tv Americas Newsroom FOX News July 5, 2022 6:00am-8:00am PDT
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come of the event. >> i don't know if i can judge again. >> she messed up on the account for the year of. >> we didn't see that in the report. it's very intense. >> congratulations, you are awesome. >> he would put on the belt but it doesn't fit. [laughter] so long, everybody, see you tomorrow. "america's newsroom" good morning, everybody, terror on the forward. our rooftop shooter reigning terror in the parade in chicago. hope you had a great holiday we can pit them bill hemmer back with you today. >> i'm dana perino. i'm glad you're back in in your blue and do your finest to me is looking good and rested so we have him back. i'm dana perino and this is "america's newsroom." only six people are dead, 30 more are injured. the gunfire erupted around ten in the morning sending parents and children running for their
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lives. >> bill: so the victims range in age of 8-85. the attack prompted nearby cities to cancel events in illinois. officers arresting a person of interest later around 5 miles away from the same. he's identified as a 21-year-old aspiring rapper with a history of posting violent imagery online. >> dana: the parade attack follows a recent string of mass shootings targeting churches, schools, grocery stores. the headline fourth of july terror and those that were there say that the scripted accurately. >> side screaming. they did know it was coming from. >> seem like it was fireworks. that's when everybody was running inside then we started noticing how many people were bloody. >> i saw somebody on the ground
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with his leg in the air and the garlic crying next to him. then to my left my mom and i saw at least three more people on the ground, bloody. the naturally likely to started running towards her car. >> my granddaughter said to me when she was leaving she said pop pop dealt with the bad guys shoot you. >> she was a witness they were the parade with her 5-year-old, set ted williams has some analysis and the laws that go with this but we begin with grady to begin the summer. good morning there. >> good morning tim abella. this is where police have a brat that suspect after the eight hour manhunt finally came to an end yesterday evening. authorities described the gun he used as a high-powered rifle. but didn't provide any more info than that. the mayor of highland park said in an interview on "the today show" this morning that the gun was legally obtained. please have a gunman opened fired on the crowd below from
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the rooftop of a downtown business just after 10:00 yesterday morning after highland park for the july parade. they say he climbed up there on an unsecured letter that was attached to the building. illinois governor at j.b. pritzker and president joe biden both spoke hours after the attack, vowing to keep fighting for gun control. >> each day is a reminder there is nothing guaranteed about our democracy. nothing guaranteed about our way of life. our founders carried muskets, not assault weapons. i don't think a single one of them would have said that you have a constitutional right to an assault rifle with a high-capacity magazine. >> after the attack that massive manhunt in suit with local and federal law enforcement agencies, an officer with the north chicago police department.
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a few miles from the parade route the next town appear they took him into custody in the middle-of-the-road, around 6:30 yesterday evening. police identified the gunmen as robert crimo the third. he grew up in his community for highland park beauties in his early 20s and i previously posted disturbing videos on social media including one depicting the aftermath of what looked like a school shooting, several of those concerning social media posts have since been removed for the question we have this morning are did law enforcement know about those videos, belt, and was there anything we could have done to prevent that shooting from happening? we are expecting an update from police and the next couple of hours. >> and hope to get some answers there. thanks. we are learning some of the names of the victims. on the left side of your screen screen's necklace to lado, a 73-year-old grandfather. his family says he immigrated to the united states from mexico in
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the 80s. >> dana: on the left of the side of your screen is that she is remembered for her warmth and kindness. >> bill: our next guest was live streaming the event of the parade. she was there with her 5-year-old son was about to march with this day care class and that's when the shooting started and she took this. >> bill: gina as our guest now good to know you're okay. he told folks here that the kids knew something was happening. explain that. >> at first we heard a few things. all of us believe that were just
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fireworks come aloud fireworks maybe some kids playing a joke and trying to scare people but then very close and a distinctive pop that is clearly not a firework that's when we noticed the crowd gathering and police running towards the noise and that's when we got all the children and push them to the side and told them let's go, let's run in the opposite direction. so in the opposite direction we and get out again. meanwhile many people were yelling active shooter, it's a
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shooter. it became very chaotic and very fast. >> dana: i know you're good to be on the show today so i was thinking about you last night. imagining what your sunday july 3rd evening was like as you prepared to go and be a part of this in the community that is close-knit and very patriotic. i'm struck now watching the video you took. >> we were there in a parking lot with the police officers who were so nice and sing happy fourth of july, they were passing out doughnuts to the kids.
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we were passing out the flags for them to waive. and to go around the corner to start marching. it is literally is filming because it was the happiest moment of these kids' lives at that moment. then i quickly turned into the worst day that we will ever remember. >> dana: how is your son doing today? >> he's in bed, that's why i'm sitting outside. he sleeping. i stayed home from work today, kept him -- his day care is in the highland park and i just wanted to keep him home today. we are just here together. >> bill: thanks for sharing your story, gina. our best to your son in your community.
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thank you. >> dana: lisping and former d.c. homicide detective, ted williams. as you thought about this, what do you think what grady trimble just reported, that the gun was purchased legally. we know that he went up the ladder on the side of the building. it was unsure if he put the letter there and then the pursuit which finally they were able to capture him last night. >> this is just so heartbreaking. when you listen to that mother that you just had on it just adds to the heartbreak. but what you had here was excellent law enforcement work. they were able to get the gun, the gun that's been reported to have been purchased legally. they were able to trace that gun back to robert bobby crimo the third.
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what they were able to show us that his family, let's say they were able to trace the history. they found out that his family was second amendment enthusiasts, that they've had guns around them for some time, that is the of all these shootings, there were postings about a family in support of the second amendment this killer, by the way we must be careful on using the word killing because of the states use of person of interest. here's a cub scout committee group in the community. he was an aspiring rapper. he went by the way the name awake. the question that begs for an answer is was he on law enforcement radar screens? >> bill: that is the question. i've seen both, some people report that he wasn't some people report that he wasn't.
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another point to be made here on july 4th weekend the city of chicago there were an additional 57 people shot over the course of 72 hours. that's been chicago for ten years. >> that is unbelievable but not shocking. if you live in chicago on any given weekend you can expect from -- they've got to do something. and what they are doing right now is just not working. the law-abiding citizens in chicago should expect more from their political leaders. they need to lead police officer is into these neighborhoods and do their job.
