Skip to main content

tv   Americas News HQ  FOX News  July 28, 2019 9:00am-10:00am PDT

9:00 am
facebook page and original videos, twitter on howard kurtz, we will see you live with mueller hearing coverage we just did, back next sunday 11:00 eastern with the latest buzz. ♪ ♪ eric: robert mueller's marathon testimony sparked divided reaction in capitol hill, democrats touting further evidence that president trump broke the law but the republicans are saying it raised more questions about the origins of the russia investigation and they want that probed. >> one of the maintaining aways is that we still don't have any russians, right, we don't know who the russians were that supposedly, you know, colluded with the trump campaign, why because there were none and that's what we said 2 and a half years ago. >> but it was very clear from what the mueller report lays out, it lays out 5 instances of obstruction of justice and lays out the 3 elements of the crime
9:01 am
very clearly with all the evidence that shows that -- that shows that had he not been the president he would have been indicted. >> on top of the story this morning, hello, i'm eric sean this is america's news headquarters. arthel: hello, everyone, i'm arthel neville, democrats are in agreement that the president obstructed justice, but the party appears to be divided on how to pick up where mueller left off. eric: team fox news coverage for you, david reporting live from the white house, let's begin with garrett tenney in washington dc bureau, garrett. >> whether or not to move ahead with impeachment proceedings against the president and that's been there some time after robert mueller's hearing nadler said his panel has already in effect been con conducting impeachment investigation for months, neither his committee nor the full house has voted to authorize an official impeachment inquiry but today nadler argued he wants to be
9:02 am
certain about their case before taking any formal action to begin impeachment proceedings. >> what mueller showed, violations of clause, all the things that might cause to recommend articles of impeachment, articles of impeachment that have been recommended to the committee and we are investigating and determining whether we should report those articles to the house. that's exactly what we are doing. >> as the next step in their investigation, the judiciary committee is now trying to get it hands on the grand jury information on mueller report telling the federal judge the evidence is essential for them to fully investigate the president and his administration, on sunday morning futures republican congressman john ratcliffe said this is just the latest effort by democrats to keep impeachment dream alive. >> everybody saw and a lot of democrats have conceded that it's time to move on, there's a hole in the impeachment ploon that's large enough to nadler
9:03 am
and adam schiff to walk together, schiff and nadler don't seem to see that. >> they will enforce subpoenas for former white house counsel don mcgann and file lawsuit challenging that former white house employees have absolute immunity from testifying before congress, eric. eric: arthel. arthel: president trump keeping up twitter attack on democrats saying they should be working for their country instead of wasting time on a, quote, witch hunt hoax. david picks up coverage from the white house, david. >> arthel, good afternoon, a lot of blow-back over president trump's tweets targeting cummings, the congressman from maryland and district in west baltimore, despite the blowback president trump continues to double even triple down, elijah cummings is fierce critics of president trump's border policies and president trump claims district is worst than the border, earlier morning guest on "fox & friends" showed video of the district prompts a
9:04 am
series of tweets from the president, i want to read one of those, quote, as proven last week during congressional tour, the border is clean, efficient and well run just very crowded, cummings district is disgusting rodent infested mess and if he spent more time in baltimore, maybe he could help clean up the very dangerous and filthy place, nancy pelosi, the house speaker tweeting yesterday, we all reject racist attacks against him and support steadfast leadership talking about cummings, president trump doubling down today, quote, explain to nancy pelosi who has recently called racist by those in her own party that there's nothing wrong with bringing out the very obvious fact that congressman kim moneys has done -- cummings has done for baltimore. chris wallace specifically asked white house chief of staff mick mulvaney about the president's rhetoric, listen. >> infested, sounds subhuman,
9:05 am
all 6 members of -- members of congress who are people of color. >> i think you're spending too much time reading between the lines. >> no, i'm reading in the lines. >> jenna bush hagger is telling president trump to knock off rhetoric, president trump has a busy week ahead of him starting tomorrow, he will sign the 9/11 victim's compensation fund bill into law and later this week, treasury secretary steve mnuchin will travel to shanghai china to continue trade talks with china, arthel, back to you. arthel: we will talk about that later this hour, thank you, david. >> both sides are calling it cover-up, leaders are saying the president is doing just that. so what comes next?
