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tv   Hannity  FOX News  May 28, 2020 6:00pm-7:00pm PDT

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sure. it is a long history of moments like this hurting people who don't have a lot. thank you so much for coming on tonight. we are completely out of time, and about three seconds wake up the great sean hannity takes over for 9:00 p.m. in new york. >> sean: all right tucker, great show as always, thank you. i don't get called to great very often. we start with breaking news on multiple fronts tonight including sick and twisted attacks on the president, actually trying to blame him for the death of george floyd. you have celebrities encouraging more violence, looting and anarchy that has already emerged. we will get to the videos in a few minutes. also more shocking comments from andrew cuomo amid new york's worsening nursing home scandal. new explosive details. we also have an in-depth hannity investigation into the scandal with our own lawrence jones. he is a sneak peek. >> who do you hold responsible
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for this? >> i will start of the top and i will hold the governor of new york state responsible which lends itself to the statement that our governor made and i can't believe he's backpedaling now about this. and i quote him, my mother is not expendable, your mother is not expendable, and i got the sense that my mother was expendable. a new executive order from the president tonight to fight back against silicon valley and censorship. mark cuban is back to discuss reopening the country safely. but our lead story, or disturbing elements on the death of george floyd. that being the violent protest and we will get to the ground and just a minute. that unfortunately resulted in, what we see on the screen. looting and destruction of property. now, the more i see this video and the more everyone i talk to that sees this video, the more
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infuriated i get and i know many of you get as well. and for a lot of different reasons. it shakes me to my core and yes, we believe in due process and presumption of innocence but that said it, our eyes show us a huge story here. so much wrong with how the police targeted george floyd. take a look, i remind you of your discretion might be advised if you have kids in the room. >> they're going to kill me. they are going to kill me right here. >> his nose is bleeding. light come on now. how long do you have to hold him down? >> sean: you can see the officer, he has his knee on his
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neck. this video has sparked almost universal agreement, besides a few keyboard warriors in their underwear in their basements their basements anonymously posting on social media, hardly anyone defending what we all see on that videotape. it's clear. just look at your screen, it shows george floyd wasn't resisting arrest that we saw at any time and this was about a possible counterfeit $20 bill, not a violent crime from what we know. and as anyone in law enforcement will tell you, once you have someone in handcuffs not resisting, that fight is over, they are the professionals. speaking personally, i have seven years experience in mixed martial arts. i am a student, i'm not an expert by any stretch of the imagination. i'm a passionate student but i know this much, mike the self defense training includes how to respond if a dangerous threat emerges in part of that response is often a targeted strike. these are strikes i frankly practice daily. now when you train, you learn
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quickly that there are very specific areas to strike if you your life is being threatened. the neck is by far the most vulnerable part of anyone's anatomy. that video shows what one targeted single strike, that we will show you in a minute, to the carotid artery will do. mr. floyd was not resisting, get the cop is sitting on his neck for 8 minutes. one strike can take somebody to his knees and cut off the blood to the brain. every law enforcement official enforcement official analysis the same thing, this is excessive and extreme the dangerous use of force and none of it was necessary. now i say it all the time. my mom was a prison guard. so many come with my family and my cousins in law enforcement. i believe the 99 percent do their job with the utmost professionalism. but these types of abuses, 1%
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need to be called out when we see them. and it has caused outrage among everybody almost unanimously around the country. they give every cop sadly a bad name. 99 percent don't deserve this, either. that's a precious life without me on the neck and it didn't have to be this way. now, the entire country is almost unanimous in their discussed at what they are seeing and peaceful protests, frankly, in my mind are justifiable and understandable. the protests, the riots, the destruction of property that we were witnessing last night and we are seeing more of tonight as you look at life pictures is not the answer. this is not a way to honor george floyd's life. this incident is sadly being used by some to engage in abhorrent criminal behavior that is putting the entire city and neighborhood at risk. take a look.
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>> [chanting] hands up, don't shoot! >> sean: that's not a way to build stronger communities and carve out a positive path forward for our kids and grandkids. so you looters and your rioters, that has nothing to do with a moment of justice. that has nothing to do with solidarity. according to many reports mr. floyd was turning his life around. he lost his job at a restaurant and he was trying to move forward with his life. these displays of violence don't honor his life, they do just the opposite. burning down stores, looting, rioting, it puts everybody in the community, citizens, children, innocent cops, children in harm's way.