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law-abiding citizens are screaming for police citizens in their neighborhoods. unfortunately that is not happening in chicago. 57 people shot. we can imagine. you don't have that many shot may be in ukraine. 57 people are injured. bill and dana, that's just unacceptable in america. >> bill: waiting for more answers. thank you for your time. robert crimo iii has been arrested from the state of illinois. >> dana: just a note and illinois gun laws. mention the gun was but legally apparently were was in the home legally and the family supports the second amendment. law-abiding people all condemned violence like this, this is illinois, grade from -- they get
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an a-. this is their judgment call as to what is allowed and what is not allowed. you can see their universal background checks, gun owner licensing. minimum age laws, open carry reports come a lot of things that you see my desire to come up by, to make federal to make national laws and maybe that is good to come, maybe that's not. maybe that people can debate that. this case does person of interest to the horrific crime. >> bill: will wait for the press conference and bring it to you from chicago when we get appeared from chicago to philly were known of the fox news to report. a manhunt underway after to a police officers were shot at a july 4th celebration just last night. the gunfire sent people scattering during the fireworks display. one jewish cop struck in the shoulder he said, the other grazed in the head by a bullet which remains lodged on the
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officer's cap. both men were treated for nonlife-threatening injuries and released the shooter is still at large. me and also contact several texas counties on the front line are taking action, they are pushing back, can they do this? how they are looking to sidestep the feds and fight with a call and invasion of border. >> plus a frustrating airline weekend. was just a forecast for a summary of travel misery? 's b1 also what's behind the war of words? jeff bezos and joe biden over the record high prices here playing every day at the pump. coming up. joe biden needs to look at the white house if he wants to find the solution for inflation. so i consolidated it into a low-rate personal loan from sofi. get a personal loan with no fees, low fixed rates, and borrow up to $100k. sofi. get your money right.
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>> dana: president biden taken a lot of flak for attacking oil and gas companies. something even jeff bezos says doesn't quite add up. mark meredith is at the white house with more. >> the white house is blaming gas high gas prices on vice president vladimir vice president vladimir putin as well as on the oil and gas industry is a halt to the president even drew some surprise and outrage from some over the weekend. with the tweet which read "my message to the companies when winning gas stations in setting prices at the pump is simple. this is a time of war and global peril, bring down the price you're charging at the pump to reflect the cost of paying for the product and do it now." the president telling companies to lower prices drawing outrage of mockery from u.s. energy producers and amazon ceo jeff bezos. the u.s. oil and gas association, which advocates for the industry, fired back writing working on it, mr. president, in the meantime have a happy fourth. make sure the white house intern who posted this tweet registers
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for econ 101 for the fall semester. gas prices are up. you're not imagining it. the national average today at $4.80 a gallon. it's not from the record highs we saw in june, down about $0.22. a little bit cheaper than it was just eight months ago. but with the midterm elections looming the white house is facing growing questions about the long-term economic strategy, even because racing inflation break records with unemployment still very low. the president had did i do and the americans are facing. >> crime is going but not without pain to liberty is under assault both here and abroad. >> bill: we expect to hear more from the president this week about the economy. they had to cleveland tomorrow to talk let inflation and what can be done about it. sorry about the jack hammering here on the north lawn. >> dana: they've got to get that infrastructure done. thank you. >> bill: here to help is host of american dream home on fox business pit hello, cheryl.
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so jeff bezos set a tweet to the president or the interim or whoever it was, says inflation is too important even straight-ahead misdirection or a deep misunderstanding a basic market dynamics. >> dana: than the journal editorial board writes task, the president doesn't appear to know anything about the private economy works. apparently he doesn't understand the oil and gas industry and how retail gas stations work in this country. 60% of gas stations are owned by individual owners. by couples, by families. they don't even make money on the gas. they make money on the groceries. the kind bar that i'm sure you went and bought at the shell station this weekend. he's right the oil and gas industry tweets laugh but it's kind of sad that we have to point out two of the white house are there some ivy league educated economists at the white house under their employment they can tell them that this is not how the oil and
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gas industry works and they got out of that business back in the 90s because you can't make true money. >> they might realize that blaming putin isn't working so they can apply mom-and-pop. >> dana: it's really sad. there are things they can do appear let us suspend the gas tax, the federal gas tax. there are some states who have talked about it. do that at the federal level. there are things they can do. >> bill: trying to pinch pennies in the dollars. what mark pointed out as it's down more than $0.20 a gallon, which is just a general question for you, as the price of commodities. have they peaked? if they have, inflation would be coming down. you're talking but wheat and corn, copper, those commodities were back to mark's levels right now. it's become looking for good news. >> if those prices are down that
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means the producers of the wholesale level are paying less. if you're paying less for copper and you need copper to go into a home you're building, then you can pass that savings on to the person buying the home. that's just a very basic event will recruit if you have produced fearless but as far as the energy story, looking for -- $5.80 or $4.80 on gas. >> hoping it doesn't get to $5.80. i was kind of worried about that to be honest with you. but as far as that story, look it's kind of like what's happening in the skies were an organ to talk about this this revenge travel story that's halved, its demand and supply. let's talk about that before we run out of time. let's canceled over the weekend, he said your flight was delayed yesterday. 23,000 flights delayed so you're in good company. the highest since february 20th of 2020, 2,490,000.
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>> talk and go to my sources because i had five hours to talk to people but i did not the one my sources sources about what's happening. instead they got a v-shaped recovery. during covid the effort early retirement packages to the pilots and the flight attendants that were firing despite that's 50 billion in stimulus. you can hire new pilot for six months because of all the we took those early retirement packages you now have to replace them with the junior pilot has to train. that takes three months for them to trade to move up in the sea, to move up to another airplane and that's what happens with the bigger carriers, so it's a full story below, this is going to the rest of the summer. this can be with the public is going to be dealing with until the end of the summer, i have to
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say we can shout out to the good people at united airlines yesterday up at the end of the very well. because it's tough. this is a reality. >> bill: emma delta develop. 26 past ten. >> dana: president biden struggling to unify on the independence day. plus critics accused stacey abrams of supporting defending the police but when it comes to our own security, that's another matter. wait until you hear how much her campaign is spending to keep her safe.
