Skip to main content

tv   Hannity  FOX News  July 13, 2019 1:00am-2:00am PDT

1:00 am
we salute deputy kimbrough as our midnight hero. right in the way of service. most-watched, most trusted, most grateful you spent the evening with us. have a great weekend, good night from washington. i am shannon bream. sa court, noe
1:01 am
1:02 am
1:03 am
1:04 am
1:05 am
subsequent renewal applications were filed as well. big problems in the deep state. but now being exposed. here in studio with reaction, the author of the russia hoax, number 1 "new york times" best seller gregg jarrett, former trump associate carter page. the fisa warrants were right on
1:06 am
him. that book, that's going to be a number one best seller, called radicals resistant and revenge. the host of the number one show here saturday nights on the fox news channel, judge jeannine pirro. also, fox news correspondent at large geraldo rivera, tammy bruce, criminal defense attorney david shown, carey picket, and the american conservative union's matt schlapp, the chair. good to see you all. you are the person i'm starting with. you were the one they used when they got, when they used the dirty dossier, as what we are now told according to the grassley graham memo, the bulk of the fisa application, it was to spy on you, cart irrelevant page, to have a backdoor into all things the trump campaign. >> i think the latter is what they were interested in. no reason to spy on me. but they really wanted an excuse
1:07 am
to get to -- >> sean: you worked with us for years. >> absolutely. >> sean: when you would go abroad as a good american you offer any information you had, correct? >> absolutely. >> sean: did you work for the cia, were you an intelligence officer for the united states? >> i was, i have been a confidential human source. >> sean: were you ever paid? >> no. did it voluntarily. >> sean: you worked as patriot who loved his country, when anybody in the intelligence community wanted information after were you abroad you would sit for hours, fair to say? >> well, sometimes it would be hours. we'd go out to lunch and speak -- >> sean: you told them everything you knew? >> absolutely. >> sean: you love your country. >> absolutely. >> sean: what do you think of what they did to you? >> i'm just surprised that they don't tell the full truth. that's, you mention the mueller dossier, which was just the initial step. that information, what they wrote about me, is totally false
1:08 am
in every possible way. one example is -- >> sean: were you ever called before congress? >> for 20 hours or so, yeah. >> sean: how many hours did you spend before mueller's team? >> a full day. >> sean: were you ever called back? >> nope. >> sean: were you charged? >> absolutely not. >> sean: they had a full year of listening to every conversation you had, every text message, every e-mail. >> and ten hours with the fbi in march 2017 as well. >> sean: gregg jarrett writes the number one "new york times" best seller, jeannine pirro, the russian hoax, elicit scheme to clear hillary clinton. what donald trump? >> frame donald trump. >> sean: what part of that is untrue the title of your book? >> all of it is true. >> sean: what we have had happen. >> every bit of information that has come out in the year since my book was published has only corroborated all of the information. i wouldn't change a single word of it.
1:09 am
what they did to carter was unconscionable. the fbi set up an information laundering scheme to hide that this was all coming from, it was paid political propaganda from the hillary clinton campaign, and the dnc. >> sean: backtrack a second, before you get to that, the same people investigated hillary, right? >> oh, yeah. >> sean: did they write an exoneration of her before they investigated her? >> absolutely. >> sean: did hillary clinton violate 18usa793, i that i -- >> she did. the espionage act, two different provisions as well as theft of government documents. >> sean: there was an underlying crime when she had top secret classified special access information on that mom and pop server in a bathroom closet. >> absolutely. >> sean: there was, that's the underlying crime, when she had subpoenaed e-mails, deleted them. anyone here every hear of bleach bit? >> destruction of evidence, it's classic.