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it destroys the lives of many working people and business owners who have already been struggling enough. we don't need more hate and hysteria and at this time of turmoil. president trump to his credit acted immediately. he ordered the fbi and the justice of civil rights division to fully investigate the case. he said it is under way and he has ordered them to expedite this investigation. it is now "a top priority for the doj, were investigators and prosecutors. here's a president from earlier today. take a look. >> president trump: i feel very, very badly. it was a very shocking site, and bill and i were talking about it before, that's one of the reason bill is here right now because as you know we are very much involved. i've asked the attorney general and the fbi to take a very strong look and to see what went on because that was a very bad thing that i saw. i saw it last night and i didn't like it. >> sean: unfortunately that
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swift decisive action is not stopping those who politicize everything. far left democrats, the media mob and others from needlessly politicizing the tragedy. axiom water is having another new level blaming the president for the tragedy. it's sickening. here's a look at her remarks on tmz. >> i am talking about all of the killings of young black men in particular, but of course black women, too, at the hands of the police and at the hands of these white supremacists. and i'm thinking about the way that the president conducts himself. in a way, he is dog whistling and in a feeling that they can get away with this kind of treatment. >> sean: a predictable and sad, colin kaepernick has stepped into this and seems to be in my interpretation as i read his remarks backing what's going on in the minneapolis.
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when civility leads to death, revolting is the only logical reaction. rap star cardi b saying, when people are left with no choice. no choice, what, to riots? dilute? more hate and more division is unacceptable. it's putting an entire community in harm's way. it is no need to put more people's livelihoods in jeopardy. and if you don't want to listen to me, okay. how about listening and honoring george floyd's family? his girlfriend telling the "star tribune" "waking up this morning to see minneapolis on fire would be something that devastated florida." so let's make sure we honor mr. floyd's memory. first, with quick justice. not using what happened here as a pretext to commit acts of violence and making the problem worse. we are also working tonight some of the officers seen on this
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video have histories of public complaints. we will continue to follow that story. here with more reaction, fox news contributor dan bongino. a correspondent at large, geraldo rivera. you know i've been looking. every person i know in law enforcement are aghast at this video. every single one. not one exception. every conservative i know is outraged. the president acted swiftly and was adamant in his remarks from the get-go. >> thank god for that, sean. but this wasn't just murder. this was torture. this was cool. this was kind of wanton reckless disregard for a man's life.
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and this was the smug look as passersby were telling them that george ford was dying, right there. and that would cut off the artery and cause permanent brain damage, if not the death that eventually happened. i cannot for a second with 50 years experience, this happened because it was a white cop and a black man and we have to deal with that as we go forward. that is horrifying, and what
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that cop did, that's the miracle i don't think we will ever forget. >> sean: that's a damage from last night. they are actually -- they are getting in front of it, and i'm like, you've got to be kidding me. >> this is grotesque. they are contributing and destroying businesses in their own community. that civil disobedience that got violence. the first person who threw the bottle got arrested and the second person that threw the bottle got arrested. there is no third person that threw the bottle. that's just the way it went down. community is entitled to police
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protection, too. i spoke about you at length last night on the radio show and your program here. i'm angry, too. what this police officer did was disgusting. geraldo's analysis of it, i wouldn't inject race into it, i think it's humanity but the smugness on the face of the officer is disturbing. another thing about this video. this is positional asphyxiation. i want everyone to remember it's hard to breathe with your hands behind you prone on the ground as it is. if you add someone's weight on top of you come handcuff someone and then put your weight on their neck? as i said to you last night i'm stunned mr. floyd lived as long as he did, it's unbelievably dangerous. >> sean: and geraldo, look at this. we have the cops assaulted in
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new york, we have other incidents where looting and rioting occurred and we have videotapes. we can identify every single person that was in the target and the other stores that were looted but we never go back and it arrest them. why? because like dan said if you get the person one, two, three four, and people know there will be consequences, you are not going to have as much of this in my opinion. >> you know the worst of it? i've covered these riots. i've had to cover almost everyone in the five decades since. it takes a minimum of ten years for these communities to recover from these. when you burn affordable housing that they were building in this third precinct here in
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minneapolis, burning affordable housing, who knows if they have insurance, probably not. this is a self-inflicted wound and it defames the memory of this poor man. it is an insult to the memory of this poor man. >> sean: if you have to pray for the family and the city, the family has called for peace and i hope people heated. i don't like what i'm seeing on the right side of your screen, that's a live shot in minneapolis at 15 minutes past the hour, 8:00 central time. thank you both. we are monitoring the situation closely tonight. at mike tobin joins us for minneapolis. mike, i just saw you in front of that burning car and i saw guys taking selfies in front of the cards. i'm not sure exactly why, what would be the point of that? what's going on tonight and