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how would this work? john is in los angeles with more. >> hi, danna, whether this is a real attempt to use the constitution to change immigration and enforce policy or whether it's more of a publicity stunt to draw attention to the situation at the border is open to question. but officials from this group of texas counties say unprecedented challenges on the u.s. southern border are demanding unprecedented actions for the safety of citizens all across texas. so that they are invoking article four section four of the constitution which says in regards to all things that the united states shall protect each of them against invasion. that's exactly what the texas counties say they are facing. an invasion by illegal immigrants flooding across the southern border. the claim certainly bolstered by the sheer numbers we have seen over the past 12 months or more. by invoking the language of the
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constitution, the officials if they want to make this a legal than political fight. merriam-webster by the way to find invasion as an active invading especially incursion of an army for conquest or plunder. and the federal government would presumably argue that the sheer number of enforcement actions. doing exactly the job the texas officials accused the government of failing to dupe you now those officials of course would point to the hundreds of thousands of illegal immigrants who they say don't get caught by law enforcement. but it's a legal challenge based on the constitution this case has a long road ahead, and significantly the texas attorney general has so far declined to bank this case. dana? >> dana: that is interesting.
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thank you, jonathan. secretary mayorkas was on the show this week. he's department of homeland security had appeared here's what he said about people making this trip. >> we continue to warn people not to take the dangerous journey. we have a multifaceted approach not only to work with our partner countries, but to bring law enforcement to bear, to attack the smuggling organizations and unprecedented ways. >> dana: do you think it's working? >> i think we are doing a good job. we need to do better. >> bill: he's right at what they said at the end. they need to do better. this aligned we continue to warn people not to make the dangerous journey come if they are warning people they are using the smallest microphone in the country because nobody is listening to that message. >> dana: they are not and also the fact that one of the reasons this came up is the migrants died last week. we had 53 that died of heat exhaustion. unacceptable. >> there is this from july 4th.
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>> there's a reason to think this country is moving backwards, that freedom is being reduced, that rights, we assumed were predicted are no longer. reminder that we remain in an ongoing battle for the soul of america as we have for over 200 years. i know it can be exhausting and unsettling. but tonight i want you to know that were going to get through all of this. >> bill: not so cheery a message on the fourth of july. striking a tone of the white house that might be more partisan than what people are used to. kellyanne conway, former trump advisor, hello to both of you. mark i begin this time. i took that comment is a direct reference to the supreme court decision in the past two weeks. what did you hear? >> i think it obviously was a nice site for the supreme court suggesting the supreme court was
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removing constitutional rights to say that on independence day when the country declared inalienable rights of people against the tyranny in great britain. look, i thought it was a weird message. in the month of top gun nor a bit of a return to basic patriotism. i think it could've been more upbeat and yet still made some reference to the court, but not made it really has central message. >> bill: great film by the way go see it. i know kelly and has seen it. i've been trying to read between the lines on the polling that's been done the roe v. wade decision came out. the ones that i've seen so overwhelmingly reflect on the economy and inflation in the issue of abortion is weighed on the list. what do you find so far on that? >> there's no no question that pro-lifers and pro-choice will be energized this fall as i
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think will become grabbing activists and pro-second amendment people as well. but you are right. the sectoral theme for all americans and everybody's belief in the economy and more specifically inflation. so when joe biden our president talks about freedom it people feel like he has remove their financial freedom because they are suffering every time they go to pay for something. obviously july 4th travel was more of a hassle and more expensive. but back to the theme of his message. i don't understand when the president talks about moving backward and depressing us right into an economic depression. you know the six present between carter and biden all gave speeches that appeal to our better they were uplifting and optimistic. biden sounds a lot like jimmy carter's famous relief speech. he neither demonstrates competence, nor inspires confidence in the american people. this is the time they need to hear it. his approval ratings of course are a disaster but when you look and read between the lines you
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see june to june his approval rating is gone from 52% to 38% with the intensities what really caught my eye. plus eight in the number of people who strongly test minus 88 in the number of people to strongly approve of his job performance on plus ten and the number of americans felt strongly disapprove. so if you are facing those kinds of headwinds what you do if you try to inspire people and say look, these are rough orders, we are americans, we can be resilient and optimistic and so these warning us about going backwards. >> that's penn's message, i want to roll this message another time. gavin newsom ran an ad in florida direct erected at ron desantis. watch. speak of freedom is under attack in your state to direct all of you living in florida to join the fight, or join us in california where we still believe in freedom. >> okay and he goes on from there. mark penn quickly less than a minute on both of you. >> great political stunt, great political stunt, national
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attention. killian, how do you see it? >> there is no question that the political stunt but gavin newsom needs to see it to make himself revel relevant. people didn't like the way he handled covert or crime or freedom. the irony is some but any california does have moved to miami and austin. they've gone to red states and ron desantis for the state come i don't think picking at a republican governor will make him any more relevant for the last thing is if i'm a donor i'm upset that he spent $105 on ads in florida. below, bottom line is people are suffering right now, and was worried about today? joe biden's talking about moving backward, gavin newsom is looking forward pass joe biden into 2024 and beyond. i want people to focus on today. >> and we'll see when that
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happens. thank you. we lost mark but that's covid cable. thank you, we'll see you next week. kellyanne conway and mark penn, thank you. >> dana: squad member ilhan omar getting a less land friendly reception at a somali music festival this weekend. plus a texas woman arrested and what police call a love triangle, killing of a top u.s. cyclist, what police say she was carrying with her, nancy grace is here to break it all down. and vanguard retirement tools and advice can help you get there. that's the value of ownership. i brought in ensure max protein, with thirty grams of protein. those who tried me felt more energy in just two weeks! (sighs wearily) here i'll take that! (excited yell) woo-hoo! ensure max protein. with thirty grams of protein, one gram of sugar, and nutrients to support immune health.
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>> bill: wnba star britney crime are held in jail in russia is asking the president to get her free. she was arrested in moscow by ken february carrying cannabis oil. alex hoffman washington with more on this. alexander, good morning. >> good morning. in this letter written to the president, griner referenced a fourth of july holiday and are free to mean something completely different or now in the excerpt she included this. as i sit in a russian president alone with my thoughts and without the protection of my wife, i'm terrified i might be here forever. the due time olympic gold medalist went on to as the president not to forget about her and the other american
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detainees. her trial begins on friday. this morning her wife, cherelle, said brittany wrote the letter because the president is not met with her family. >> it kills me every time i have to write her and she's asking if you met with him yet? and i have to say no. she's like you know what? i'm sure she was like i'm going to write him and ask now because my family has tried and to no avail so i'm going to it myself. >> the national security council coronet of the security communication said this when asked about a meeting with the president and possibly relief negotiations. >> i can tell you that is very much engaged in this and he has been engaged with the team it's not only in direct communication with miss griner but also working very hard to get her released. i mean she needs to come home commits past time. hope to hear from her wife for
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the first time since february. up phone call was approved by the russian government but according to the associated press, despite brittany griner dialing her wife 11 times, nobody at the u.s. embassy in moscow was there to forward the call. >> thank you, alex, we need to get her own pronto. thank you. >> dana: authority saying caitlin armstrong was carrying her sister's passport when she was caught in costa rica last week after more than a month on the run. armstrong is a texas woman accused in what police say was of love triangle killing of the top professional cyclist. police say she also had a receipt for plastic surgery in her possession beer that's bringing nancy grace, host of prime stories with nancy grace who called us from the very beginning what it was. do you make anything of the fact that she had her sister's passport and she had apparently had a nose job. speak well i make a lot of it and i can tell you this much, in our effort to play just as she have landed her sister with some felony charges. that is in violation of the u.s.
