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tv   Fox and Friends First  FOX News  October 7, 2019 2:00am-3:00am PDT

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uniform violation for a game he didn't play in. the injured quarterback punished for wearing an apple watch on the sidelines. espn says he's upset and plans to appeal. thanks for joining us on this monday. "fox & friends" continues now. bye-bye. rob: its is monday, october 7th. this is a fox news alert. one of the suspected gunman behind a kansas city bar rampage is now in custody as the search for a second t shooter ramps up. jillian: what we learned about a possible motive for the attack that left four people dead. plus, the democrats' impeachment push is getting support from a second whistleblower. rob: the white house says the timing is pretty convenient, accusing democrats of moving the goal post and the president says he's not going to play nice until the dems back up a all of their talk with action. oh, no!
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[ laughter ] rob: what was supposed to be a dramatic gender reveal remains a mystery. jillian: the mishap for one couple is going viral. "fox & friends" continues right now. ♪ i just want to use your love tonight. ♪ i don't want to lose your love tonight. ♪ jillian: how about going to the doctor and finding out the old fashioned way? rob: okay, yeah. i didn't know what you were talking about for a second. jillian: that seems like the safest possible way. good morning, you are watching "fox & friends first" on this monday morning. i'm carley shimkus. rob: welcome.
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i'thank you forgetting up early. the white house is expected to send a message to house democrats as the party demands president trump comply with impeachment inquiry. >> allison barber joins us live from washington. allison, the big news is that a second whistleblower is now coming forward. >> reporter: that's right. the second whistleblower is represented by the same attorneys representing the first whistleblower. they say client made a protected disclosure under the law and cannot be retaliated against. they say whistleblower number two has firsthand knowledge of the allegations that triggered the impeachment inquiry. the seconstephanie grisham sayst doesn't matter how many people decide to call themselves whistleblowers about the same telephone call, a call the president made public, it doesn't change the fact that hes has done nothing wrong. the impeachment inquiry directly reached the white house friday
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evening when three democratic chairmen subpoenaed for documents related to president trump and the president of ukraine, they say the president forced their hand after ignoring repeated requests for documents, that began with a letter in early september. the white house is expected to send a letter to house speaker nancy pelosi this week, telling her the white house will not hand over any documents until a full house vote is held on the impeachment inquiry. sources tell fox news that letter could be sent some time today. democrats say a vote is not necessary to conduct the investigation and that a demand like had that is outside of modern precedent. rob, carlie. >> allison, thank you. house democrats are confident they have enough votes to pass articles of impeachment. rob: fox news contributor tammy bruce says democrats think they're winning on impeachment but are really simply moving the goal posts. >> it's a standard that is meant to hamstring the president, because pretty much
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everyone is his political rival. if you run for office, then nobody gets to ask you questions about your past? when did that happen? it comes down to the use of the power of the office and ironicky, a that is what they are accusing the president of. donald trump is probably the one guy in washington who is not doing any of that and yet there's this list of accusations that's meant to distract you from the fact that he's likely the most direct, certainly the transparent and most honest that we have. carley: house democrats could lose 18 votes and have enough support to move articles of impeachment through. rob: a fox news alert, breaking overnight. a man connected to a deadly shooting at a kansas city bar is under arrest as the search for a second suspect in this is heating up. carley: witnesses reveal a possible motive for they
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rampage. >> reporter: a massive manhunt us underway right now for one of the two suspects accused of opening fire inside the kansas city bar, killing four men. the kansas city kansas police department says javier eltetora is behind bars but hugo martinez is still wanted. both men face four charges of first degree murder. >> we heard that possibly these suspects were in the bar earlier, maybe some kind of physical altercation or just verbal. >> reporter: jose valdez was par tending on saturday night. he says one of the suspects caused trouble in the bar before and that's why he refused to serve him. >> we never serve them. we try keep people like that out of the bar. he picked up a cup and threw it at me. >> reporter: hours later, the suspects returned and they began shooting. overnight, dozens gathered for candlelight vigil in the