1:10 am
>> sean: that's destroying, the aids beating up the hammers, ewing the hammers to beat it up. >> so many of those people received immunity in exchange for nothing. nobody received immunity that was associated with trump. >> sean: anybody here that doubts hillary obstructed justice? >> obstructed justice specifically what do you mean? >> sean: geraldo? >> they ask sean hannity, you're my lawyer, sean hannity we subpoena your e-mails and i decide, brilliant, i'm following the lead of hillary, delete 2 3 3,000 of them, i use bleachbit to clean my hard drove. then i have an aid, a friend here, take a handler and beat up my devices and remove the sim cards. is that obstruction? >> it might be. >> sean: wait a second. >> i think that, you and i have had this kind of conversation. to me hillary is the side show. the real story is -- >> sean: that's not the issue here. could you get me out of jail if
1:11 am
i did that? >> i want to say, carter page you are an unusual fellow. i tell that you. >> sean: whoa, whoa, whoa. >> most private citizen. >> sean: he's spinning. >> i think when some one tells me that they have proven conclusively that the information has been usurped by a foreign power, then i can, i would be more comfortable on the obstruction action. >> sean: david, you're a lawyer. >> i'll answer the question directly. jeanne reed came from his law firm, represented hillary clinton in the e-mail scandal. developed a case in the western district of north carolina in which her client wasn't charged with wleech bit, he was -- bleach bit, he was charged with deleting things inadvertently. convicted. serving ten years in prison. >> sean: it's worse than that. christian sosier served in the navy, he was proud, in a
1:12 am
submarine, took six pictures, got a year in jail for the espionage act. you're a judge, number one show on saturday night, congratulations. >> thank you. >> sean: were you a d.a., a lawyer -- >> then i was a judge. here's the bottom line. that's obstruction without a kout. you don't need to bleach bit, you don't need the hammer, hit the delete button. that's what she did. and that's about as intentional an act as much, obstruction and destruction of evidence. >> is mueller also guilty under those circumstances? >> you know, of the -- losing all of the e-mails and messages. >> she was intentionally, you think she was accidentally deleting and bleachbitting and breaking her own phone? don't be ridiculous. >> how do they weaken the case when you don't focus on the president. >> sean: the laws have to be applied equally geraldo.
1:13 am
>> this was a malignant hypocrisy, the democrats and vaunted fbi used the language of patriotism and principle to cover a partisan operation. >> sean: but start at the beginning, the candidate that could buy the dirty dossier, tammy? >> the reason this particularly matters and i agree with geraldo, because of what this tumor became with this cancer, all of this of course is a pretext to distract people from what hillary was doing. americans, we here and people watching this program, americans are romantic. we believe in the best of people. >> sean: easy, tammy. >> in the larger sense -- >> sean: geraldo, definitely. he's my best friend. >> in the larger sense of expecting the best from people, expecting people to do the right thing. this is why it is heartbreaking. it is key in that the
1:14 am
rileyization of what thenis end up being, crime, collusion, horrible dynamic, the tip of the iceberg was met. they realized at that point that the place holder of hillary clinton was not going to be there. so the question becomes what else are they -- >> sean: did they protect her? >> the entire operation was meant to be protection of her, also getting the extra benefit of ruining donald trump. >> sean: okay. >> they everestimated her and everestimated themselves, underestimated donald trump. now it's not always easy to find out that there's a problem. but this, these questions we can't forget f you have cancer you must go back to see where it began. can you treat the entire body. >> sean: that is a great analogy. >> have you heard one process crime that was charged in the hillary clinton investigation?