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code title 28. you may not allow another or facilitate another using your passport, now does the sister now she took the passport, we don't know that bidder and it may never be -- but let's talk about about what she did. i don't want mariah wilson to get lost. this is a young girl, this one photo of her with mud across her face and a big smile. pete at the top of a game just 25 years old, one of the best dirt gravel and mud cyclists in the world, she's dead. she was hunted down like a dog shot multiple times with a gun. let me point out that was facilitated to use a silencer. a silencer appeared now this woman, caitlin armstrong, many people think she's glamorous and beautiful yoga teacher come i don't. she looks like the devil to me because a jury can take into account behavior before, during,
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and after a crime and her fleeing to costa rica to get away shows me this was very well-planned. >> you have somebody like those who -- caitlin armstrong does not have a long rap sheet per se, but then this happens and it does seem like she planned it, right? as you said she got the silent therapy eventually decides a letter sell mike carrick -- it's almost like she watched like a true crime documentary and was like oh that's how you try to get away with it? speak of that site could away but she couldn't change her name, she can change her appearance, she had a nose job in plastic surgery, dye her hair, but she couldn't change your habits. she went to stay in some hostile for where students stay named ranjan surf and yoga hostile. it's like taking out an ad on third avenue saying here i am, come and get me.
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but not just that, she saw mariah like fox woodstock its payout in the wilderness. enola for what? a cheating boyfriend that put mariah's name in a cell phone under a fake number? you know what? for what? all of this over a cheating boyfriend? and now mariah is dead. and that's not all. they did something really smart, they got hurt -- they did not extradite her. now, because costa rica has abolished the death penalty. they deported her on immigration fraud. that way texas can seek the death penalty. this is absolutely an aggravating circumstance. it's called lying in wait. cold-blooded. waiting for her to show up so you could break in and shoot her dead in the bathroom. >> that's an interesting detail
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tradition versus -- thank you for that and always being our guide in this matters. >> thank you for inviting me. it's a great reminder, thank you. thank you, nance, meanwhile teach all u.s. history and the good come of the bad command the uncountable pair that's the message from amanda notes on education. bill bennett is next on that. and atlanta cop delivering a baby at a gas station. that officer joins us first hand with that first-hand account coming up live and we continue. cool story. like any family, the auburns all have... individual priorities. some like strategic diversification. some like a little comfort, to balance out the risk.
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"the wall street journal" saying teaching all aspects of the u.s. story will help depoliticize education and foster democracy. here to make his case, former secretary of education fox news contributor pete how are you doing, bill, read your piece very interesting. make your case for our audience beard will start there. >> tell the truth. let's talk about what's on everybody's mind this morning. child looking at the tv says mom, dad, is america a terrible place with the shooting there? in island park in chicago? the answer is no it's not a terrible place. do we have some terrible things and some terrible people? yes we do. it looks like this guy should've been spotted earlier and watched like a hawk. ed been in counseling. but there are wonderful things too. in the celebration of the fourth is a celebration of what's right. you'll notice that you guys were reporting very well, the little children were built leaving the scene of that, they were waving the american flag.
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according to all reports, the police rushed the shooter, they didn't walk away or chat, they rushed the shooter. that's america. some bad things happen, tell the truth. but talk about the story of america in its entirety. in its entirety there is no country like it. it's the greatest country that's ever been. have we done terrible things? yes we have. but as daniel patrick moynihan said we read about them in the newspapers and we see the stories on television. that's how we find out, that's freedom and that's part of the story. >> that's understanding also ultimately. here's just one paragraph. some on the left wrongly attempt to reduce our history to an ugly saga of patriarchy and racism. others explain our country through an ideologically driven framework that sees america has permanently tainted by the sin of slavery. some conservatives you right have minimized how slavery, racism, and discrimination have inflicted scars on our nation.
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interesting statement that. explain. >> yes, sir. will again tell the truth. as they say in the piece, talk about the galling and the glorious. and they are both part of the american story. but you know what is it about this country that people want to commit? thousands, millions of people want to commend, we want we must be doing something right. after world war ii we are very well educated a lot of people in the public schools, with gun a little downhill since then. that has led to this wonderful economy that we've had until a couple of years ago. so there is a great story to be told. tell the truth. if you tell the truth we can live with the accounting of our sins, provided everybody knows that this is a country that looks at its sins and tries to do the right thing and recover from them and go on a better path. >> bill: a big question, do you think after what we've come
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through with the exposure and was being taught in certain public schools to be explicit, that we are going away from it now? >> i think we are. the big schools need to get the message. parents have the message and they are leaving a lot of public schools after what they found out during covid. but school choice will enable this. take a look at virginia where glenn youngkin is done in virginia i think is a great model. but you know look, schools can reform. they've been good and they've completely gotten worse. but they can get better again. lord knows it's an important window asked. >> bill: good example in virginia also. bill bennett, nice to see you. have a great tuesday. >> think you guys. thank you very much.