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compare last night to tonight. >> the point of that is, they are whipping up. two different groups. there are some people out here who are mourning the death of george floyd. the people out here are calling for change and other people who are looting stores and burning cars. you can see they are piling more stuff on it right now, to see if they can get the fire accelerated more. just a short distance from here there was tear gas and that occurred when the paramedics showed up to work on a couple injured people on the ground and the cops just needed to get the paramedics some space to work. these people know that the hennepin county attorney mike freeman is investigating. the u.s. attorney erica mcdonald, she is investigating as well, with the backing of the u.s. president, with the backing of the u.s. attorney general. these people out there don't think it's fast enough and don't think it's working. >> sean: we turn now to have
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another big breaking story. another executive order fighting back against silicon valley and a censorship of conservatives. by the way i thought the left, the media didn't like interference in the elections. now they interpret the communications decency act as not providing special protections for silicon valley titans like twitter and facebook that are engaged in censorship, not just offering an opportunity for people to post but political conduct often against conservatives. if they in fact make changes, that would make them liable. but because they might now be engaged in publishing decisions and deciding and editing, the president is making it very clear, that liability should not apply to them any longer going
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forward. here is the president and attorney general barr earlier this evening. >> president trump: today i'm signing an executive order to protect and uphold the rights of the american people. currently social media giants like twitter receive an unprecedented liability shield based on the theory that they are a neutral platform which they are not. as president i will not allow people to be bullied, for a long time. >> when they start censoring the particular content, including in many cases the direction of foreign governments like communist china, they become publishers and they shouldn't be entitled to the same kind of shield that was set up earlier. >> sean: if you are a pure content provider, let people pose freely. this move comes just days after twitter took the unprecedented
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move of fact-checking the president's tweets about fraud and mail and voting despite what we all know our legitimate evidence concerns about voting by mail, especially mass voting. of course we are continuing to learn more about the rampant bias outside of twitter. for example, a twitter employee linked to the platform, so-called fact-checking effort, that person has a history of pretty vile anti-trump tweeting. for example, the company's head of site integrity. really? tweeted after the 2016 election, we fly over those states that voted for a recessed tangerine for a reason. did that sound like someone committed to fair and unbiased fact-checking? hey, at jack, that's your fact-checker. does that sound like someone who should have a voice in how target the presidents twitter
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had page? you are going to take on the role of fact-checking and also take on the role of responsibility. by the way, you may not want to use a fake news cnn, the new york toilet paper times or "the washington post." as they go back and flag all of their phony stories, what about their lives like justice kavanaugh or just a small at being the victim of a hate crime? and at that particular case, i think they will be a real fact-checking or more partisan fact-checking. and took the balance of free media to the democrats. now they all need to get the help they did it, embed quid pro quo joe biden's offering, and he is a small example of just in the last
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24 hours and other bizarre moments. >> the president put me in charge of getting out the recovery money which was 800 -- it was almost $89 billion. i guess it came to 84 at the e end. >> delaware used to be part of pennsylvania. >> that's right. one of the things, we somehow put that back on and we are somehow in a situation where, we work together. >> sean: joining us now, author of the book "offers this book," most of the rubin report, dave rubin, alongside mike huckabee. if you've been following joe biden very closely throughout all of this and you always have a great sense of
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humor about it. but that again added to everything else makes you conclude? >> the fact is he prided himself on wearing a mask the other day at the memorial ceremony. the truth is, that was not a mask, that was a gag. for stuff put it on him to keep him from saying something that they would spend the next three days walking back. joe is in trouble. he's in trouble because it cannot put a sentence together and one of these days he will have to stand on the stage with president trump and it will be a very ugly site to say the least. >> sean: mr. ruben, you deal with this all the time. now if twitter wants to be a straight up content provider, the laws are very clear. if the rules are crystal clear. do you want to be a content provider or a publisher? if you are at a turning editing, you are by every definition in my mind a publisher. >> your intro there was perfect because you laid it out.
quote
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i fall more on the libertarian side of this so i wouldn't want to tromp inserting government bureaucrats inside these big tech companies. that's not what he did. what he said is, we are going to strip you, if you act as a publisher -- they are explicitly telling you that they can limit the availability of certain tweets. >> sean: unfortunately we have a little audio problem. you may have a common carrier like the title and telephone company, you provide the lines. you don't get to referee the conversation and two people have come up that's one model.