9:06 am
andrew joins us, congressional reporter for politico, so andrew, congressman nadler calls it impeachment investigation, not inquiry, they are the same, going to federal court, get the secret transcripts and force subpoenas on don mcgann and others, what do you expect? >> in petitioning a federal court for the grand jury information, the house judiciary committee was first time putting in writing the fact that they are potentially pursuing impeachment, now, this has always been something at their disposal, obviously house judiciary committee only panel in congress that can only initiate such an investigation, but by putting in writing, they are crossing threshold by doing the regular oversight functions as congressional committee to now officially considering whether impeachment is warranted. the problem with that dynamic right now is that speaker nancy pelosi is not fully on board with an impeachment inquiry, they haven't taken a formal house vote that would unlock more funding, hire more lawyers
9:07 am
and other folks consider extreme measures, by telling the court that they are considering impeachment they are moving into a new phase here, so that's what's next for the committee. eric: this is the building block of a foundation of a legal case and procedural case for them to potentially start and/or present the case for impeachment? >> that's exactly right, the second part of this is something that was mentioned before, the idea that this coming week they will actually go to federal court again to sue former white house counsel don mcgann to unlock his testimony, of course, the white house has been blocking him from appearing before the house judiciary committee asserting the claim of court absolute immunity, former senior advisers to the president do not have to testify before congress, the house judiciary committee, democrats in particular feel pretty confident that they can win the lawsuit and that could be act 2 of this entire, you know, if you want to call it impeachment crusade that they are on right now.
9:08 am
>> nadler has been going after donald trump for decades, as reporter in the 80's, city proposal which would take big chunk of the west side, nbc was going to move there, build 152-story building and jerry nadler who represents the west side of manhattan avidly fighting donald trump every inch of the way against that project and he is still fighting now, take a listen to what he said this morning. >> the president lied repeatedly to the american people and to investigators and conducted a corrupt cover-up with at least 5 criminally indictable acts of obstruction of justice. these are very serious offenses against the rule of law and we now have to get further evidence and put it before the american people as we consider articles of impeachment in the committee. >> he's saying they ought to get further -- more evidence, how are they going to do that? >> well, the first part as we
9:09 am
mentioned before, the idea of trying to get the grand jury information, you recall from 1990's they were literally wheeling boxes of documents onto capitol hill, so that the house judiciary committee could use that information, now, that was under the independent counsel statute, this is the special counsel statute, so they're making a different legal aferght to try to -- argument to try to get the information. i want to zero in real quick on something that jerry nadler said in the clip you played there. he mentioned the president lied to investigators that was really the only real new piece of information that came out and asked by congresswoman by the president's responses, written responses to investigators, of course, in the 448 pages, mueller wrote that he believed that the president's responses were, quote, incomplete and inadequate but mueller went a step further than asked when asked by congresswoman, do you believe the president -- the president's responses were also
9:10 am
untruthful and he said, generally, yes, that was a new piece of information that we had not learned from the mueller report itself and that's something that jerry nadler was trying to focus on there. >> yeah, hasn't been highlighted a lot in the coverage. on the other side republicans are going after alleged fisa abuse, questioning how the whole thing started, was it a total set-up. >> nothing more, nothing less than a cover-up, okay, you know, why would you not -- you write a whole report, you mentioned 65 times in the report, the russian, she met with the trump team one time for less than 20 minutes, okay, she met with glen simpson who was running the dirty operations for the clinton campaign at least 3 times, my guess is multiple times, maybe dozens of times, you don't have that in there, you put it in the report but you don't talk about it, so there's so much in this
9:11 am
-- in that mueller report it really just looks like a glossover and cover-up. michael horowitz investigating who has power to panel grand jury, there's durham on the right. are we going to get a durham that delves into those questions. >> investigator general horowitz is conducting investigation and we will see results within the next few months, republicans i have been talking in capitol hill expect result around september, that's at least the timeline that they believe is most feasible right now and, look, the senate judiciary committee, the senate obviously controlled by republicans still, the senate judiciary committee intends to hold hearings on this issue especially after the inspector general report comes out to try to focus on it but to what congressman nunes said, mueller was not allowed to speak about those issues that he was talking about there in that clip in his testimony on wednesday