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>> dana: a horrible terrifying scene in highland park, illinois, as police say alone trigger a benign fire on people at a fourth of july parade. the person of interest now behind bars after an hour long manhunt. welcome to a brand-new hour of "america's newsroom," i'm dana perino. >> bill: i'm bill hemmer. good morning to you, dana camilla gang's all here for now. >> dana: we are mostly here. >> bill: yesterday's mass shooting left six people dead, 31 injured among the dead. 73 father and grandfather nicholas toledo was at the festival with his family. jackie sent him was also killed. she was a devout member of an area synagogue and is survived by her husband and her daughter. >> dana: police said took the 21-year-old suspect in the custom meat following a car chase after identifying them hours after the shooting releasing his name, photo, and then type of car he was likely driving. >> bill: the city of highland park, illinois, north of chicago is only just the beginning to process these tragic events. here's one witness describing
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what they saw firsthand. >> we were in the parking lot moments before with the police officers, you know who are so nice saying happy fourth of july, it was the happiest moment of these kids' lives at that moment that quickly turned into the worst day that we will ever remember. >> bill: that was gina from last hour with us. what more on this retired nypd lieutenant is going to join us in a few moments coming up here. also other major cities in gun violence in the blood it we can across america, at least 13 people shot in multiple incidences in new york city. two cops shot in philadelphia late last night, molly line a boston to run down this police blotter. molly, good morning. >> good morning, bill, let's start in philadelphia.
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this was a firework show with a concert going on and a multitude of people running for cover as these two police officers were wounded but thankfully survived. it was very chaotic scene as the crowds of course scattering there. this near the benjamin franklin parkway. it's unclear if the officers who were ahead were actually targeted. but one received the grace wound to the head appeared remarkably the bullet was found in the highway patrol officers had. the other officer was a member of the montgomery county bomb squad. both treated and released to the local hospital. >> it feels too early to tell. we don't know if this was a ricochet from celebratory gunfire. we don't know if it was intentional. we don't know if this was someone taking a shot intentionally of these officers from long range. >> dana: evidence markers littering the streets near downtown minneapolis last night as investigators work together information are gathered at plum island park eight people are hospitalized several in critical condition. there was no causing the
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violence plaguing new york city several people shot across facility there were 38 shootings. more than 50 wounded, nine killed. this always happen across the city and the tight confines of the bodega in brooklyn were two young men were reportedly wounded and died. now this recent wave of violence leaving investigators with a lot of work to do and a lot of suspects to look for. bill? >> bill: in boston today thank you. >> several counties in texas has say they've had enough of the border crisis. can a maverick at the invasion later today. jonathan turley and the president of the national border patrol council, let's save the legal analysis for just a moment and, brandon, i think you can probably channel these frustrations as to why they are going to even try to do this but what are you hearing from them?
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>> absolutely. when you look at what is currently happening and what they are left to deal with. when the federal government fails to do the job in these counties, they have to clean up every aspect of the illegal immigration problem that we are currently facing. what's interesting about this as two of these counties are predominantly democrats. both sheriff's are democrats. kinney county -- this can be considered a bipartisan effort. and that clearly shows that this issue is a very important issue across the country. but in these counties, these counties have to pick up all of the shattered pieces the federal government is leaving behind because we refused to do the job that is necessary to protect the border and protect the community. >> bill: part of the argument they are making from a legal standpoint, is the federal government has the obligation to protect states or americans from invasion. if that is where to go forward
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what it legally? >> i'm afraid i am skeptical. as they say in texas the dog won't collect. theory -- that deals with the invasion, which is generally interpreted come along interpreted to mean an actual foreign invasion of an organized force. i don't think a court would seriously consider expanding the term invasion to cover this. that does not mean, as brandon was noting, that there is not a serious problem on the border. i think all americans should be alarmed over these numbers. this is really breathtaking the degree to which we were see -- but it's a matter of competency not the constitution. it goes to the biden administration failure to take a more concerted effort to try to stem this flow. but i don't believe a federal
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court would lend much credence to the expansion of the guaranty clause. >> bill: maybe i could address it from a different standpoint. if your federal government is not enforcing its own laws, could you approach it from that standpoint? >> well this goes to the merits, which i think there are strong arguments in favor of these counties. they have been left vulnerable and without sufficient federal support or effort, that becomes a political issue up for the courts. now you could change that. article five allows for constitutional conventions that would allow them to change the constitution. but it was a 2012 in arizona versus the united states that the supreme court reaffirmed that control of the border in terms of federal authority. i don't believe that, even with the current majority in the
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supreme court, that you would see a change in that position. >> dana: we are just starting another month of july is already hot. usually you'll see some drop-off and migrants attempting to cross, that's not happening this summer. forecast for us what you see in the month of july. >> we continue to see the numbers go up. if you look historically we should be apprehended between 30 and 40,000 people at this particular time of the year. per month. but right now we are well above 200,000 apprehension and we continue to set records. that's why these counties are so desperate right now. there are so desperate that they are willing to declare an invasion which, like jonathan said, is generally reserved for an attacking force, an army from a foreign country. but they are so desperate they want the federal government to step up and do the job. they want this president to recognize exactly what's going on. he continues to ignore this issue, which then puts these counties in very bad positions. >> he didn't give you much of a
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fighting chance on the legal aspects of this. auntie have been to plan a and plan b -- you're going to run through the whole alphabet. if this doesn't work, what next? >> well that's the problem. if we don't -- if we don't get the proper law enforcement program policy and operations, were going to continue to see this bid were going to continue to see more deaths. when you look at the drownings in the rio grande river it's the counties that have to deal with it. it's not the president of the united states, the counties have to deal with it. when you look at the crime it's the counties that have to deal with it. it's not the federal government. that's the problem. that's why these counties are self it up with that. we've got to have the proper policy. we have to have the proper operation. we just don't have that right now that's what we have the chaos that we are currently seeing. >> dana: jonathan turley, thank you as this issue continues we will cover it. thank you. >> bill: meanwhile the drugs keep coming over the border.
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quickly moving across state lines sending just about every state in the country. drug enforcement administration ousting itsy at sea is every single u.s. state and territory. william la jeunesse with that story today. >> well, billy dalrymple fentanyl is made in the lab so it's easy to produce and distribute. and because it's a powder can easily be laced into other addictive pillows. it's stronger than heroin and more profitable than cocaine or marijuana so it is tracking across the united states as we learned outside of denver. >> this amount according to the dea could kill up to 31 million people. >> your lips looking at a historic hall from a bust on the colorado highway. >> this by and large is the biggest seizure in colorado and i would dart argue the biggest seizure in the united states out of a motor vehicle on the highway. >> captain bill barclay
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smuggling trafficking in at the colorado state patrol 24 members including a canine. >> we've seized over 367 pounds of fentanyl, which is a 389% increase over last year. and i would say that the majority of our seizures come from the cartels of mexico. >> dea administrator and malcolm says by the numbers this is unlike anything that she's ever seen. >> the dea has interdicted fentanyl counterfeit pills in every single u.s. state and territory. it's everywhere. in mexico criminal drug trafficking flooding into the united states. >> we are the deadliest moment and what is the deadliest drug epidemic in american history. >> josh stein is the attorney general of north carolina where a list illicit fentanyl crossed some 70% of all fatal overdoses in
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2020. even worse, more than three quarters of all teams who are dying if overdose have fentanyl in their system. it's killing america's youth. >> bill: so about 300 people die every day in the u.s. of an overdose, that's 12 every hour according to the cdc. two-thirds because of fentanyl are some other synthetic opioid. >> bill: it doesn't end. william on the streets of los angeles today. thank you. >> dana: as america celebrated the fourth of july many on the left he was dead as an opportunity to criticize the red, white, and blue. >> bill: also the police arresting a person of interest only hours after the deadly shooting in illinois. how they tracked them down and where things stand on a potential motive at this hour. >> it was frightening. we are okay. it went on for a minute or more.