1:15 am
>> sean: no. >> no. have you heard of any immunity being given in the trump investigation? not like sheryl mills and the love of them, no. they gave immunity out like locally pops. when i was a prosecutor, you don't give it out unless you get something back. they did to it everyone to save hillary. >> sean: kerry and matt. >> it wasn't just sheryl mills, but heather samuels as well. we'll make them with its as well as make her lawyers as well. these are names that we should be hearing more about. this is an issue, gee, what about roger stone. all of a sudden swat teams coming into his house, why is that it we didn't hear this about hillary clinton. we didn't hear about swat teams. >> sean: judge ellis, we know you don't care about his taxes. we know why we're here. be honest. we're here to put this guy on trial for the taxes to put the screws on him so he sings and he
1:16 am
composes. the hearing went on. >> but i want to pull back about everybody being equal under the law. as the only person here who probably worked in the white house, everyone of my e-mails, i'm not representing -- everyone of my e-mails is in the history books. i have things that are embarrassing, times i would love to press delete. guess, what i'm not allowed to do that. the reason they set up this whole fraud yent lent -- >> sean: hannity and manafort's text messages? >> this is the part of public service. there's a downside. you have to put yourself out there. there's transparency. my wife had to do the same thing. why is it for the clintons? they're allowed to set up a bathroom server in order to clearly avoid what tammy is talking about, the transparency, so that the taxpayers who pay their salary get to see everything. it's not just a subpoena. >> sean: all right. >> that's only the start of what's going on in this
1:17 am
government, and with the entire swamp. it's a drop on the tip of the iceberg. this is i think why there's such a panic. it revealed so much more. >> sean: now they're turning on each other. i'll listen to her ram dough, you talk about the origins. but we're going to get into the depth of what happened with donald trump, effort to prevent him from becoming president, then undermining him, bludgeoning a duly elected president. when we come back. mueller is testifying, is it going to backfire on democrats as i think it could and the media mob? former independent interest counsel ken starr. also reaction from the expert panel which is right here, thank you all for being with us, special edition of hannity continues. - [narrator] the following is an urgent appeal from the international fellowship of christians and jews. - right now in the former soviet union, there are thousands of jewish holocaust survivors
1:18 am
trapped in relentless poverty. there's no heat, no electricity, no running water, they're cold hungry and sick and they're suffering and dying needlessly. christians and jews together stand obedient to god to listen to his word. god gives us a special calling to help the orphan, the widow, the weakest, the survivors and he makes a promise that if we stand with them, so too will god stand with us. - [narrator] please open your heart and act now. you can save lives and honor god by helping elderly jews in dire need in the former soviet union. your gift today of just $25 will rush an emergency survival package to a person in desperate need of food, medicine, water and heating fuel.
1:19 am
visit our website. (somber music) - what's different about the situation today, my friends is that it's not just helping elderly, today it's a matter of survival. today your gift to the emergency survival program will literally, literally save lives. - [narrator] please visit our website. (somber music) for just $25, you can help us rush an emergency survival package to a desperate holocaust survivor before it's too late. (somber music)
1:20 am
1:21 am
wanna take your xfi now you can with xfi advantage. giving you enhanced performance and protection. when devices are connected to your home's wifi, they're protected. helping keep outsiders from getting inside. and if someone tries, we'll let you know. so you can stream, surf and game all you want, with confidence you can get coverage where you need it most. that's xfi advantage. make your xfi even better. upgrade today. call, click or visit a store. feel like they're part of a team. my name is timothy chi and i'm the ceo of weddingwire. we're very proud customers of custom ink. we keep coming back to custom ink because of the quality of the product, the customer service, and the ease of use. that moment you walk in the office and people are wearing the same gear, you feel a sense of connectedness and belonging right away and our shirts from custom ink help bring us together. - [announcer] custom ink has hundreds of products to help you look and feel like a team. upload your logo or start your design today at customink.com
1:22 am
1:23 am
early tomorrow, we will be tracking it here. ♪ >> sean: all right as we continue, the russia probe boomerang, special edition of hannity. democrats giddy about mueller testifying to congress, totally blind to the possibility i actually suspect could really happen, this is all going to backfire on them. take a look at how high their hopes are. >> it's important he answer a lot of specific questions.