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victim's honor. tina stapleton said she left the bar one hour before the shooting. >> i just count believe it. you know. i was talking to everyone and everybody looked happy. everybody's happy last night. these are my brothers and sisters. >> reporter: tragic. police say all four men killed were hispanic. they don't believe this incident was racially motivated. javier eletore is held on $1 million bond. rob. rob: thank you so much. while you were sleeping, the united states began to pull troops from turkey's border in syria. the white house says it is clearing the way for turkish troops to invade. the president making a deal with his turkish counter part, giving the country control over captured isis fighters as well. u.s.-backed syrian democratic forces slammed, warning that the
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turkish invasion could lead to an isis uprising. a family attorney tells the daily mail that joshua brown's death was an assassination. he's not ruling out police involvement in the alleged assassination. brown was shot days after a jury convicted the ex dallas cop of murdering brown's neighbor. brown testified about that 2018 shooting. guyger has been sentenced to 10 years in prison. carley: the supreme court is back in session today, the high court will face several hot button issues this term like immigration, guns and abortion. gil trotter joined "fox & friends first" last hour saying this could be a he historic year for the court. >> we're seeing unprecedented attacks on the independence of the judiciary, starting with the democratic presidential candidates who are pushing court
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packing plans. we see current senators like senator sheldon whitehouse arguing that the court should be restructured. so you are seeing how critical this term is going to be, which starts today. carley: first thing on the docket is a death penalty case about whether states can abolish an insanity defense. and as the court returns to session, a congresswoman is joining calls for justice, brett of kavanaugh's impeachment. listen to ayana pressly outside the court. >> kavanaugh may have a that seat for now but what you, what we are fighting for is so much bigger than one insecure man blinded by his privilege. [ cheering and applause ] carley: pressly introduced a resolution earlier this year calling for kavanaugh's impeachment. he was faced with sexual misconduct allegations during his confirmation process. he denies they'l denies them al.
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rob: on sunday, the eagles soared into the first place by routing the jets, 31-6. not much of a game there. the packers beat the cowboys 34-24 thanks to four rushing touchdowns from aaron jones. and a big win for the colts, shutting down the chiefs, 19-13, heading into their firsts loss of the season in a road game and the steelers falling to 1-4 after a brutal 26-23 overtime loss to the baltimore ravens. earl thomas hit steelers' quarterback, knocking him out cold on the field. he was rushed to the hospital with a concussion. that is really scary. carley: from the gridiron to the baseball diamond, the braves are one win away from their first nlcs since 2001. >> martinez deals and that is driven into center field. one round is in in, ortega, here
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comes clawson, he will score. carley: a two run single sealing the 3-1 win over the cardinals. a 7 run sixth inning sparks the dodgers' win over the nationals. both game fours are tonight. the astros and yankees can advance tonight. you houstonew york faces the tw0 on fox sports one. somebody hand me a hot dog, it's october baseball. rob: how do they expect us to watch these games when they start at 8:40. democrattings going wild after a second whistleblower comes forward regarding president trump and that phone call with ukraine. >> they are coming forward either as whistleblowers but also leaking which is not a good thick. a lot of the story is coming out because people who are in the room are talking to the
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washington post and new york times and others. carley: this doesn't surprise our next guest. why the former impeachment manager for clinton says we've reached the point of no return. rob: also, this is kind of a cool story. no uniform, no problem. how police officers in minneapolis who are banned from wearing their uniforms at political events got creative. stay tuned. ♪ bad to the bone. ♪
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what's happening is that people around the president are watching what is happening and are finally saying my god, this cannot happen anymore and they are coming forward. either as whistleblower as apparently as many as two people are going to do officially, but also leaking which by the way is not a good thing but an awful lot of the storely is coming out because people who are in the room are talking to the washington post and the new york times and to others. carley: democrats are circling the wagons around the second sed
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whistleblower. rob: the transcript has been released. is there anything new that could be released or is it just politics and the democrats trying to confuse maybe a lot of voters with nonstop accusations and a lot of leaks. carley: bob barr was one of the managers during bill clinton's impeachment and he joins us with more. good morning. could the second whistleblower provide anything new that we don't already know? >> it's hard to tell. regardless of what this new so-called whistleblower can do, this is a dangerous precedent that we're -- very dangerous waters, so-to-speak, that we're entering into, where you have basically a sort of farm team of people waiting in the wings with this outside law firm which specializes in this sort of conspiracy, waiting in the wings and at the right moment the