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that's what they claim they are, and what they are doing is they are referring the content and deciding who wins and who loses and they've become a monopoly. not just a social media platform, it's no different than when the government busted up at&t or the major utilities were busted up because there were monopolies and if they were filled with the lack of competition. if that's not free enterprise. i'm proud of the president, thank goodness he had some guts and did what he data, been waiting on that for a long time. >> sean: i agree with both of you. i don't want any involvement or any censorship. sorry about the audio issues, we apologize to our audience as well. when we come back we will be monitoring a situation in minneapolis. you will see the live pictures and bring you updates. my cuban's back with us next and lauren jones investigative report talking to the families
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that lost loved ones of the nursing home scandal in new york and elsewhere, straight ahead. musical physica♪ that sets strict quality and purity standards nature made, the #1 pharmacist recommended vitamin and supplement brand
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>> a once booming economy has now taken a major hit due to lockdowns in the country.
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american lives, businesses have been placed on hold for months. the new york city mayor, conrad bill de blasio now pleading for federal assistance. $9 billion worth. okay? now he also spends money on the illegal immigrants and all sorts of wasted money, $900 million that he and his wife are involved in. we as americans cannot afford to bail out governors for their outrageous spending. remember, like a light bulb factory and, oh, microchips and a solar factory. if you ask me, your best stimulus package, americans reopened doors, our businesses, flood the economy begin to heal and we learned a lot of lessons, we should now implement them. our next guest has some different ideas and he is the owner of the mavericks, the dallas mavericks.
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he is proposing a use that word was that debit card program to boost consumer confidence. good to see you again. >> let me tell you, your math segment was invaluable. >> nobody is disagreeing on what happens. i think i might actually want sports more than you. we all want to return to normalcy. but you are a billionaire. the reason are, americans are craving normalcy. if you take care of the elderly like your governor did, they didn't really come up really well protecting the most vulnerable. stupid decisions. they put covid-19 patients in nursing homes, and that was
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third of all the deaths. >> everybody made them perfect decisions with imperfect information. new york certainly made mistakes but so did everyone, look at other places that had meat processing plants where 20% of the population is now stricken with covid. it's hard to deal with in the circumstances. it's hard to cast the blame and not. >> sean: all the models and predictions were wrong. but, all those who remain consistent, protect the elderly. they were telling them, we can't handle this. protect the elderly. also in the epicenter of this, i can't argue with that at all.
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and that's a great reason to wear a mask. >> sean: i like ideas. i don't care where the idea comes from, but you said, use it or lose that debit card. and what, $101,200, you have a certain period of time to stimulate the economy. the problem is we spent $3 trillion, another trillion in loan guarantees. the country can't afford this, we have to reopen. >> i'm not saying we don't reopened but the question is, and i will even put the hit on the democrats. when the ppp program was initiated, it was a great plan but the key to make it work was getting the money in the hands of businesses immediately. so when the democrats started over negotiating, that created a delay and that meant that small businesses had to lay people o
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off. once small businesses laid people off, and that now leaves small businesses in the state of suspended animation. they are not open all the way yet, they don't have all the demand back, and 68% of them are making more money and unemployment. so what we need to do in order to change that, is to stimulate demand. the way to stimulate demand is to give people checks that they have to spend. the other way is whether a state is open or closed, the only way that they can justify and afford to bring employees back particularly after july 31st when the enhanced unemployment runs out is by having demand. so right now, people are saving 14.4% of our income and thus the most it has been in 40 years, that's a problem we need to solve. >> sean: here's my last
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question. you can have these temperature check turnstiles, and i'm not trying to discriminate. we can ask older people for the time being to stay away from stadiums come out for stadiums to start. you could give everyone a dallas mavericks mask or yankees mask, patriots mask, we have robert kraft on. and safely open that way. why wouldn't we try that based on the lessons we learned from the kids that was stocking the shelf every week? >> one thing, the temperature checks don't work because you chew up a couple of extra strength tylenol and you defeat the system. we need to understand how we do it on scale. it's not like a grocery store where you let one out and let one end, it's a lot harder when you have thousands of people going in. >> sean: they have these turnstiles where you walk right through. you are right about the time, but could we actually look out for our neighbors? if you have a temperature, stay home. we want you open, we want stadiums open and if we can do
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it safely, we will figure it out, we are americans. up next, the doj spokesperson broke news about the deep state. later, lawrence jones and his exclusive investigation into the horrific, horrifying nursing home scandal that has now got a financial component associated with it, straight ahead. , for the freedoms that we have here in this country. so for us, at newday to help those people at this point in time. it's a labor of love, it's a noble service, and that's what we're all about.