1:24 am
he did a two-year investigation, the russians attacked our election. he found that there was plenty of, i think 170 contacts between the russians and the people in the trump campaign. >> he did not make a traditional prosecutorial adjustment, he referred to it congress, perfectly appropriate for congress to bring him in. >> sean: joining us former independent counsel, fox news contributor ken starr. you had to testify under the independent counsel statute. mueller doesn't have to. but here's the interesting thing. why do i think that republicans are going to want to know things like how did you have time for taxi medallions, loan applications, taxes but didn't have time for hillary's russian dirty dossier that she bought and pay for, a lie that, was the foundation to spy on the guy in the audience, carter page, and the entire trump campaign, trump transition and trump presidency. how did he miss that important item? >> well, you have laid out a lot of questions, and those are very
1:25 am
legislate malt questions. this is going to be a great opportunity. republicans are going to be on the spot. they are being given, you put it well, a golden opportunity to get some questions answered that we all have. we haven't talked much this evening, thus far, very briefly about the report itself. the republicans will do well to drill into the report and to say such things as the transition period proved, proved that there were no connections between vladimir putin and the kremlin, and the trump organization and the trump campaign. why couldn't you say that much more directly? with respect to the obstruction, the obstructive acts. i think one question that i would want to ask if i were in congress, your report cries out that the president felt the entire investigation was totally unfair and uncalled for. doesn't that put in context the fact that he had issues with bob mueller's continuing service,
1:26 am
with what rod rosenstein could do, and so forth. i think pressing bob mueller with respect to why you did not give the president of the united states any benefit of the doubt at all. the final question, you really wrote this for congress and you had no authority to do that. you had no authority to do that. you were to write a confidential report to the attorney general of the united states, explaining your prosecution decisions and your deckly nation decision. your whole second part goes way beyond anything you were authorized to do. mr. mueller some might call it abuse of power. >> sean: and the horrific 9 1/2 minute press conference where he contradicted what he had already told many people, that, no, it wasn't part of his thinking, justice department policy, d.o.j. policy as it relates to the constitutionality of whether you can indict or not indict a sitting president. he already answered that twice. both ways.
1:27 am
>> right, yeah. and, sean, note in that report especially the second part of his report, bob, i have great respect for bob mueller but i don't respect this report. here is something that i thought was just beyond the pale, he turned himself and his office into a constitutional law office. he had no authority to do that. there's an office of legal counsel that has been in place for decades. bob mueller and his prosecutors are not. here he gives this very authoritative sounding opinion with respect to the powers of the presidency. i think he got a lot have it wrong. i think he got a lot of the analysis wrong on obstruction of justice. the presentation of the facts, just raises the question, again, was this a fair presentation and balanced presentation of the facts. at this stage i say no. >> sean: ken starr, thank you.
1:28 am
how many lawyers go we have? four, that's a lot. you're a lawyer, start with you, judge, we love dearly. that 9 1/2 minutes that was a disaster for mueller. go ahead. >> it was a disaster. first of all that report as ken starr just said is a report that was supposed to go to the attorney general. the attorney general can decide what if anything he wants to do with it. he didn't to have disclose it, release it -- >> sean: he said no collusion in part one. >> he said no collusion in part one. and then as it related to obstruction he says i can't really acquit the defend, the president. yeah, of obstruction. he was saying i can't say yes or no. under the guidelines in the department of justice, the attorney general and deputy attorney general then come in and make the decision. >> sean: and offer counsel -- >> right, leaving the crumbs for congress and suggesting that
1:29 am
congress should have oversight and hold hearings, he played himself, took off his mask as an objective special counsel, and shoetd himself to be a political operative. swhn i watched the 9 1/2 minutes, gregg jarrett, i don't think he wrote it. >> i don't think he did. he didn't write the report either, it was written by committee, two committee, james quarrels' side, the reasonable side, felt as if no collusion and not obstruction of justice. the other side was andrew weissmann's side. >> sean: we learned today did the hiring for mueller. >> absolutely. weissmann would find a crime if you just walk down the street. >> sean: is weissmann the one that was held in the book, if i recall correctly, known on withhold exculpatory evidence? >> and threaten with its, called on the carpet, reversed, rebuked by higher courts. this is a guy who should never be a lawyer or a prosecutor.