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democrats or whoever trots another one out to embellish or to basically defend against deficiencies in what the earlier whistle blower says and i think president trump is right, saying basically move forward with this or stop it because this will set a terrible precedent for any future president. rob: the press secretary says it doesn't matter how many people decide to tell themselves whistleblowers about the same telephone call, doesn't change the fact he has done nothing wrong. the democrats is say there might be more to learn from this second person. >> here we have another problem and that is does the president of the united states have the right or the ability to keep confidential sensitive information involving a conversation with a foreign
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leader. this has never been the case before where some so-called whistleblower can just willy-nilly start releasing confidential, sensitive, possibly sensitive information, so that's another problem we have. carley: i'm sure that a lot of world leaders are going to be watching what they say around the president now on those private phone calls. president trump says he may not comply with the impeachment inquiry until nancy pelosi holds a full house vote on that. so how do you think that one is going to play out? >> i think the president has a good point here. every recent impeachment, president nixon's, president clinton's, the house dealt with the issue very, very formally, very professionally and with precedent, that is, they filed and voted on a formal inquiry of impeachment that set parameters for the impeachment itself. they've not done so here because they want to give themselves an out in case it falls apart and to avoid having democrats facing
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re-election in pro-trump states, having to take a vote. so it's all political on the part of the democrats and i think the president is right to call them out. rob: what does this look like, if this gets voted into an impeachment and it goes mostly right on party lines, doesn't that look a little bad that really only one side wanted to impeach a sitting president, doesn't it look very political and not really the right thing to do? >> certainly, it does. it's impossible to color it any other way if that's what happens and it seems that that's the path that we're on. now, certainly that's not likely to be the case in the senate. you always have one or two folks that will change sides over there. but in the house, it is pure unadulterated partisan politics. carley: lindsey graham said something interesting yesterday on fox news. he said that if democrats move forward with this impeachment, he's going to make sure that the whistleblower testifies in public but does that break any
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sort of whistleblower protection laws because then we will know of course who these people are. >> i don't think these are whistleblowers anyway. these ar sabatoeurs. a whistleblower reveals something that would not be disclosed that relates to abuse, waste of funds and so forth. what we have here is a group of individuals who have found a champion and some outside law firm that has made clear from the very start of the trump administration in january 2017 that they are looking for information with which to undermine this presidency. this is in a sense a soft coup, not a whistleblower. rob: interesting take. bob, thank you so much for coming on this morning. we do appreciate it. >> certainly. rob: 19 minutes after the hour now. we're taking a closer look at the new threat for the commercial fishing industry. carley: look at that. rob: offshore wind farms. what are they? todd piro spoke with america's
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fishermen to find out. >> by the end of the first full year, i was quite visibly pregnant and the principal did what principals did in those days. wished me luck and hired someone else for the job. carley: what 2020 hopeful elizabeth warren, was she just caught in another lie. it's not exactly what she said a decade ago. ♪ day 23.
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what are you doing back there, junior? since we're obviously lost, i'm rescheduling my xfinity customer service appointment. ah, relax. i got this. which gps are you using anyway? a little something called instinct. been using it for years. yeah, that's what i'm afraid of. he knows exactly where we're going. my whole body is a compass. oh boy... the my account app makes today's xfinity customer service simple, easy, awesome. not my thing. rob: welcome back. time is ticking on a federal tax credit that major wind farm companies had hoped to take advantage of. carley: without it, the future of offshore wind farming is in question. "fox & friends" correspondent todd piro is here with more many
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tell us about this. >> that tax credit, like you mentioned, set to expire at the end of the year but this summer the interior department announced a hold on offshore wind projects until, quote, a cumulative analysis is conducted. the move delaying potential approval of the country's first large scale offshore wind farm, the vineyard wind problem, until december 2020. without that tax credit, the future of vineyard wind is in doubt. one industry that is pleased with this development, fishing. here's why. >> as a family business, it's a lot of pride. my grandfather was a fisherman, my dad, hopefully some day my son would want to do it. if something doesn't change, i don't want him coming down to the boat. >> reporter: the last time we spoke with this commercial fishing captain, he was worried that government regulations would kill the business that's been in his family for four generations. now fishermen are phras facing w threat, offshore wind farms.