9:12 am
because the attorney general specifically said that you -- that mueller was not allowed to talk about anything the four corners-his report, democrats were frustrate bid that directive but the republicans were frustrated by it because they couldn't get what they believe key questions of the start of the investigation in the first place. eric: those questions likely to be investigated now by republicans in the coming months, andrew of politico, thank you for joining us. >> thank you. eric: of course, arthel. arthel: supreme court clearing the way for trump administration to use $2.5 billion in pentagon funds to build the border wall, on sunday morning futures acting homeland security kevin mcaleenan was big ruling, more action required on capitol hill. >> the situation is improving by almost every measure but we remain in border security crisis, the only fundamental
9:13 am
solution to this crisis is congressional action, we may very clear the targeted changes of law that we need. arthel: mark meredith live in washington with more, mark. >> hey, arthel, the white house is thrilled that friday's ruling by the supreme court to allow the president to redirect military funds to build the border wall, the court say it is money can be spent now even as the lawsuit works its way through the court, the case continues, the trump administration says $2.5 billion will go a long way to ensuring border security, the money expected to fund projects in california, arizona and new mexico, acting white house chief of staff mick mulvaney told chris wallace that the court made the right decision. >> 100 miles of wall, 4 miles a week, probably higher and still on schedule, 450 miles of wall built by the end of 2020. >> acting homeland security secretary kevin mcaleenan say it
9:14 am
is situation on the border is improving but remains crisis, the court's decision will speed up more construction. >> there's a big victory of the supreme court to allow the department of defense to move forward with that $2.5 billion to really accelerate the progress on the wall. >> house speaker nancy pelosi calls the court's decision deeply flawed, she put out a tweet shortly after the decision came down calling the wall wasteful and in effective, she also had more to say, quote, founders founded democracy governed by the people and not monarchy, new jersey senator cory booker also weighing in on the wall, he also was on twitter, we had tweets this weekend, he wrote, quote, diverting military funds for vanity project is exactly who donald trump is. i will continue to fight back misguided decision and issue and democrats hope to go take on the president and will be holding their second debate.
9:15 am
arthel: new york regional fugitive task force, good to have you here. thank you, i want to start if i could, is the president wrong for moving forward with this plans for border security if he thinks he cannot get congress to cooperate? >> no, he's not done wrong. congress hasn't done anything in securing the bored for years, i started 30 years ago in immigration, there was a chain-link fence, no. 2.5 billion from the military, that's a good thing. we can start to build the wall and secure it. 2 million -- go ahead, arthel. arthel: no, no, it's about you, go ahead. >> 2 million aliens have been
9:16 am
arrested in the interior in the last 10 years, that's in the interior away from the border, so how did the 2 million came in and credit crimes and lock them up and tried to deport, they get in because the border is not secured. the democrats seem to hate the president so much no matter what he does it never gets done. the supreme court did the right thing. >> definitely victory for trump administration, i want to rush in there about democrats because this was the president's campaign promise, does this work around, you know, take on a different tone? >> no, it's a campaign promise, but it's the right thing to do, every border patrol agent like myself and every ice agent or every true patriot wants a secure border, we can't let everybody in, arthel. arthel, when i'm on the border and arrested children with their
9:17 am
parents, you know, on the border, all of us, all of us feel bad, we want them to be safe, we want to be well fed and want them to go to school but we can't as a nation not have a secure border and just let everybody come in, how we do that is the state department, we give aid to other countries so they can take care of themselves. so we are doing the right thing. arthel: and i want -- >> doing the right thing. arthel: i want to talk about the safe third-country agreement since you mentioned other countries. is guatemala, agreement with guatemala, is guatemala equip today serve as gait-keeper to asylum seekers trying to get to the u.s.? if they are overrunning our borders how can guatemala contain the flow of refugees? >> well, the vast, vast majority of those entering guatemala, of course, are from the neighboring honduras and el salvador. arthel: right.