1:30 am
but bob mueller's news conference for nine minutes, he contradicted himself. he said if he could clear the president he would. but at the same time in a different sentence he said he couldn't clear the president because of the olc opinion. which is it, bob. the most important question for mueller in front of congress is the following. isn't it true mr. mueller you sat in the oval office talking to the president the day before you became special counsel. >> sean: asking for a job. >> and the president told you his reasons for firing james comey, which makes you the witness in your own case, and demands your recusal. why didn't you? >> sean: david. >> i think that the major problem, the question, series of questions i want to ask mr. mueller starts and stops with the picking of his team. all of the issues you raised in the beginning, relate to that. mueller knew exactly what he was doing. it's not just that he picked only partisan democrats, financial supporters of hillary clinton, hillary clinton's lawyer. he picked andrew weissmann.
1:31 am
he knew who andrew weissmann was. not only was the only corrupt prosecutor singled out by the chief judge in the eastern district of new york for withholding evidence. >> sean: you have seen this. >> i have the case against him now. he brought the case, when the evidence was disclosed 16 defendants were acquitted, based on that evidence. good judges in the eastern district required it to be disclosed. mueller knew it. he hired him as general counsel, mueller authorized $500,000 in attorney fees for the corrupt fbi agent that weissmann covered up for. >> sean: i'll send to you meet with jim jordan, he needs to have a conversation with you. sent four maryland executives to jail for a year, overturned by the fifth signature. everyone wants, in we'll come back, more with the studio audience and preview the inspector general's upcoming report, former congressman trey gowdy weighs in as well as the deep state is in serious trouble. i joined the army after 911,
1:32 am
cuz, um, i thought that was what i needed to do. we got our orders to go overseas and i went to baghdad, iraq. we were transporting a bomb sniffing dog to the polling stations. we rolled over two anti-tank mines, it blew my humvee up, killed my sergeant. after the explosion, i suffered a closed head injury, um, traumatic brain injury,
1:33 am
loss of a limb, burns to 60% of my body. when the doctors told me i reached my plateau, i did not want to hear that because i do not believe i have a plateau. so, i had to prove 'em wrong, which i am doing to this day and i will still do until the end of my days. i've gotten to where i am at because of my family. and, the wounded warrior project has helped me more than i can ever imagine. they have really been there to support me in my endeavors. my number one goal, basically, is to get close to where i was. i am more than ready to work hard to get to that goal. i am living proof to never give up and i will never give up.
1:34 am
my twin brother jacob has an autism spectrum disorder to never give up i remember one moment after being at school all day and i remember him getting into the car just balling... and saying: "mom, i have no friends" "why don't i have any friends?" it broke my heart. ♪brother let me be your shelter♪ ♪never leave you all alone that was the moment when i realized that i needed to do something about this. i needed to make a difference in his life. go! and i knew that if i could help him find a friend, i could help teach other people that including people with differences is the right thing to do. ♪bring it home ♪brother let me be your shelter♪ that was the inspiration behind my non-profit "score a friend" educating people to include the people with differences is so important because when jacob's included he feels like he can succeed in life and he feels like he actually has a purpose. ♪..home
1:35 am
1:36 am
>> sean: welcome back to the special edition of hannity. boomerang of justice as we revealed days ago, the report is delayed. two major developments. key with its last minute have decided to cooperate others coming back to add to their testimony. and christopher steele, the one that created the dirty clinton bought and paid for russian dossier full of lies, he was grilled by d.o.j. investigators. the deep state abuse of power scandal, finally coming full circle. here to sman more, former congressman and fox news contributor trey gowdy. you were a prosecutor, never lost a case, i respect that about you, i mention it a lot. mule hears lot of explaining to do as ken starr said.