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>> if they are actually built, it's over for the commercial fishing industry. >> reporter: the shift to wind energy is growing, the first wind farms was installed in the u.s. in 1980 and now there are more than 200 wind farms providing about six and-a-half percent of the nation's electricity and more growth is expected. specifically, in our nation's oceans. in 2016, the first commercial offshore wind farm began operations with five turbines off block island in rhode island and according to the american wind energy association, 10 more farms could be up and running as soon as 2024. >> this is block island. >> reporter: aaron drove us to get a better look. you may look at it and say it's just five windmills, who cares. this could be did start of thousands of these up and down the east coast of the u.s., some of them much larger than what you see in front of you. >> the impacts from five won't be the same as as impacts from 500 or 5,000. however there, have been impacts. >> reporter: where are they seeing the impact? on the fish. >> fish have different
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habitats, have certain routes that repeat year after year and year. when you put the wind farm an those places, those fish are definitely most personall persoy impacted. >> reporter: on the boats. >> we're trying to navigate. we have to avoid the windmill. >> reporter: most concerning, the wind farm's effect on radar. we watched it happen. >> these right here are the five wind turbines. this is what the radar does when you get close to the wind farm. looks like there's about 20 here when there's actually five right here. it's the interference. the cost of windmills outweigh the benefits of it. >> reporter: proponents of the wind farms say the environmental and economic advantages need to be taken into consideration as well. connecticut plans to add wind farms to their shores. >> connecticut is excited to be investing in offshore wind. we are directing project developers to ensure they have adequate funding for surveys and for monitoring and we know that
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they're going to be driving investment in manufacturing and construction jobs. >> reporter: the fishing industry response? >> it's easy for a lot of folks to look out into the ocean and think it's an endless -- it's not endless. we're going to get displaced, not only on the fishing grounds, but certain guys will go out of business. >> reporter: the coast guard as well as members from the departments of defense, energy, homeland security, faa and noaa are looking into the radar interference these ships are experiencing. it could be a national security issue, as well as a fishing and environmental issue. rob: it's crazy that it would affect the fish. you would think the ocean is so big. >> that's why i almost didn't do the story. i learned a lot on this story. carley: very interesting. a lot that many of us don't know about. the time is now 27 minutes after the hour. she had no id and no boarding
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pass. >> the orlando police were waiting for us, tsa was there and they did a full inspection of the plane with multiple k-9 dogs. rob: so how did she end up on a delta flight? the investigation into that major security breach coming up. carley: they're calling for it but can they handle it or is the impeachment probe dividing democrats. our political panel debates, next. ♪ everything i wish i didn't know. ♪ go where they could explore and experience adventure in unexpected places... ♪ who were inspired by different cultures ♪ and found that the past can create new memories... leading them to discover: we're woven together by the moments we share. for everywhere you go, expedia has everything you need, all in one place.
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fire in a bar, killing four people. rob: troops are being pulled from turkey at the border. president trump giving turkey control over captured isis fighters as well. carley: and today the white house is expected to send a letter to house democrats demanding a formal vote if they want president trump to comply with the impeachment inquiry. a senior member of the house democratic caucus telling fox news, house speaker nancy pelosi is unlikely to give in to the request. rob: all right. the democrat establishment is moving full steam ahead on impeachment but for moderate house members in states that support the president is it more important to follow the herd or to listen to their constituents, to the voters. here to debate that, advisory board member jason meiser and kelly heiman. jason, we'll start with you. if you're a democrat and you're
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in a place like wisconsin, maybe michigan, pennsylvania, this could be dangs russ in some -- dangerous in some ways. >> i think it's going to infeweinfuriate moderate democrd independents. you saw this with the russia collusion hoax which backfired. two years of investigation, $45 million later, and they have nothing to prove for it. you saw what they did with kavanaugh and now you see this ukrainian call which was perfect. there is absolutely nothing wrong with this phone call. in fact, the president has an obligation to route out corruption all around the world and he did a perfect job in that phone call. rob: i suspect you don't think it was a perfect phone call. i want to get your response as to what you think the members that are in these dangerous districts should do with this. >> absolutely. good morning. yes, i absolutely totally disagree with what he just said. first off, it was not a perfect
