he's back in the same spot to give us an update. and then the toronto raptors that might have an extra man for the finals. drake now bringing the heat to the golden state warriors. here he is getting in the face of draymond green. green said he didn't admonish it. all in good fun. drake did his hot line bling dance. why not? that's after a press conference in which klay said he might not
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>> shepard: bottom of the hour. time for top of news headlines. a heavy has breached in arkansas. waters are rising. we'll go there live. you think your boss is bad, right? we're hearing that kim jong-un may have executed the henchmen that set up the failed summit with the president in vietnam and sent his top negotiator to a hard labor camp. and borat from kazakhstan may have caused a high profile celebrity divorce. first, the fox weather alert. floods keep getting worse. flood waters are gushing through a levy that gave way along the arkansas river as it rises to
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record smashing levels. it's happening around dardenelle. our crew on the ground caught this on camera. watch here. a family of deer having a swim across a flooded read near the levee. and take a look at st. louis where the mississippi river is expected to reach its highest level since the great flood of 1993. that devastated the area. matt finn has been in arkansas all week. he's live in dardenelle where the levee breached. matt? >> shep, we were one of the first on scene as the river burst through. we have more images to show you. briefly, i want to show you this. this is the dardenelle power station. the guard says it's in danger of slipping into the arkansas river and shut down. areas around here are getting power from an alternate source. this dam is so battered by all of this water, it just is in danger of falling into the
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river. just a few miles from here, the hollow bend levee burst and the arkansas river right now is violently unloading staggers amounts of water into the farming community of dardenelle. farmers are telling it's total losses for many people there. you can imagine, this river that we've reported on is nearly 45 feet high. it's raging. now a little bathtub drain opening. the most populated of dardenelle is not in danger for now. the national guard said they cannot fix the levee so they're sandbagging canals and trying to direct the river away. all the locals, local police say they think all of this raging water got to go somewhere and could flood the town of dardenelle. >> farmers, probably just planting their seed. spring time. that is all gone. you can see where the water is now. once that water gone, all that
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grass is dead. >> i picked up the kids and the girlfriend and we're ready to roll out. >> shep, the national guard tells us that the tyson plant nearby is affected by rising water. this river is carrying all of the flood water across the state through more levees and more towns and hit little rock. >> shepard: when levees go, folks suffer. what do the rest look like? >> right now, we have word there's another levee breached. the national guard is planning on reinforcing in adkins. another breach levee in scott, arkansas. we're aware of levees that are being compromised in missouri. dardenelle, arkansas, matt finn. thank you. parts of the florida panhandle are still trying to recover more than seven months after hurricane michael slammed into northwest florida as a category five storm. only the fourth on record to make to it landfall in the
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united states. i know you haven't seen this on the news all the time. it's not over. people in panama city, mexico beach, all struggling mightily. another hurricane condition is coming. michael tore through the areas, including mexico beach and panama city and killed 16 people, caused an estimated 25 billion in damage. nearly 500 building at tyndall air force base destroyed. a national guardsman that was there at the time says he remembers looking for somewhere safe as that hurricane took the roof off of the building he was in. our own phil keating got a look at the base now. more than that in just a minute. state and federal officials are urging people across the state to prepare for the 2019 hurricane season. some people say they never got back to normal after the last one. phil keating reporting. he's live in mexico beach.
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most people in that town, that's a summer town. a lot have not returned, i understand. >> in fact, most of them, many of them, probably never will. take a look around. this looks pretty much just like it did seven months ago. the last time we were right here. pretty much a wasteland. this is beach row right here. when the 16 foot storm surge came in, it took everything in the second row of houses, third row of houses and finally pushing all of it down there three 00 yards away where the blue tarp is. improvements have been happening. a lot of the debris has been happening but much of it is still all over the place. service is the biggest challenge. still no grocery store, no bank, no gas station and no headquarters for police and fire. jake lost his house. they live in this fema trailer on their slap still planning to rebuild. >> people can get frustrated
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easy. look around. you still see debris. not things going as fast as you would like it. it becomes part of your life looking at debris. >> up the beach in panama city, which also took a huge hit, more than half of all apartments in that city still unlivable. >> shepard: tyndall air force base is a life blood for economics and otherwise and a source of great pride in that area. how is tyndall doing? >> it's coming along day by day. but it's going to take years according to the base commander, just being honest. it's years in the process to get back to things before michael slammed into the place. the 30th squadron -- the fighter squadron based there still has not returned. that's where the eye of the storm slammed into the coastline. right through that area force base. nearly 500 buildings were
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damaged or destroyed. it's a $3 billion project to get it back up to speed. according to the base commander, they're up to speed but doing it with temporary fixes. what they need is money. here's what the base commander told me. >> we're getting the mission done. that's our job. but we're doing it with a bunch of temporary solutions that we're putting in place. these are not long-term solutions. >> yeah, like i said, the 325th fighter squadron remains in e eglin air force base. 80% of the airmen are back on the base but getting help from other bases as well. shep? >> shepard: we wish them the be best. fiphil keating with a look back. and this is in montezuma.
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this twister disappeared quickly. the woman that reported this told the des moines news register said she never felt unsafe or she would have left immediately. nobody at the game got hurt. ahead, did kim jong-un really execute officials involved in the nuclear talks with the united states? that's the reporting out of south korea what we're learning next. i had a few good tricks to help hide my bladder leak pad. like the old "tunic tug". but always discreet is less bulky. and it really protects. 'cause it turns liquid to gel. so i have nothing to hide.