9:18 am
>> you to pass through guatemala to get to méxico. okay. now, that safe-third country, look, it's not -- asylum was not designed for economic reasons, you can't use asylum because you're in a poor country. if that were the case, they'll be trillion -- billions and billions of people coming from every country. it's for persecution. people that are going to get killed if they stay in their country, murdered, attacked, that's not the majority of people, very, very few asylum claims are truly for persecution, now, in answer to your question, arthel, you know, can guatemala handle it, probably not with the infrastructure, but now they have to pass through méxico as well, méxico should also be another country, but when you get to the u.s.-mexican border and you try to enter the united states, now bawls of -- because
9:19 am
of the agreement you did not follow the agreement, you passed through a country that you didn't try, let them try and get denied by guatemala and then we will see what happens when they get to our border, we have to secure the border. arthel: yeah, that's true. the wall street journal, they are reporting that under the terms of the agreement posted online by the guatemalan government on friday the u.s. government will arrange and cover transportation costs of asylum seekers sent from the u.s. to guatemala and mention that unaccompanied minors are excluded from the agreement. so i ask, part of the deal that the u.s., you know l send asylum seekers who have already made it to the u.s. back to guatemala to be detained there? >> yes. they tried to enter our country, they didn't follow the current law, now you have an opportunity, look, let's say you are being hunted by ms13 in el
9:20 am
salvador and you truly have a need for safety, asylum claim, well, then, arthel, you go to guatemala, they are not going to chase you across the border into guatemala, you know, again, i feel bad that it's a poor country, but it's at least safe in most of the country. not the whole country but then again our whole country is not safe, we have murders every day in every big city, so they need to apply in the first safe country, it was a fantastic idea by the president and it's about time we did something. the real solution is comprehensive immigration reform, get the congress and the democrats and the republicans to agree on a huge package which i'm sure steven miller and the president are working on and let's make the whole 1952 immigration act new to conform
9:21 am
with the standards of today, let's make everything better and we have an opportunity to do that, arthel. arthel: so what's it going to take, though, i mean, because the political gridlock is leaving, you know, remains porous at the border. >> the $2.5 billion and now more walls, frees up a lot more agents, we have sent down to the border volunteers from every federal agency to go help, so it frees up the border patrol agents to do enforcement action and arrest illegal aliens coming across the border, not only those seeking asylum but those who will come here and commit crime and hurt people, so what is it going to take? a little bit on either side, that's where the democracy is all about, give and take. >> i think people want --
9:22 am
>> i wish -- arthel: i'm sorry, you know what, i'm getting a wrap and i apologize but i'm with you on that, i want them to get together and make it happen, we need to fix it, we really do, thomas, i really appreciate your time today and we will be right back like me. ♪
9:23 am
we really pride ourselves on >> temaking it easy for youass, to get your windshield fixed. >> teacher: let's turn in your science papers. >> tech vo: this teacher always puts her students first. >> student: i did mine on volcanoes. >> teacher: you did?! oh, i can't wait to read it. >> tech vo: so when she had auto glass damage... she chose safelite. with safelite, she could see exactly when we'd be there.
9:24 am
>> teacher: you must be pascal. >> tech: yes ma'am. >> tech vo: saving her time... [honk, honk] >> kids: bye! >> tech vo: ...so she can save the science project. >> kids: whoa! >> kids vo: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace ♪ that's it. i'm calling kohler about their walk-in bath. [ sigh ] not gonna happen. my name is ken. how may i help you? hi, i'm calling about kohler's walk-in bath. excellent! happy to help. huh? hold one moment please... [ finger snaps ] hmm. the kohler walk-in bath features an extra-wide opening and a low step-in at three inches, which is 25 to 60% lower than some leading competitors. the bath fills and drains quickly, while the heated seat soothes your back, neck and shoulders. kohler is an expert in bathing, so you can count on a deep soaking experience. are you seeing this? the kohler walk-in bath comes with fully adjustable hydrotherapy jets and our exclusive bubblemassage.