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call. let's look at the transcript with trump and the ukraine be president and there's three key take-aways we need to look at. number one, trump stated that the u.s. has been very good to ukraine and ukraine hasn't been good to the u.s. number two, trump asked for a favor. number three, trump asked that the president look and investigation -- rob: he asked for a favor talking about the origins of the russia probe. >> he was talking about the dnc hacking, talking about the mueller investigation, not talking about the corruption with joe biden. and by the way, joe biden is not above the law. >> there is nothing that said anything about any kind of corruption. the transcript doesn't say that, doesn't talk about corruption. >> if we pull up the graphic of the corruption, you see that do me a favor had nothing to do with joe biden. let's talk about joe biden. joe biden is not above the law, just like no one else in this country is above the law. just because he's running for
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president doesn't mean he -- >> trump is not above the law. rob: a lot of people ask why the president hasn't asked his own inte intelligence agencies o take care of this, why are we asking ukraine and china to investigate joe biden. >> the president of the ukraine who won based on draining the swamp in the ukraine, he opened up the door to the conversation about draining the swamp in the ukraine. it wasn't actually president trump who brought up the corruption and the draining of the swamp, it was the president of ukraine and president zelensky. rob: i want to show you there's a number of democrats who have not supported impeachment or have not indicated that they support impeachment, if we pull up the graphic. there's about eight of them right there. kelly, if the transcript is all that we discover from this, if that transcript -- if we don't learn anything more from the second whistleblower, do you still think a impeachment is the right move here? >> a poll recently showed that
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most americans do support an impeachment inquiry. as a lot of us know, even if the house impeaches him, the senate will neve indict the president. rob: why doesn't nancy pelosi want to call a vote on this? >> it's important that we do our due diligence and investigate and make sure that the american people have a right to know and get as much information as possible before there is a vote. i think it's important to have an informed decision before making a decision because it's an important decision. rob: jason, the final word. >> the american people have a right to know. rob: do you think democrats are making a dent here. to the average person out there who is not politically affiliated, it seems the president is always in some kind of a crisis and it's exhausting to the average voter, having to pay attention to all of this. >> it's extremely exhausting. it's going to backfire magnificently. the question you asked earlier about nancy pelosi not taking a vote, she didn't take it to a vote because there's no stomach
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for this right now in this country. the leadership of the democrat party has left their party. they have left their constituents. this is not what the american people want. >> that's not true. >> the democrats don't want this in middle america. it's the coastal elites that are running the democrat -- the leadership away from the democrat party. this is effectively trying to overturn a democratically elected president and nullify 63 million voters. it's unaccept aable in our republic and it never should happen. rob: guys, good conversation this morning. we do appreciate your time. kelly, jason, thank you so much. >> thank you. >> thank you. rob: all right. going to go over to janice and talk a little weather. janice, it was unusually warms this morning. i thought it was going to be chilly. jillian: we've got a cold front. ahead of it we've got southerly air moving up towards the mid-atlantic and north east. it's 70 in new york city. we have more cold air moving in across the northern plains, and the northern rocky as the next system moves in. the front will kind of linger
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over the next couple of days and bring us the potential for some showers and some thunderstorms along the front, ahead of the front, not only today but tuesday even into wednesday. we're going to watch the potential for some showery weather off the coast as well because we've got this area of low pressure that's riding up. we are looking at the potential for several inches of rain, depending on where you live. we could see the potential for some flooding with heavier downpours and watch what happens as we go through wednesday and thursday. our next big system moves into the northwest, the northern rockies, and more wintery weather for the west. so it's the tale of two seasons, still hanging onto summer and we're he getting full-blown winter early in the fall. back to you, carley and rob. carley: wintery weather in the west. janice, thanks so much. switching gears here. the time is now 38 minutes after the hour. president trump is trying to crack down on vaping after several deaths and hundreds of
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illnesses. but he's even taking some heat from the right. so shouldn't everyone be on board on this? dr. paul sapphire weighs in next. and no uniform, no problem. how police officers in minneapolis who are banned from wearing their uniform at political events are getting creative. ♪ i keep pushing forward. ♪
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carley: president trump is cracking down on the vaping industry over a series of deadly illnesses. but he's taking heat from some conservative groups who are urging the president to rethink a ban on flavored e-cigarettes. shouldn't this be a bipartisan effort to crack down on this crisis? here to weigh is in dr. paul sapphire. doctor sapphire, thank you for being with us. the president indicated he wants to ban flavored e-cigarettes but leave the tobacco flavor on the market.