1:37 am
and as our panel has been pointing out. if you, trey gowdy, were on that committee what would you want to know? >> why didn't you indict president trump. was it a factual deficiency or opinion. that is the only question that i think is going to change any dynamic coming out of that hearing. >> sean: don't we know the answer? >> why didn't you indict the president. >> sean: we know the answer. >> well, he's given two different answers. identify think he told bill barr, there was a factual deficiency. alluded in his press conference to this d.o.j. o.l.c. opinion. if he's going to say that -- >> sean: about five hours later, attorney general barr and special counsel's office released a joint statement kind of making up for the factual error that mueller made, he was talking about d.o.j. policy and the constitutionality of whether you can or cannot indict a sitting president.
1:38 am
>> right. and i think what the democrats are going to focus on, it had that policy not been in place would you have indicted private citizen donald trump. that's the only thing that can come out of this. >> sean: doesn't his answer have to be no? because of what he said to barr. >> i think it has to be no for a lot of reasons. i'm sorry, firing jim comey is not obstruction of justice. if it were, rod rosenstein would be in trouble, not president trump. i don't, that is the only -- that is the question that concerns me the most if i were still a republican member of the house, what is going to be his answer. was it the olc opinion or a factual deficiency. the rest of it, he's going to stick with the four corners of his report f you're a republican, you're going to want to ask about bias, what you didn't look into. and i still have a bunch of
1:39 am
friends on that committee. i would spend all of my time getting mueller to talk about things he didn't bother to look for. just the factual predicate for the russia investigation. anything related to the fisa process. >> sean: the dossier. >> why chris steele -- yeah. all of the things he didn't look at. he's got an out, i wasn't asked to. but i think it's going to resonate with people. these are important issues. if you have time for medallions and taxis why didn't you have time for this. that's a fair question. trust me when i say this, sean, we aren't going to learn a lot unless he fumbles the answer from my point of view, the republican point of view, if he fumbles the answer on why he did not indict donald trump, then this thing will continue to go on for another 6, 9, 12 months. >> sean: but we know the answer. we even read the report. geraldo, there's no underlying crime, i'm complaining, oh, i
1:40 am
should fire mueller. i have the power to under article 2. correct, attorneys? the power to fire mueller, didn't fire mueller. oh, he should be fired. rosenstein should be fired. this one is a pain in the ass, et cetera. is that obstruction? >> obstruction of injustice, maybe. >> sean: whoa, whoa, slow down, great line. >> obstruction of injustice. clearly, one of the wonderful things about william barr, when he was selected by president trump one of the points he made was imagine if you were president trump and for over two years in your administration you were haunted by the fact these vaunted fabled legendary agencies like the federal bureau of investigation were unleashed on you. everything that do you, every step you take, the police song, every word you speak, they were on him, and second-guessing him, undermining him. >> sean: you can weave in '70s music, it's great.
1:41 am
>> but thinking not only do you have 50 of the best reporters in the world from the "washington post," "new york times," every other investigative group on your case. >> sean: all got it wrong. >> hating you, you have your own government coming after you, particularly -- the miracle is that he didn't unravel. he didn't truly obstruct. the miracle is that he was at the end of the day -- >> sean: how many people can do that and fix the economy. carter? >> there was so much obstruction growing back to the point on fisa, right, if you look all four of those applications, three of which mr. comey himself signed. they're full of lies. >> sean: was it three? >> absolutely. >> sean: oh, he signed the one october 26, told trump it's unverifiable. >> correct, he signed the first three. >> sean: you mean he lied? >> absolutely. comey lied. >> sean: did he spy on you? >> no question.
1:42 am
and not only that, when he sent his agents in march of 2017, we had long discussions, they said we know that the democrats did a lot of bad things against you. we know the media was tough about you, you know, was really tough. but the people that also didn't treat you so well was the trump campaign. talk about that. which was complete, you know, complete lies. >> sean: this is a good point. we offer people something of great value, we learned this week about general flynn. tell us what we want to hear and here is your get out of jail free card n my world that is called bribery. >> it is extortion, extortion for information, doesn't matter if it's true or not. when you talk about obstruction and the president remarked on this a few weeks ago, they were able to find your text messages and they can find text messages everywhere. interestingly for mr. mueller,
1:43 am
is that after lisa page and peter strzok were fired their cell phones were wiped. >> sent back to the factory. >> sean: we'll get in the upper chamber over where matt and kurt. we'll get to when you we get back. sleepy creepy crazy uncle joe said russian interference wouldn't have happened under his watch. it all happened under his watch. audience reaction to biden's latest gaffe. these folks don't have time to go to the post office they use stamps.com all the services of the post office only cheaper get a 4-week trial plus postage and a digital scale go to stamps.com/tv and never go to the post office again. is it really that common?