9:25 am
everything is installed in as little as a day by a kohler-certified installe. and it's made by kohler- america's leading plumbing brand. we need this bath. yes. yes you do. a kohler walk-in bath provides independence with peace of min. >> fox alert from alaska you israel and the u.s. successfully carried out long-range missile interceptor test above the atmosphere, taking a look at some of the dramatic video that came to news room, the new system to drive ballistic missiles that are incoming out of the sky before they can hit a country specifically protecting israel against those medium-range ballistic missiles fired by iran and iran just firing another one the other day. ellison barber live in our bureau on more details what
9:26 am
takes iron dome to protect the jewish state. >> hi, eric, the system has successfully intercepted a missile simulating a ballistic one, israeli ministry of defense says the weapon system demonstrated hit to kill interception of ballistic target outside of the atmosphere, at cabinet meeting earlier today israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu say intercepted targets heights and speeds not known. >> today israel has the ability to act against ballistic missiles fired against us from iran and any other location. this is the great achievement for israel's security, all of our enemies should know that we will overcome them both defensively and offensively. >> arrow 3 is the top tier of multi-layered shield which includes the iron dome all meant
9:27 am
to help from rockets fired from gaza and lebanon as well as iran's long range missile. u.s. official told fox news it flew over 600 miles from southern iran to an area in northern iran outside of the capital, iran is to start activities at heavy water nuclear reactor, include to go iranian news agency the atomic news organization told about the plans of the meeting earlier today, heavy water can be used to make plutonium used in nuclear war heads, since president trump announced the u.s.' withdrawal from 2015 nuclear agreement and began imposing harsh economic sanctions on the regime, iran has taken steps to reduce commitments it agreed to in the 2015 deal, they say the u.s. is engaging in economic terrorism. iran, remaining signatories met in viena today, britain, germany, france and russia and
9:28 am
china are trying to salvage the deal, iranian official called today's talks constructive but did not resolve everything, iran wants to sell its oil as it did before the u.s. started reimposing sanctions -- sanctions, the official says that iran is going to keep reducing their commitments to the deal until there's agreement that secures iran's interest. eric. eric: ellison, in a few moments in newscast we will have exclusive interview, i sit down with president's middle east pointman, the number one threat to israel and arab allies in middle east is iran. arthel. arthel: eric, washington and beijing restarting trade talks this week, what to expect and why our next guest says the only thing standing between us and a world dominated by china is president trump mm, uh, what do you do for fun?
9:29 am
-not this. ♪ -oh, what am i into? mostly progressive's name your price tool. helps people find coverage options based on their budget. flo has it, i want it, it's a whole thing, and she's right there. -yeah, she's my ride. this date's lame. he has pics of you on his phone. -they're very tasteful.
9:30 am
9:31 am
that's ensure max protein,phone. with high protein and 1 gram sugar. it's a sit-up, banana!
9:32 am
bend at the waist! i'm tryin'! keep it up. you'll get there. whoa-hoa-hoa! 30 grams of protein, and one gram of sugar. ensure max protein. ♪ how do you like it, ♪ how do you like it ♪ ♪ more, more, more ♪ how do you like it, how do you like it ♪ all you can eat is back. how do you like that? applebee's. now that's eatin' good in the neighborhood. arthel: u.s.-china trade talks start up again in shanghai this week, although expectations are low for a major breakthrough, analysts say some progress is possible. next guest wrote a wall street journal op-ed touting president trump's defense of american sovereignty against growing threats from beijing, the headline right here reads xi changed my mind about trump, joining me now gordon chang,
9:33 am
author of the book the coming collapse of china, okay, gordon, how did president xi change your mind and what is your new position? >> yeah, president trump in assembly speeches dwelled on sovereignty and when i heard them that's ridiculous, the whole notion of sovereignty was settled in 1642 at the treaty, but xi jinping of china for more than a decade has been dropping hints that china is the world's only sovereign state. he's been adopting the notion of china rules all under heaven so we need to have a conversation of sovereignty. i thought it was settled but xi jinping is attacking the very basis of the international system. >> so -- you said that president trump is the only key from blocking china to block china? >> yeah, he's the only global leader who has been talking about sovereignty, everybody else is either just dropped the
9:34 am
whole notion or talk about multilateralism, so this is a conversation that we need to have because obviously the piece and the prosperity since world war ii is based on the notion of sovereign states that compete and cooperate in a global framework, xi jinping is undermining that, he's not trying to compete with us in this international system, he's trying to overthrow it and we've got to defend it. arthel: so then is anyone expecting a breakthrough in shanghai this week with all of that as the background? >> yeah, people expect, you know, the most that we can do is come to interim agreement where the united states gives reprieves to hauwei technologies, the equipment manufacturer that we allow u.s. manufacturers to deal with it and on the other hand chinese would buy more u.s. agricultural products, that's a possible interim step but i think that that's not good for the united states on a number of different perspectives. arthel: yeah, because i thought hauwei was national security threat.
9:35 am
>> it absolutely is, arthel, we should not be using as bargaining chip in trade talks, you know, the dominance of technology in our world right now is so critical, so we have to make sure that the chinese do not through predatory means take over the world through hauwei and 5g, the fifth generation of wireless communications and hauwei is a threat not only to us but to our friends and allies and partners, so clearly we should be doing all we can to protect ourselves and helping hauwei is not on my list of what we should be doing. >> so then if china's goal is to be a technology beast, could any american president stop china's drive for tech dominance? >> well, we can and largely because xi jinping primary tool is made in china 2025 initiative to dominate now 11 sectors in the technology, well, this made in china 2025 plan is violation of world trade obligation that is china has undertaken.