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do you think that's a good idea? >> i think what they're looking -- the administration's looking at instituting is reigniting or focusing on the 2016 indication that said that there needs to be premarket evaluation of these flavored e-cigarettes and with that saying, that that if they don't have the premarket evaluation, technically speaking they're illegal products. they're looking to clear the way to reduce the number of flavored non tobacco cigarettes that are on the market. carley: the president is saying everything needs to get checked by the fda and get approved and until that happens, they're banned. >> the fda needs to make sure that products on the market are safe for all the consumers. carley: seems like a smart idea. he is facing pushback from some conservative groups who sent the president a letter saying this, eliminating all but one or two of these options for adults
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would destroy thousands of small businesses, force many adult vapors to return to smoking and to force some to seek out products on the black market. they're basically saying this could backsfire. they make a good point that if your favorite flavored e-cigarette is banned, maybe you'll start to smoke regular cigarettes again. >> there is some concern for that, for sure. there is absolutely some concern that if the approved devices or products are not available, that it will thrust people to get into the secondary or illicit market products which has a higher rate of problems, of the pulmonary problems associated with vaping. i get that concern. the problem is, a lot of these e flavored cigarettes are targeted at younger individuals and wearinwe'reseeing a rise in thef e-cigarettes by young individuals. carley: the numbers of
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illnesses and deaths are stagger, over 1,000 possible lung injury linked to vaping and 20 deaths. people are seeing these numbers and saying why is this happening all at once. high school use of e-cigarettes is a crazy number, it's on the rise there. you can see that in blue right there. >> this is a real problem. we have a lot of people that are getting sick from this. it's certainly rising quickly, exponentially and specifically for younger kids that are attracted to things like bubble gum flavor, whatever the names are, it's attracting and hooking people into this addiction at a young age. that's a real problem. that's what the administration is looking at, how do we target this to prevent ten, 20 years in the future. carley: still no word on why this is happening. >> the problem is, we're really early on in the whole history of the e-cigarette problem. carley: that's so true. everybody is getting sick all at once. if i had advice, i would say don't buy anything on the black
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market. that seems like a really scary place. >> absolutely. rob: 45 minutes after the hour. a woman with no id and no boarding pass somehow had no problem getting on a plane. how did this during this day and age of airline security. what the fbi is doing right now to figure that out. that's coming up. first, stev steve doocy is goino tell us what's coming up in a few minutes. i usually need a boarding pass to get on a plane. >> i need id to get into the studio. i just showed my sears card, which is weird. i need that back. it's still around? >> it is in my wallet. thank you, robert. coming up, kevin mccarthy, the most powerful republican in the house is going to be joining us, talking about the democrats' push for impeachment, same thing with eric trump, son of the president. we're going to talk to him about that. molly hemingway has interesting
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new. dr. oz on vaping as you were just talking about and also bernie sanders, had a heart attack last week, what is up with him. and plus, a crowd favorite, the one, the only, dan bongino joins us live from florida. we've got a busy three hours, rob, starts 13 minutes from right now. right here on the channel america shops for news, your sears of telecasts. we will be right back with more "fox & friends first." - [narrator] meet the ninja foodi pressure cooker
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rob: welcome back. more questions than answers after a woman gets on a delta flight, somehow, with no ticket or identification or boarding pass. carley: a lot of questions there. todd piro joins us live at the tsa -- as the tsa tries to figure out what led to several security lapses. todd, good morning. >> this is real bizarre.