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>> bang, bang, bang. you heard the shots go off and off. it must've lasted 2 minutes and everybody kept screaming shooter, ron, ron. why does somebody do this and what makes them feel so compelled and so frustrated? >> bill: such a great witness they are. those shots rang out at the fourth of july parade in north of chicago. six dead and dozens injured bid the person of interest in that shooting is in custody. former nypd lieutenant joe cardell. good morning tio. have not been given a motive, i imagine they know a lot that we have not been told. what do you think?
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>> i think this investigation is moving along the way they wanted to appear they haven't said they charged him yet, they're probably putting some of the pieces together still. but the fact that they got them in a timely manner is crucial. and i think they're just gonna piece everything together now. the gun legally bought come as they will put that rhyme or reason later on as well. so i think they have a lot to do with the investigation yet. as far as motive, i mean it's clear what his intent was, to go out and create havoc and kill as many people as he could. he left the gun behind so it's a traceable gun. i guess he wasn't afraid of being caught right after that. >> bill: what type of gun is it? do we have that? >> they did not say what it was. they didn't say if it was a large capacity magazine or if he had multiple magazines. i'm sure that will come out later on too. i know it's everybody's preference to know that now, but the police are doing a good job with this and keeping it close
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to the vest and letting the public know what they have as they get it without compromising the investigation. >> bill: you are on the air a lot yesterday at fox. i read where he was on the radar of cops and i read where he wasn't on the radar. we know what the right answer is? >> i don't know if he was on the radar of the cops. maybe he had a run-in with the police, was it at an incident where they should have taken the gun away from him? nobody knows that. but the fact that he goes on social media is the question right now and how it's not picked up. also family members saying he was a loner, but those family members also probably knew he had a gun for those family members should have raised concern about that they were concerned about his mental capacity at that point. so i think social media has a lot to do to step up to the plate, because they can pick and choose the people that they want to keep an eye on comeau which are very easy targets, you know? political targets or commentators or whatever, they can easily distinguish what
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these guys are doing out on the street right now, put keywords together on their social media platforms and combined them and say law enforcement should see this person right now. not after it happens. it's always after it happens that we find out all the postings and everything this person was doing in the past. >> bill: to more things here, joe, speaking of postings lee harvey oswald, that could be just the beginning of what he was putting out there on social media. >> absolutely. somebody said to me yesterday as soon as that word comes up but what about a college student doing and essay on lee harvey oswald, it's not just that keyword, its other keywords and other actions with this person that should tie in. but that alone, that is looking at these past shootings and everything and he planned this, there's no doubt in my mind that he planned this and he wanted to create as much havoc as he could and he's willing to face the
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consequences. >> bill: i don't know when the press conferences. i have not been given a time. will carry it live. in the gun legislation that was passed two weeks ago, is there anything in there that would have prevented this killer from accessing his weapon? >> i don't think so. i think each state -- you know sometimes, bill, people don't realize that state law supersedes federal law when it comes to how they can carry a weapon. so i think that the states really need to put a program in place with the mental status of people that are known to people and let that pop up on the radar for the police. let it just show up and let them question it before they issue any carry permits or actually give a weapon to these people. so i think you're going to have to tighten those areas as well. that may fall within the states person -- >> bill: i just came up with two areas. more for thorough review of that
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she was already 21 years old. increases in funding for mental health programs that may in the end of helped but all this is hindsight at the moment. we'll see what the authorities have to say when they are ready. joe cardinale, thank you for coming back and thank you for your time. >> any time, bill. >> dana: air travel approaching its pre-pandemic levels over the holiday weekend pay that's the good news bad the bad news is getting from here to there is becoming a test of endurance. airline struggling to keep up with demand. plus america getting crushed by rising prices on a billing from gas to groceries now the business unloading for its handling of the inflation crisis. >> i think the american people get it. they feel it in my pocket pair the president is thinking he can just get away with continuing to live. that doesn't allow them to have a pivot moment where they say were going to go on a different were actually in the walkway from our policy the inflation buzz word. as if inflation magically goes away and then suddenly returns. but inflation never really goes away.
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you might have experienced this. headaches for holiday travelers over the holiday weekend. more than 1800 cancellations, 22,000 delays from friday through monday. i'd rather walk. charles watson is live with the latest. good morning. >> i think a lot of folks are with you on the walking point. you can see a lot of folks here landing right now trying to go through the tsa checkpoints. they've been getting through pretty easily this morning but certainly it's been a chaotic weekend for millions of americans all over the weekend trying to travel the holiday and a lot of these folks are likely to run into the same issue as they start to make their way home pete a lot of folks traveling over the weekend found themselves stuck in airports across the country. the airlines struggling to keep up with this pandemic demand thanks in part to bad weather and staffing shortages. the widespread issues causing headaches for thousands of passengers.