9:36 am
this also way we can do this, hauwei technology is built on stolen and other tech, hauwei equipment to surveil other countries, this is a real danger to everybody, so this is a threat to that international system that we were talking about, so we should do all we can to deny technology to hauwei. arthel: but we just didn't -- we allowed it, though, i'm a little -- i have a few more seconds and i think i'm missing the point here, gordon, i apologize for that. so you say that president trump is the person -- the president, the leader who is -- who can stop china's, you know, quest for world dominance in terms of technology, but yet you just said that the deal in allowing hauwei to do business with some american businesses is still a national threat and that's problematic so i'm confused. >> well, president trump should not be giving any sort of exemptions to hauwei from the commerce department entity list, that's within president trump's
9:37 am
power, he should be making sure that we do not compromise our u.s. national security, the trade-off is they will buy agricultural products, that's not the future of the world. the future of the world is hauwei. >> that means china will have the tech come neabs that they want. >> well, we hope that he will not give exemptions, he hasn't granted exemptions, suggested that he would do that after press at the end of last month but this is not set in stone and there are number of senators and a number of others who are very much against helping hauwei in any way. arthel: leverage, gordon. >> he has the leverage and clearly he could stop any sort of licenses or sales of computer chips to hauwei that would make sure that hauwei couldn't do business or it couldn't use profits to support 5g build-up
9:38 am
which is going to be a danger to us. arthel: would china retaliate and stop shipping, exporting so many goods that we need here in america? >> well, they need to sell those goods, arthel, because their economy is export dependent, last year 119.3% of merchandise, that gives us enormous leverage, we have so much more power over china than china over us. they'll be friction and they'll be losers in the american economy because we have to do this because this is where the china are stealing our ip and they're acting in predatory ways, so we have no choice but to defend ourselves and our friends. arthel: okay, we will leave it there, thank you very much, gordon chang. >> thank you very much, arthel. arthel: eric. eric: massive search underway for missing 2-year-old boy after his parents were found dead in
9:39 am
apparent murder-suicide, the developing story straight ahead. whoa. travis in it made it. it's amazing. oh is that travis's app? it's pretty cool, isn't it? there's two of them. they're multiplying. no, guys, its me. see, i'm real. i'm real! he thinks he's real. geico. over 75 years of savings and service.
9:40 am
so chantix can help you quit slow turkey.key. along with support, chantix is proven to help you quit. with chantix you can keep smoking at first and ease into quitting. chantix reduces the urge so when the day arrives, you'll be more ready to kiss cigarettes goodbye. when you try to quit smoking, with or without chantix,
9:41 am
you may have nicotine withdrawal symptoms. stop chantix and get help right away if you have changes in behavior or thinking, aggression, hostility, depressed mood, suicidal thoughts or actions, seizures, new or worse heart or blood vessel problems, sleepwalking, or life-threatening allergic and skin reactions. decrease alcohol use. use caution driving or operating machinery. tell your doctor if you've had mental health problems. the most common side effect is nausea. quit smoking slow turkey. talk to your doctor about chantix.