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how did this happen, that's the question so many are wondering this morning and which delta and the tsa trying to get to the bottom of. here's how it all went down. another passenger went to her assigned seat but the woman in question was in it and reportedly told the other passenger, quote, i'm not moving. a flight attendant was called over. noticed the woman wasn't on the manifest. when asked for her boarding pass the woman said she threw it away. when asked for her id, the woman reportedly showed the pilot a photo of herself on her phone. for those of you scoring at home, that is not a government issued id and she, though, said it was just as good. turns out it was not. efforts to remove her were unsuccessful until police were called. at that point the woman reportedly left the plane cursing. one passenger describes the scene. >> the orlando police were waiting for us. tsa was there and they did an inspection of the plane with multiple k-9 dogs. >> delta releasing the following in part. quote, delta's working with
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local law enforcement around the transportation security administration on their investigation and we are conducting our own review of this as well. nevertheless, it is clear something went really wrong. >> it could have been another person who would have been a real threat to the security. tsa, delta, these are the two major factors man tores. somebody failed in doing their job. >> the fbi was notified. the flight eventually made it from orlando to atlanta, several hours after it was supposed to. it was weird. rob: do you have your id, todd. >> i did not bring my id. i'll probably be asked to leave the studio. rob: i don't think that's todd. i have my questions. thank you so much. is that your real name? ahead of president trump's rally in minneapolis this week, the police union is rolling out tops
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for trump t-shirts, created after the mayor announced a new policy banning officers from wearing uniforms at political events. imagine that. minneapolis police department lieutenant bob kroll sounded off about that snub on "fox & friends" last month. >> my numbers are outraged. a lot of them want to be there, they want to be in the backdrop, have an opportunity to meet him. s he's shown he's a pro law enforcement president. rob: the police department has denied that the ban is politically motivated. carley: 2020 hopeful elizabeth warren caught giving conflicting statements about why she left a teaching job after college. listen. >> by the end of the first school year, i was quite visibly pregnant. i was visibly pregnant. and the principal did what principals did in those days. wished me luck and hired someone else for the job. carley: warren telling supporters on the campaign trail that she was fired for being
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pregnant but during an interview in 2007 she said it was her choice to leave. >> i actually didn't have the education courses so i was on an emergency certificate and i went back to graduate school and took a couple courses in education and i don't think this is going to work out for me. carley: warren's campaign did not immediately respond to fox news' request for comment. rob: all right. country superstar luke bryant stopped his concert to help fans with a gender reveal. check it out. >> open it. >> you are having a girl! [ cheering and applause ] carley: yeah. isn't that amazing? a moment to remember. the crowd in oklahoma city going wild over the exciting news. that video is going viral. it's safer than the balloon.
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this is what we're talking about. a dramatic gender reveal that remains s a mystery. rob: this is hilarious. a mishap for a couple that's going viral. stay tuned. oh, don't worry. voya helps them to and through retirement... ...dealing with today's expenses... ...like college... ...while helping plan, invest and protect for the future. so they'll be okay... without me? um... . fight for first dances
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at your neighborhood walgreens. i had no idea that my grandfatherfe changing moment for me. was a federal judge in guatemala. he was an advocate for the people... a voice for the voiceless. bring your family history to life like never before. get started for free at ancestry.com rob: time for the good, the bad, and the ugly. start with the good. the moment this highway trooper says he cher ricks most. dash cam rolling as a child
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take as cop's hand. best job ever. >> next the bad. vegetarian diet now risked to higher risk of stroke. researchers say it may be due to a lack of vitamin b 12 in their diets. people who don't eat meat have a lower risk of heart disease. what? rob: finally the ugly. nothing about this gender plan goes as planned. >> holy cow. whoa. oh, no. >> up and up and away, dad failings miserable whether i tries to pop that balloon which was made out of rubber. we still don't know if this a boy or a girl. hopefully the parents know at this point. rob: starbucks brought us dessert. carley: national frappuccino
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day. i already took a sip of that. rob: cold forever. todd: that is pumpkin pie. carley: oh my gosh. i'm going to chug this whole thing. rob: we got to go. see you. ♪ ♪ let's go ♪ let's go. brian: it would be easier to go if we had those frappuccinos before the show maybe we will get them before the show. ainsley: are you buying? brian: i will contribute to some not all of them. tremendous are frappuccinos. steve: they're used to a place starbucks became clear it's closer to 5 bucks. ainsley: so true. steve: thank you for joining us this beautiful day in new york city 70 degrees. starting with some news that kind of shocked a lot of people. the white house put out word last night 11:00 the united states is going to start pulling troops from

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