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i can tell you, bill, some are taking it in stride's now. they are learning to work with delays because take a look at flight aware tracking more than a thousand u.s. flights delayed today at about 130 cancellations so far. that on top of more than 20,000 flights that have been delayed and another 2,000 over canceled up the long weekend. obviously that isn't making the best impressions on customers, according to the bureau of transportation statistics. consumer complaints are up by more than 300% since 2019. with a busy summer ahead experts say airlines really need to do their best to get back to full strength. >> we are only dealing with let weather inch issues but the staff shortage in the fact we don't have enough pilots, were not paying them enough, that's poor management. >> yeah, that's what we've been hearing from a lot of these folks who are flying out today and over the weekend but again there were learning to work with
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the delays and cancellations. we talk with folks who said they are getting your 3-4 hours before the flight even take off just to account for any time that they may be cut up a check in lines and at the date gates and they are just hoping that they make it on their flights and get to their destination. >> bill: i bet they are not easy bid thank you, charles, nice to see you in atlanta. millions of americans celebrated the country's 246th birthday yesterday but some major media outlets were having none of that appear they instead used our independence day to criticize america. jason chaffetz from the yuko. here's katy perry and pat miller. women in the u.s. or if rights than an actual sparkler, shake my head. that mother fourth of july has been canceled of independence sincerely women. it seems to be there go to if they don't like something a part of our system or a part of the governments or part of our
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institution this is what they go to. they just want to have you this back in june the 8th of 2021. he might remember, watch. >> i was on long island this weekend visiting a really severe friend. i was really disturbed. i saw dozens and dozens of pickup trucks with explicit lives against joe biden, on the back of them. trump flags and some cases just dozens of american flags which is also just disturbing. essentially the message was clear this is my country, this is not your country. i own this. jason, would you make of all this? >> am tired of people spinning out of the country come they don't respect the flight, they don't respect the millions of people who gave their lives for the freedoms that we enjoy. the good news is that i come with good news. i checked with the aarp. guess what, costa rica is a really good place evidently to
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retire and for katy perry and pat mother and all of that, delta has a direct flight from los angeles to san jose, costa rica. they can be there in less than six hours and i'm sure they can enjoy the rest of their lives in costa rica. >> do you have a membership card to the aarp? is that how you get a direct line and there? >> no but katy perry is getting pretty close to k joining. i don't have one but i checked their website. >> it's interesting there's a lot of coverage about how our country is in decline and it's going backwards as president biden said. then in the same breath they will decry the fact that there is such a loss in the trust in our institutions. >> it's interesting. even bette midler up, because i could do this segment i had to go back and read her texts, was painful. i did and she was complaining that they were attacking women, they were calling them an attack on women. they would actually call them women.
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don't look at republicans for that. you need to look at your hollywood buddies on that one. it's the same old thing they do. why not respect the country and value the idea that you have these freedoms that you can speak out, but be part of the solution, don't be part of the problem. offer a viable solution, that's what i think they miss every single time. >> jason there's something else -- i was actually taken aback by this. npr decided to enter a tradition of reading the declaration of independence. here's the tweet. to this july 4th we break with tradition instead of a reading of the declaration of independence. important segment about our past and future. okay if you won't have a debate about that, great. but why do you have to stop reading the declaration of independence, that just means the you think it's inherently bad. >> and the declaration of
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independence can be read in just a couple of minutes, it's not a very long and lengthy document, but it's the celebration commits fourth of july for goodness' sakes, why do we as taxpayers have to fund this npr organization when they won't even read the declaration of independence for goodness sake, why is that so controversial and why can't we just show a moment of gratitude to be united. i remember when barack obama used to talk about we are not the red states of the blue states with the united states, everybody felt good about that. but not anymore, these people at npr can't even read the declaration of independence because they think it's controversial. i don't want to find it and not organization like that. >> that's also an interesting point commits dead? just a little gentle ribbing about the aarp had not public and to get a card in the mail soon as well. good to see you a thank you. >> thank you. talks to restore the iran nuclear deal apparently hit a
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brick wall. so what next? general jack keane's got a lot of thoughts on that. jeff bezos had a few things to say to the white house and president biden over the long weekend. it kind of goes like this. it's simple math and econ so tried. >> frankly i place my trust and the man who is largely restructured the global economy versus a president who has driven himself to work in 50 years and is never met payroll. i'm with jeff on this. the elects and half the sugar. ♪♪ pedialyte powder packs. feel better fast.
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>> dana: billionaire jeff bezos butting heads with the biden administration that cutting guys after the president demanded gas companies have just lowering their prices. the amazon ceo says the president is needed either -- yes with the latest, how did they take it over there? >> it's interesting to the white house was pushing low unemployment rates that they have going on. but the president seems to be losing friends among long-term allies. the longer his policies end up pushing this inflation. that last point you said this time gas prices. the president before the july 4th weekend weeded out the companies own a gas station suggest lower the prices from the is the invasion of ukraine
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continues on this and that prompted the normal biden ally, jeff bezos, the owner of "the washington post" to respond with us, inflation is far too important a problem for the white house to keep making statements like this. it's either stayed ahead misdirection or a deep misunderstanding of basic market dynamics. that said often of the series of tweets the president countered that low employment rate is blaming the republicans for blocking his agenda even though democrats have both houses. >> biden's can have to stop this and stop blaming everybody but himself rare everything going on these can have to take some responsibility for what's happening and is going to have to do something to fix it. jeff bezos joins concerned about a downturn ahead without a pivoting policy as i talk with democratic senator chris coons last week who said that he now supports streamlining regulations on pipeline project so tomorrow joe biden takes his
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economic message on the road to convince his americans that has economy is working for everyone. >> let's go overseas to significant issues president biden is pushed to restore the iran nuclear deal apparently hit a brick wall. a senior u.s. official reportedly describing talks has moving backwards. i want to bring a gentleman jack keane to talk about this but also significant developments for the war and prudent in ukraine. general good morning to you, thank you for your time paired how do you gauge this iran nuclear deal? if it falls true or if it goes forward what is the fate of that? >> first of all, billy welcome back, great to see you. in terms of the deal itself, many of us who felt the 2015 dell was on the mental flawed in the united states never entered into it, there is even greater opposition to renewing that deal given iran's behavior the past five plus years, which has been reprehensible.
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they've taken the money from the 25th deal and they've used that money to buy rockets and missiles for hamas and hezbollah to rain down on israel and before they ink was dry and the 2050 and the the very same year we signed it, the iranian proxies invaded yemen and top of the government friendly to the united states to their allies in the region, that has been their behavior as a result of the 2015 deal. remember the sunset clauses were established in that deal ten years were for threshold capability. when obama was their will, why do you have those clauses in there? it should be a prohibition of weapons. well because we wanted to change iran's behavior and we think in the ten or 15 years' time that could possibly happen. we've legitimized them in negotiating with the most powerful countries in the world. we want them to become a responsible member of the international community.