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>> shepard: there's word north korea has executed five officials involved in nuclear talks with the united states. and sentenced a sixth official sometimes called kim jong-un's right-hand man to hard labor. that official, kim jong-chol was at the white house a year ago to deliver a letter to president trump. now according to a south korean newspaper, he's at a labor camp for idealogical reeducation. the paper reports the executions happened in march after that hanoi summit. important to note, the south korean newspaper cite as single
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anonymous source and officials in seoul are not confirming this. american officials are looking to it, which is why it's news. benjamin hall reporting live from london. benjamin? >> hi, shep. if this is true, it's another brutal purge from a bring tall regime. it shows us something else. i shows us what a failure the hanoi summit was for the north koreans, for kim jong-un personally. negotiators went out there seeking economic sanction relief. they came back empty-handed as well. these excuses are a result of that. senior envoy kim jong-chol was apparently executed by a firing squad along with the four other officials. the purge went official. jong-chol was sentenced to hard labor. it is, as we've been saying,
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hard to verify news out of north korea. but this was an embarrassing failure for kim jong-un on the world stage. there's growing concern that the relationship may be reversing. since the summit, north korea has tested short range ballistic missiles and it's been boosting up their angry rhetoric towards america, calling john bolton a human defect. this news comes on the top american nuclear envoy. they're hoping to find another way to coordinate a response to recent publication. there's no news on a third summit. president trump is happy to negotiate if the main talking point is denuclearization. and then there's the g-20 and meetings with president xi will lie on the agenda.
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shep? >> shepard: a woman in florida woke up to the sound of her kitchen window shattering and went to confront the intruder obviously, which is when she came face-to-face with this. that, in the kitchen, is a 11-foot alligator. and as long as the counter. >> i decided i wasn't staying there. i went back to my bedroom. i closed the door, called the police. >> shepard: wise. happened overnight in clearwater. about 20 miles west of tampa. the gator broke through her window, then trashed itself and thrashed itself around her condominium, knocked over her furniture and damaged the wall. the homeowner sid she's upset about the reptile smashing her bottles of red wine. she said the gator destroyed the good stuff. after a couple hours, police officers and a trainer got the gator outside of the condo. no truth to the rumor that anybody was in there looking the
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floor post incident. sasha cohen claims his movie borat is to blame for pamela anderson and kid rock's break-up. it premiered in november of 2006 just before they got divorced. according to sasha cohen, it it was because of a scene where his character tried to kidnap anderson and kidnap her from a book signing. oh, dear! pamela anderson played herself in that movie. sasha cohen is a man from kazakhstan who has been in america trying to marry the bay watch star. he said he asked anderson how her husband liked the screening of the movie. he said that she told him that they were getting divorced because of it. pamela anderson have not confirmed any of this.
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been to the eiffel tower? there's a new way to experience it now. you can zip line. look at this. zip line from a balcony nearly 400 feet to a balcony nearby. the trip takes about a minute. here's someone screaming. you can't hear it. the zip line can reach speeds up to 55 miles an hour. it's all temporary. people interested have to enter a lottery and get very lucky and hope against hope that it goes well. an odd couple teaming up on capitol hill. a progressive and a conservative say they're trying to make a big change in washington. yes, these two. what that could mean for members of congress who may be looking to cash out with a cushy gig. toy aspirin regimen, and i just didn't listen. until i almost lost my life. my doctors again ordered me to take aspirin, and i do. be sure to talk to your doctor before you begin an aspirin regimen. listen to the doctor. take it seriously.
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we're on the move. hey rick, all good? oh yeah, we're good. we're good. terminix. defenders of home.
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>> shepard: this is new. breaking news out of honduras. it looks like a fire has started outside the u.s. i'm be see in the capitol city. we're trying to get more
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information now. we expect video to come soon. early reports from the ground suggest somebody set tires on fire. there's massive protests happening there over the domestic policy. we'll keep an eye on this. when the video come in, we'll send it to you. and then there's this. ted cruz and congress woman alexandria ocasio-cortez have agreed to work together to fix washington. it happened in twitter. the north democrat tweeted, if you're a member of congress and leave, you shouldn't be allowed to turn right around and leverage your service for a lobbyist check. i don't think it should be legal at all to become a corporate lobbyist if you served in congress. at minimum, there should be a long wait period. so the texas republican ted cruz retweeteded aoc and said this. "here's something i don't say often, i agree with aoc. i have long called for a life-time ban on former members
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of congress become lobbyists. the swamp would hate it. but perhaps a chance for bipartisan cooperation." then they agreed to work on a bipartisan bill. the fox business network jackie deangelos. there's no jackie. that's all for that. a danny socialite has died. prosecutors accused him of sending his heiress wife into a coma with insulin injections. it's been a crazy day on wall street. started well into the red and has continued well into the red because the markets are concerned about the talk and it's only that now, talk of tariffs on mexican imparts. first 5% and then 10% and then
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15% unless the mexicans stop immigrants from coming to the united states from central america. cavuto will have more. "your world" begins now. >> forget the wall. now president trump is trying to slam mexico in the wallet. who is really going to pay? hello, everyone. i'm charles payne in for neil cavuto, this is "your world." the message from the white house to mexico, tighten up the southern border or your economy could get tight with a dose of tariffs on all mexican goods. that has stocks here feeling very tight today. the dow closing below 25,000 for the first time since january 31. what is the fallout from this? we're all over it. we have kevin corke on what the president is planning. jackie deangelis or why investors and consumers should be worried and the border patrol union chief on why his