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>> sean: the deep state tonight is on edge after john bass reviewed on masking's, a lot of them a threefold increase before and after the 2016 election. the president chief of staff rights, sara carter. she said, this is widespread. this is now a bigger part of the investigation. ron johnson and chuck grassley make it a longer timeline to create part of this and it seems like they are getting to the bottom of it that's a threefold increase towards the end of
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president obama's administration. u.n. ambassadors and some of the powers unmasking exponentially, you have susan rice, john brennan, james clapper, and others all involved, these were not targets or is working for the cia or in the intelligence apparatus, that was their job to investigate. these were people in the administration whose job was not to investigate but they were political. so where these unmaskings political? the one crime we know was committed was a crime of leaking michael flynn's conversation with former russian ambassador sergey keithley act to "the washington post." that's a crime that no one has paid for because that was a private conversation. he was an american citizen, his name should have never been made public at a classified conversation like that should have never been made public. that's a lot of issues that john bass should have been looking
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out. >> sean: now we are finding out that the trump family may have very well been unmasked. who else may have been unmasked? i hear it -- i even heard sara carter could have potentially been unmasked. >> i'm sure i was. here's where i'm hopeful that someone like ron johnson who is a good friend, he is going to -- and i hope he's going to turn over every single stone. we spent the last three months, every single day. there was another article. you know what they always started with? according to a senior u.s. government official... on inauguration day, the article started law enforcement and intelligence agencies are examining intercepted communications between trump and russia. every day, the dossier. we didn't know where the bullets were coming from. it was big things and little things. we would take off to a trip to
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saudi arabia and we would be wheels up, and hours later the associated press had the speech of donald trump that he was going to give in saudi arabia. how did it turn up? it was someone in the national security council. there is a web of people that were playing with us every single day in all of their emails, all of their texts and this entire web. the unmasking and the communication that has to come out as soon as possible. and you know what? it's all going to come out, every bit of it. >> sean: it's era, last question next. who do we suspect may have been unmasked at this point? >> certainly everyone that was connected to president trump and his company. bryce previous, sean, i believe you are unmasked. statement great.
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as it if it wasn't nice enough they release my text messages to the world, and i have my name on documents. when we come back, we will check back in. mike tobin on the ground in minneapolis and lawrence jones with an exclusive investigation into andrew cuomo's horrifying nursing home scandal. now, there is a money component. that's straight ahead. and saving...umm...ing jamie, you're cutting out. sorry i'm late! hey, whoever's doing that, can you go on mute? oh, my bad! i was just saying there's a typo on slide 7. bundle home & auto for big discosnouts. i think that's supposed to say discounts. you sure about that? hey, can you guys see me?