9:42 am
arthel: fbi is asking for public's health after agents search for 2-year-old boy after parents found dead in apparent suicide last week. kristina following the story from news room, kristina. >> arthel, the boy's parents were found dead on wednesday in a car, the fbi says the couple ran over spike strips after leading police on chase in montana and then the dad shot and killed the mother and then shot himself inside that car, this is a picture of adan salcido, missing 2-year-old, adan last seen on june 4th, seen or surveillance video in wal-mart, they were purchasing camping equipment, according to police adan's relative say family was homeless and camped out from time to time, the
9:43 am
mother was supposed to start serving a prison sentence in jackson county for 2018 burglary and the boy's dad was linked to the crime but never showed up to prison, felony warrants issued for the couple's arrest, the couple was then seen on surveillance video on july 25th, the same day they died, but on that day, adan was not seen in the video with them. i want to show you the missing child poster share bid the national center for missing and exploited children, 2-year-old boy, hispanic with brown hair, and eyes about 45 pounds and he hasn't been seen since june 4th, now, this point investigators are greatly concerned for the child's welfare, police investigated the car, parents were found dead in, adan was not in the vehicle at the time and police say there was no evidence he had been inside that vehicle recently, so, again, a very active search underway right now
9:44 am
for this little boy, arthel. arthel: hope they can find them, kristina coleman, thank you. >> earlier reported on the successful test of u.s. backed ballistic missile by israel, aim today protect the jewish state from incoming attacks from iran, islamic public number one threat to the region, middle east point man jason, i sat down to talk about the president's middle east peace plan in support of israel and arab allies, to aid palestinians with billions, palestinian authority has refused to participate in. he addressed security council on history of middle east and he really gave it to them. >> international consensus is not international law, let's stop kidding ourselves, so-called international consensus had been able to resolve the israeli-palestinian conflict it would have done so
9:45 am
decades ago. it didn't. >> blunt words to the united nations security council from president trump's special middle east envoy jason, real estate lawyer is trying to work his magic on much tougher geographical challenge, peace between israel and the palestinians and in doing so, he's trying to break the pattern of repeated failures of the past >> what has gone so wrong in your view? >> people have falled back in talking points and speak in short sentences or slogans, nobody is willing to make decisions to xrom hiez. >> solving those hard decision that is motivates greenblad. >> as long as we can keep everybody secured, we are not going to get there with slogans. >> , n visit came one month, more than 300 officials
9:46 am
including those from israel and arab nations attended. the palestinians boycotted the meeting and threatening to reverse palestinians executives who dared to attend. plan is creating 1 million jobs in the west bank and gaza that would take to palestinians to a new era. >> i think we are at unique time in history, unique president who is not only a huge supporter of israel, a president who understands israel's security needs but president who wants to help palestinians themselves. but the palestinian leadership does not welcome the help. has not only refuse today negotiate or participate, he cut off ties with the white house after the administration moved u.s. embassy to tel aviv to jerusalem last year. >> how can you reassure that palestinian authority that this is in their interest?
9:47 am
>> when they see the plan, they will see that, nobody is here to force something on them that doesn't work, it's not for america, it's not for the european union who is interested in conflict to make decisions for israelis and palestinians, we don't live there, we don't suffer there, we don't fight there, we don't die there, it's up to the two sides to do that. eric: heading back to middle east, he and presidential senior adviser jared kushner and other officials following up on that workshop, they would be pretty busy, they will be visiting israel, egypt, jordan, qatar, saudi arabia and the uae all part of the president's push for peace. arthel: fascinating story how you broke it all down. eric: it really is, trying to make effort and taken real estate negotiating skill and experience here new york to middle east and he thinks that he will eventually be successful. arthel: okay, good luck, it is like a scene out of horror movie, forms of grasshoppers
9:48 am
invading las vegas that would freak me out. spotted all over streets and sidewalks throughout the city. what is causing it and how long will the creditors call sin city home? a live report, now that's going to be interesting, coming up next. em 15% more. with getaway deals of at least 15% off, you can be a booker at booking.com. with getaway deals of at least 15% off, let's see, aleve is than tylenol extra strength. and last longer with fewer pills. so why am i still thinking about this? i'll take aleve. aleve. proven better on pain.
9:49 am
we took everything you love about the bloomin' onion and created a menu you've never seen before. ♪ bloom, there it is! ♪ bloom, there it is! this bloom-ified menu starts at $13.99. and try our everyday lunch combos, starting at $7.99. we like drip coffee, layovers- lunch combos, -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 or reschedule an appointment, even on nights and weekends. today's xfinity service. simple. easy. awesome. i'd rather not.
9:50 am
9:51 am
>> look at that, swarms of grasshoppers taking over las vegas, descended on the strip and other parts of the city, all over the city, you to protect yourself, so many of them.