1:44 am
[narrator] it is. it's the second leading cancer killer in the u.s. i don't have symptoms. [narrator] it doesn't always cause symptoms, especially early on. and screening helps prevent the disease. oh? how? [narrator] by finding precancerous polyps so they can be removed. but that test. [narrator] there's more than one screening test. if you're 50 or older, talk to your doctor about which one is right for you. colorectal cancer screening really does save lives.
1:45 am
we like drip coffee, layovers- -and waiting on hold. what we don't like is relying on fancy technology for help. snail mail! we were invited to a y2k party... uh, didn't that happen, like, 20 years ago? oh, look, karolyn, we've got a mathematician on our hands! check it out! now you can schedule a callback
1:46 am
or reschedule an appointment, even on nights and weekends. today's xfinity service. simple. easy. awesome. i'd rather not. you can go first. audible reintroduced this whole world to me. so many great stories from amazing people. it makes me want to be better. to be able to connect with the people's stories that i'm listening to. that's inspiration. it's on during my commute, it's on all the time. doing the dishes. working out. while i'm in the car. at bed time.
1:47 am
an audible listener is someone that wants to broaden their mind. people who are tired of listening to the radio, or music. to hear her speak those words. it was incredible. it was unbelievable. with audible originals, there's something for almost every taste in there. everything you ever wanted to hear. i signed up for getting a credit every month, and i started exploring books that i normally wouldn't read. our ability to empathize through these stories, with these stories, can be transformational. it's my own thing that i can do for me. see what listening to audible can do for you. just text listen5 to 500500.
1:48 am
1:49 am
come, that will be here on the fox news channel. >> sean: as we continue the special edition of hannity, sleepy, creepy, crazy uncle joe biden 2020 run is in nonstop damage control. it's gotten so bad by ken is trying to rewrite history. he claimed russian election interference would never happen on his or obama's watch. only it happened on their watch, all of it. take a look. >> well, putin is trying to undo all elections, he is undoing elections in europe. look what happened in hungary, look what's happened in poland. you think that would have happened on my watch, barack's watch? i promise you it wouldn't have and it didn't. >> sean: it all happened on obama-biden watch, all of it. here more reaction with the incredible panel. matt, you mentioned earlier were you in the white house.
1:50 am
interesting the fourth of july speech the president gave got a lot of criticism. i saw him praising a military that literally stopped evil without help in europe. naziism, fascism, imperial japan, that military has defended more freedom around the globe than any other. they deserve that. it was warned of by devin nunes, is he that out of touch? >> when joe biden doesn't have a script in front of him it goes haywire. i love it. the more, the most serious lie in this whole question about the ridiculous charge of collusion is this idea that this was some unique thing that only happened in the last presidential election. the russians have been doing this in our elections while joe biden was the vice president, while he was in the senate, he never did anything to stop it. obama knew this was going to happen.