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>> sean: also developing tonight, a new report from the guardian finding that democratic vp contender amy klobuchar previously declined to prosecute the officer at the center of george floyd's death as it related to a shooting in the mid-2000s when she was a prosecutor in minneapolis. we will have more details as we come in. back to the latest of in the situation in minneapolis unfolding tonight. mike tobin, seems like a lot of gathering. we saw the car burning earlier and i don't see from the images that i can see a lot of violence like last night, but that tended to happen later. >> yeah, they tend to get wound up. there are a lot of cases of beer
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and bottles of whiskey are arriving on the scene. that might say something about the seriousness. i've been talking with people hear about the looting and destruction and some of them say it's a perfectly natural reaction to something that is unjustifiable. others say it undermines a statement that they are trying to make. >> people coming out here and looting the stores, i understand, i feel your pain but it's not going to help. it continues to diminish everything we've been fighting for. we tried at the mlk way and the people are trying at the malcolm x way. >> you are looking at the third flash point, and now it's picking up right now, they are throwing things at the building. what you saw last night was this was the flash point where the police met the protesters and would let them inside. you can see someone has got one of the barricades and he's ramming it against the front door. what's absent from the picture right now? police. there is no police presence and
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we are kind of wondering when the demonstrators will come past the fence and tried to get inside the third precinct here. that's what's going on right n now. >> sean: don't destroy the city and the process. that's what i fear. in new york, governor cuomo's mishandling of the coronavirus response keeps looking worse and worse. we now have a bombshell report that literally points the finger at andrew cuomo for signing that executive order but also signing legislation. in a budget bill shielding nursing home executives from lawsuits. this after he received millions in campaign donations from major health care companies and that of course includes nursing homes. of course the infamous march 25th nursing home mandate, a complete disaster. cuomo himself said, people die,
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recently set himself he would not put his own mother in a nursing home. then blame the nursing homes. this is all about money and you are responsible for your own p ppe. cuomo won't add up to it, he wants to "kill all democrats" for reporting on his own actio actions. a host of "keeping up with the joneses" and are on the ground 2020 correspondent lawrence jones. very revealing insight. >> good evening. media darling and new york governor andrew cuomo may be garnering praise from the left but his constituents aren't too happy with how he has handled the pandemic, especially in the nursing home. i recently talked to jeff weaver and gloria sullivan who both lost their mothers to covid-19 at a long island nursing home.
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it is all they had to say. >> nursing homes are full and all their clientele are frail. some of these people, like my mother, she died alone. and i find that unconscionable. there was a lockdown put on visitation and additionally, right up until the time she passed, our contact wasn't what it was used to being. >> they said your mom may have contracted it from someone else within the facility. >> is absently possible because in the discussion i had there with the staff member, they talked about how their staff internally was kind of limited. they really had their work cut out for them. >> who do you hold responsible for this? >> i will start at the top and hold the governor of new york state health commission responsible which lends itself to the statement that our governor made, and i can't believe he's backpedaling now about this. my mother is not expendable, your mother is not expendable.
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and i get the sense that maybe my mother was expendable and i find that horrendous. >> when did you find out about the governor's executive order saying that covid patients can be returned back to the facility? >> i told my mother would be back in two weeks, and my mother wanted to know what date that was an ice of the 25th. my mother was looking toward that date. when i heard the executive order, i couldn't believe it. because that was the day we all thought we were going back in, they told us two weeks. so in two weeks, they open the doors for covid, not family. and it just took out the entire way my mother was in. i put a lot of blame for the nursing homes on cuomo because he himself said, we have to protect the older people.
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and then he made them -- he had the homes taken covid patients. they just took the covid patients and put them in with the quarantine patients, it made no sense. >> she said my mom came in with just a simple leg injury and left in a body bag. the governor needs to be held accountable. >> sean: you know i watch this, pennsylvania, new york, new jersey, got it wrong. florida and texas got it right. it's shocking that they sent covid-19 positive people. >> and out the families may not be able to sue because the governor got some campaign money. >> sean: i don't think that's going to hold it, they will go to the courts and they will decide. thank you lawrence jones. coming up, a new documentary about jeffrey epstein and an explosive plane about bill clinton in that documentary. we will explain, next.
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♪ >> sean: back to what is unfolding tonight in minneapolis. apparently, the police have now and also guards called up rubber bullets being fired into the crowd as we speak. you know to the extent possible, those leaders in the community, those on the city council, those mayors, those people that have e pastors to the extent that they can get out in a crowd and help people preserve the city.
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so that expedited investigation in the department jet of justice, the fbi and the police. the four cops have been fired in record time. we expect that this is going to be justice that will happen. our prayers to the family and the people of minneapolis. my heart is troubled, laura ingraham. >> laura: sean, i think we are all looking for a path forward after this very difficult for a month. in the united states. there will be more difficult times ahead and we need a lot of understanding and a lot of prayers for our country and for the people of minneapolis and to the families of those victims who have been affected here. and of course, the family of the unarmed black man who is grieving tonight. everybody has to be recognized in all the pain has to be recognized. >> sean: looters and rioting, it will not help the neighborhood and the stores may never rebuild. these jobs may be lost forever. >> laura: i will pick it up where you left it