9:52 am
look at that, they show up as weather on radar. adam klotz on the weather center with this, what's going on, adam? >> it's not unusual to see bats in areas, this is the reason that came about, here is your drought monitor across the region, typically you think the southwest, you think of drought, dry conditions, las vegas gets 5-inches of rain, that's not been the case, have had more than 5-inches of rain, seen a lot more rain, this is the last 24 and we have been getting happening a lot lately, you get in the afternoon hours and we see fire up of storms in the area, it's not really ever huge rain, more rain they they typically see, the rain across the region, widespread here getting to an inch, in some cases couple of inches, all that additional rainfall, all the
9:53 am
additional rainfall created all those grasshoppers, they are on the move and they just happened to be moving through las vegas, weather across the rest of the country, pretty dry for the rest of us, here is the west all the way stretch to go east coast, mostly dry conditions, one area to pay attention to, upper midwest, northern plains, that is pretty much it today, the other stories continue to be so warm for so long we will be seeing more of that pretty much everything off towards the east of that frontal boundary i showed you, temperatures actually currently getting up in middle 80's and in some cases upper 80's, you get the feel-like temperature and you add heat and humidity and feels warmer, spots widespread in middle to upper 90's, running the east coast, feel like 94 in dc, 90 in new york city today, shift a little for tomorrow, cool off in portions of the plains, lots of spot close to triple digits and warmer in east
9:54 am
coast, feel like 97-degrees in dc tomorrow, 93-degrees for monday into here into new york city and the heat just continues, sunday, into monday, into tuesday, the actual temperatures, a lot of spots continues to be very warm, good news, eric, i don't predict grasshoppers running across the east coast. eric: you get the number and hit it and there's a grasshopper. all right, adam, thank you. arthel: i will ask you later where did you come up with that, senator bernie sanders traveling outside the country today to make point of the cost of prescription drugs, fox news is traveling along with the senator, that's up next.
9:55 am
hey, who are you? oh, hey jeff, i'm a car thief... what?! i'm here to steal your car because, well, that's my job. what? what?? what?! (laughing) what?? what?! what?! [crash] what?! haha, it happens. and if you've got cut-rate car insurance, paying for this could feel like getting robbed twice. so get allstate... and be better protected from mayhem... like me. ♪
9:56 am
9:57 am
we really pride ourselves on >> temaking it easy for youass, to get your windshield fixed. >> teacher: let's turn in your science papers. >> tech vo: this teacher always puts her students first. >> student: i did mine on volcanoes. >> teacher: you did?! oh, i can't wait to read it. >> tech vo: so when she had auto glass damage... she chose safelite. with safelite, she could see exactly when we'd be there. >> teacher: you must be pascal. >> tech: yes ma'am. >> tech vo: saving her time... [honk, honk] >> kids: bye! >> tech vo: ...so she can save the science project. >> kids: whoa! >> kids vo: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace ♪ we carry flowers that signifyn why we want to end the disease. and we walk so that one day, there will be a white flower for alzheimer's first survivor. join the fight at alz.org/walk.
9:58 am
arthel: senator bernie sand us taking a bus from detroit to canada today to highlight how customers north of the border pay less for life-saving medications like insulin. peter doocy is along for the ride. reporter: right now we're on the canadian side in windsor trying to get back into the united states after this trip with senator bernie sanders who, for years -- or for at least the last couple months, has been talking about how the things he was proposing in 2016 when he ran for president are now part of the democratic mainstream, one of those things, medicare for all -- which has been adopted by some in the top tier with the exclusion of joe biden -- now he's trying
9:59 am
something different. he rounded up some americans with diabetes who are having a difficult time paying for sinces lin, and he -- insulin, and took them on a bus to highlight just a trip that took about an hour could save somebody thousands of dollars. >> how are we a few minutes from the american border, and she's going to be paying one-twelfth of the price that you pay in the united states? it has everything to do with the fact that over the last 20 years the pharmaceutical industry have spent hundreds of millions of dollars in campaign contributions, buying politicians in both political parties, by the way, and billions of dollars on lobbying efforts. >> reporter: i asked senator sanders what he could do as president to maybe even out the costs, and he says that one idea is to take the average cost of drugs like insulin in six nearby countries and then have that be something that the government
10:00 am
requires pharmaceutical companies to charge. arthel? arthel: all right, peter, interesting. and we are -- eric: diabetes is so -- arthel: so, people need help. back at 4 p.m. eric: see you then. ♪ ♪ >> president trump doubling down today, tweeting a series of new attacks against democratic congressman elijiah cummings and the conditions in his maryland district. good afternoon to you, welcome to america's news headquarters from washington, i'm jill january neely. he let -- gillian neely. he let me come back. leland: we're so glad to have you. bernie sanders had a few things to say about baltimore, we'll get to that in a minute. president trump lashing out against nancy pelosi and others pushing back against the claim that his criticism of

143 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on