1:51 am
>> sean: everyone says o'biden. >> i like it. he knew biden was going to be warned. not tell donald trump but try to ensnare donald trump. that is the fundamental, fraudens basis for this. >> sean: i've always thought, especially with jim comey, describes this meeting, why didn't jim comey say i know you're not there the political world mr. president-elect, i'm not your guy. this is, i am separate and apart, just so you know. why didn't they tell the trump campaign, he's a patriot, loves his country, done great philanthropic work. why didn't they just tell donald trump, i think there might be some attempt, russian interference in your campaign and give him a chance to clean it up. 23 it was happening. turns out it wasn't. why didn't they approach that. >> you wonder that. for some reason then jim comey,
1:52 am
turns around and ends up leaking all of this information to his professor friend, yet he seems to get away with that, doesn't he? one of the things i'm also sort of wondering about, andrew weissmann. why is it that if the democrats are so interested in getting information about the mueller investigation, why don't they bring him to capitol hill? why is it that all of the democrats don't seem so interested about what andrew weissmann has to say? i've been asking them these questions. they're like, we don't want to talk about that right now. >> sean: let me get a prediction, i want predictions here. question i most frequently am asked by everybody, when, who, who, when. when are they going to be held accountable. we've been peeling the onion for two years. we have gotten further than i thought when we started. you have a thought? will people be indicted for abuse of power and corruption,
1:53 am
that's the question i want to ask you all. >> i suspect so. but it takes long time. uncovering lies with all of the coverup involved, takes a very long time. >> sean: are we close? >> no, we're not close. william barr has a lot of work to could and john durham and the inspector general. >> sean: will it happen? >> i think there will be. >> sean: there will be indictments about the names we talk about every night? >> i hope there are indictments. the evidence is compelling and overwhelming. >> sean: incontrovertible, tammy? >> yes, it's low hanging fruit, the american people won't accept a lack of indictment. it was about the rule of law and fairness. >> shannon: james comey won't be indicted? >> i don't think so. and i think when it comes to the hillary team that you had so many people given i mummunimmun get indictments you need some one to whistle blow. you need some one to confess, to say yes we did this. >> sean: let me get everyone in.
1:54 am
>> first of all comey has to be dieted. all right, the rats are already jumping ship, already pointing the finger at each other. you have durham -- >> sean: indicted for what? >> hold a second, you have durham and barr, serious prosecutors. >> sean: premeditated. >> they don't play games. >> i trust bill barr to make the right decision. >> sean: you can't believe the big names. >> not as much as we want but i agree with the judge. >> sean: comey? >> god i'd love it. >> the indictments, plea deals. >> i don't believe there will be, people would never satisfy the american people. the evidence is overwhelming and incontrovertible. >> sean: they took away his constitutional rights and they will get away with it? >> weissmann has been doing it for 30 or 40 years. two people sitting here -- >> sean: maybe it's time for equal justice. >> the issue is not whether they took carter page's rights away from you. i agree he should have an incredibly big lawsuit.
1:55 am
the issue is whether on its face -- >> sean: he needs to sue. >> on its face they have lied to congress. they have obstructed evidence. they have obstructed justice. >> sean: carter, last word. >> there's just, it's all come down to lies. there's no truth out there. it's just been lie after lie for the last several years. >> sean: you feel mort most of your life is tainted because people are suspicious of you, you were spied for a year? >> i'm concerned about the damage it's done for our country, president trump, his entire administration. >> sean: you going to sue? >> there's a lot coming so very soon, sean. >> sean: more of this great pa [school bell rings]
1:56 am
hey luke, come check this out. [car horn]
1:57 am
[mom] come on buddy, hurry up. ♪ [dad] come on kiddo, do your homework ok? [sighs] [mom] oh no what are you wearing? can you just go in the other room and watch your show? [mom] it would be a shame for you to get sick at this time of year. [mom] is he ok? [doctor] he's perfectly healthy, except i still need to write him a prescription. [female narrator] play isn't just fun and games, it's also critical to raising healthy and happy children. through play, kids learn how to solve problems, manage their emotions, relieve stress and more. the american academy of pediatrics now encourages doctors to write kids prescriptions for play. hey super dude, five minutes till homework time ok? [boy] bet you can't catch me! [narrator] to learn about the benefits of play go to the genius of play dot org.
1:58 am
1:59 am
left. we will never be the hate trump media mob. don't let your heart be troubled. laurainlaura ingraham is next.
2:00 am
have a good weekend.