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and that has blown up in our faces. listen, there's bipartisan opposition to the steel led by the democratic chairman of the senate foreign relations committee senator bob menendez he believes this is fundamentally flawed and we should scrap it. and go back to maximum extensions, strengthening our partnership certainly in the middle east with our allies and israel, and also, according to military action -- >> bill: in the meantime you know what kind of hassle they can bring our way too also watch that. in the meanwhile zelinski late last night's live significant developments in southeastern ukraine. here's what zelenskyy said in the nightly address. >> the armed forces of ukraine respond push and the occupiers day after day, we have no alternatives. it's about our independence come about our future come about the faith of the entire ukrainian people. >> they are pretty much same who got the next region will go for
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the rest and will have all of southeastern ukraine under control. if that's the case, that war is not a war over? >> no, not even close. actually in my judgment it's likely to be a protracted war. where we are, and putin celebrating this weekend because it has been taken by the russian forces, that's the eastern part of the don boss. they took all of the forces they had enough self and concentrated them there. and they were finally able to take it in again starting to take it in april. it's taken them months. they've had huge amounts of casualties, so much so that putin this week and after decorating to four-star generals who are operating at the tactical level to help them succeed, made this point, we need to rest our forces. what that really means is the
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casualties are so high they have to refit and rearm. that will take some weeks. this is going to give the ukrainians a huge opportunity here, bill, to conduct a limited counterattacked and possibly a counteroffensive by the end of july or august. for them to be successful at that, the really substantively take territory back, they're going to need the enablers from the international community to my promises made last week in the g7 and the nato summit, will they deliver the right amount in the right quantities and the right systems and also in a timely manner. the united states by far is the greatest contributor. if you add up all of the other countries in terms of what they have contributed it doesn't even match the united states, other countries have got to step up. >> bill: general thank you.
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you might be right about a protracted war that goes on for some time when it goes to the amount of munitions that have come into the country. will speak to you later in the week, thank you for your time. >> great talking to you, bill. >> dana: squad member ilhan omar getting an ear full from a hostile crowd of the weekend. it was in her home state. in atlanta police officers stepping into deliver a baby at a gas station. >> be advised baby has been delivered. >> that hero officer is here. ♪ ♪
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by trashing it of course. and president biden is getting his facts wrong again? going after the struggling mom-and-pop gas stations for the prices for oil tank. steve forbes, retired fbi agent for landro, congresswoman, and the faulkner focus at the top of the hour of. >> bill: thank you, harris, see you in a moment. check this out or look away. the dow was down a moment ago more than 700 points for a percentage mark of well over 2%, which would indicate the dow 30 is down 19% on the year if i'm doing my math correct. anyway, it is not good news. there is a concern over a slowing economy, which is raising the possibility that we are headed for a recession. some people believe that we are already there. but nonetheless, -- it's not good. >> don't look today, maybe even tomorrow.
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>> georgia's democratic gubernatorial nominee say stacey abrams apparently taking contradictory stances on personal safety. her campaign is spent more than $450,000 in private security despite abrams being a board member of a group that supports defunding the police. the security company's website focuses on the threat assessment and protecting its clients and she might absolutely need that security. >> rather rich i would add. >> dana: but you want to talk about a great police officer, check this out. ♪ ♪ >> he's freezing, he's crying, beautiful, healthy baby. >> dana: in atlanta police officer springing into action after a will a woman went into labor at a gas station. the baby's father flagged her down for for the baby was like no i'm not waiting.
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officer renato anaya is here where it is great to have you with us. tell us about the moment where you realize they were going to continue following you, that you they had to pull over. >> i want to say thank you for having me. it all happened so fast. towards the end after the baby was delivered it was an exciting moment. >> how did they flagged down initially? >> the driver -- the father of the baby was driving behind us. he was flashing his headlights and blowing the horn trying to get our attention. we saw that, we pulled over and he pulled next to us when he told us that he needed an escort to a hospital. he started to follow us and he pulled into a gas station. we saw that i pulled back around and we deliver the baby. >> dana: have you ever delivered a baby? >> never come a first time. >> dana: do you have your own children? >> yes. i think that's where i learned.
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i was there for all three births. that's where pretty much experience the delivering of a baby. >> i can imagine how grateful the parents where. did you have a chance to talk to them? >> not yet. i was just following up making sure the baby and the mother were fine and that's the only contact that i've had. >> do you train for this when you are becoming a police officer? for this possibility? >> no we do not. but we always have something that we learn at the academy. always expect the unexpected. that stayed with me. >> it's interesting about this moment that we are in. when we here at our china would try to celebrate police officers and thank them for all that they do. it really is true. a police officer could be called in to help in all sorts of situations. we even saw a couple of weeks ago somebody rescued a little baby pig that had gone into the road. it was a police officer that was like i guess i've got to get the
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pig and take it back. in a moment like this, did you call the police or the ambulance before you even started to catch that baby? >> we did. something that's medical related we have to notify the dispatch and have them start the ambulance and fire rescue. but we were already there so we were like just go ahead and do it on ourselves. >> that's news, it's always going to stay in my memory. >> dana: you will be in hours paid we appreciate you and thank you for coming up. we appreciate all that you do. >> think i appreciate you guys having me here i just want to say thank you and bless all of law enforcement officers. >> dana: absolutely, thank you. >> bill: good news for alanna. >> dana: father of three delivering a baby. i know those parents are going to get in touch with them.
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there may be just a little overwhelmed at the moment. >> bill: well done, sir. meanwhile at the vatican pope francis dismissing rumors that he's going to quit. he's 85, he said in an interview that actually retire and never entered his mind. though he did say that he may step down one day, i don't get that. like benedict but did back in 2013. the pope has been in a wheelchair for about a month with a problem with the need for last july he underwent surgery on his: i was hospitalized for about two weeks. he's dying on the job. there is not a job opening at the vatican for now. >> dana: there is also a job open here with this before we go contest we want to show you. for the annual nathan's hot dog eating contest on coney island taking a wild turn. a masked protester jumped on the stage, joey chestnut puts him in a choke hold and then back to business. and he won the contest for a 15th time. how many hot dogs did he eat?
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63 or something like that? >> bill: this guy has got skills. i mean he's really good. he shows up the play. >> dana: i wonder if the protester got arrested. we should find that out. nice to be back with you. >> dana: aren't you glad to be back? >> bill: i'll bring the mustard tomorrow. >> dana: harris faulkner is up >> harris: with a fox news alert freedom quieted by the ripping sounds of gunfire and terror. this our new information on the july 4th parade massacre in our nation's heartland. i am harris faulkner, you are in the "faulkner focus." [gunshots] of gunmen on a rooftop murdering parade goers. kills at least six people, enters more than 30 others including
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