tv Fox News Live FOX News October 16, 2022 9:00am-10:00am PDT
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don't hesitate. ask your doctor about otezla today. arthel: 23 days until the critical midterm elections and the issues that really matter to voters are taking center stage. one of them crime. in new york kathy hochul big leave over republican lee zeldin done is shrinking as rising crime has voters wondering which party can lead to better days ahead. welcome to fox news live i'm arthel neville. eric: thank you for joining us. you know the issues of bail reform and other issues are really on center stage in the gubernatorial race in new york city. this comes as there has been
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another act of senseless violence. teenager shot in new york city subway and suspect in the shooting sadly and tragically happens to be yet another teenager. police say that 15-year-old was murdered on friday night after think had some type of dispute. devastating mother telling new york post that her son is now just another number lost to crime. arthel: it's very tragic. president biden seeing economy with highest inflation in more than 40 years. fox team coverage start right now lucas tomlinson from the white house in moments. eric: first alexis mcadams who has the latest in new york. alexis. >> 79% of voters across the country say they are concerned with higher crime rates which isn't a surprise according to fox news poll. that's the case right here in new york where race for governor
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can be closer than expected. check this out in latest poll, democratic governor poll leading lee zeldin done by 10 percentage point but then that leads to 8 among those people who say they will vote in the election. hochul and zeldon have been hitting the campaign and among voters crime remains a top concern. this issue hitting close to home for zeldon last week after drive-by shooting on long island. daughters were inside but they weren't hurt. zeldon said if he's elected he will declare a statewide crime crisis listen. >> a lot of new yorkers are really fed up with kathy hochul. she's doing a terrible job as governor. new yorkers are leaving this country -- this state more than any other state across the entire country and the reason why is because albany has been attacking their safety and wallets and heading for
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opportunities elsewhere. >> talking about the crime in new york, yesterday nypd arrested kiandre walker for murder. the 18-year-old shot and killed a 15-year-old riding on the subway in queens. over the past 5 years, crime in the city up 31%, that includes murder, rape and robbery. crime is also a top priority, eric, for swing state of pennsylvania where senate race is growing closer. we will keep an eye on that. eric: all right, alexis, thank you so much. arthel: another stop issue for voters is the economy as inflation still has people coast to coast paying more for everything from gas to grocery. what is president biden saying about the state of the economy, lucas tomlinson with more. lucas. lucas: good afternoon, arthel. according to new fox news poll. only 33% of voters say they would vote to reelect president
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joe biden today. top economic adviser stated his case. >> we have unemployment that's 3 and a half percent. there is no recession that would prevail with that kind of unemployment. we are obviously adding hundreds of thousands of jobs per month. consumers who still have pretty good balance sheets. lucas: 51% of majority of voters say financial situations are actually worse than it was two years ago since president biden first took office. only 15% said it was better, 33% said it was the same. only 35% of americans approve the job joe biden has done with the economy and only 29% approve how he's handled inflation and increasing number of american families said they've had to cut back to afford necessities. president biden raised eyebrows in portland when he mentioned coffee machines as a way to save money. >> if you need a new coffee
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machine, washer, you >> that's lead to increase spending and increase inflation, just a cost of everything that you buy when you go to the grocery store if you can afford to put gas when you get there.cd shannon bream the strategic petroleum reserve is only half full right now. arthel. arthel: lucas tomlinson live at white house. thank you, lucas thompson and we will have more when judy miller joins us shortly. eric: humanitarian crisis in the
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southern border. flow of migrants coming to our doorstep in texas, arizona and elsewhere. the department of homeland security is launching large scale enforcement operation with mexico that including reverting to policy of staying in mexico for venezuelan migrants who try to come here. they are now being turned away as asylum seekers under expanded title 42 rule. griff jenkins who is back on the story in eagle pass, texas with the very latest. griff, it seems like the biden administration is reverting back to trump policy of sending people back over the border if thethey are venezuelans, a lot f migrants that are coming from el paso are overwhelming venezuelan. you talk about coming to doorsteps. let's talk about the doorsteps of border communities. you talk to anybody in eagle pass,
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population 29,000 in main street where we are, they are overwhelmed because in the 15 days that i've been here on the ground since the new fiscal year began, they've had more than 19,000 migrant apprehensions and these migrants are coming from all over the world, venezuela, cuba, colombia, along with syria, somalia, yemen and iran. let me show you video. we shot this large group before the sun came up today in this area. it was a group of about 100 interestingly enough, eric, there were no venezuelans in this group. we are not sure whether they are going the start stopping coming and surrendering and possibly try and cross and not get into the hands in the custody of the border patrol knowing now that they would go back. but we have a really big insight yesterday, eric, when we went over into mexico. we were in piedras negras. a video of the smugglers, didn't have a care of the world as we film them send a group of 12
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nicaraguans across from piedras negras into eagle pass. third group we observed that day. big one of upwards of 100 before the sun came up and, of course, there's the new title 42 rule. take a look at this video we have been shooting for the last couple of days from the drone of venezuelans being expelled under the title 42 trump-era provision. border patrol going van to van, mexican inn as secretary mayorkas is putting this out to the dallas morning news telling them, quote, the political cry that the border is open the music to the smuggler's ears because they take political rhetoric and market it. the critics of this administration and border policies are still making that political cry if you will. here is pat fallony weighing in that the border is secure.
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>> kamala harris, the vice president of the united states, what did she say, john, the border is secure. that woman is not living on earth. she's orbiting the planet neptune because she's not in this world. griff: another thing that we found on the mexican side of the border, multiple venezuelan documents, like this venezuelan passport that was discarded before they made the crossing presumably because they might want to say they were from somewhere else so they would not be title 42 andexpelled. the provision has been throughout expelling under title 42 mexicans, guatemalans and now you add venezuelans. from the border town of eagle pass with local elections coming on november 8th, it appears a big issue and communities well north of here. eric: you have the passport,
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they know how to work the system. throw your venezuelan passport away. say i'm from mexico and that they know they can stay. griff: one last thing, this is an agreement with mexico and the agreement in this area between eagle parts and piedras negras, only 200 venezuelans a day to be sent back. we will see if venezuelans start coming in larger groups because if 401 cross, you can only send 200 a day. eric: go at 4:00 o'clock in the afternoon after the 200 are deported. griff in eagle pass, thank you. arthel. arthel: griff, and eric, mean while 24 alleged gang members are arrested in florida for charges including fentanyl trafficking and conspiracy to commit murder. police found nearly 50 pounds of the deadly drug and 15,000 pills. johnson siri live in bureau.
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>> hi, arthel, florida department of law enforcement says it has d disrupted a major fentanyl corporation with connections to cartels in mexico. they are looking for additional suspect. investigate it's seized 15,000 fentanyl pills around more than 380 pounds of other drugs. authorities say the ring leader was florida prison inmate who gave instructions to the outside to traffic guns and weapons through complex criminal network. mexican drug cartels often obtain ingredients from china and then smuggle fentanyl across the u.s.-southern border but it becomes a problem for the entire country. attorneys general from 17 states and guam have written a letter urging president biden to treat fentanyl as more than just a narcotics control problem. >> we've asked for fentanyl to be considered a weapon of mass destruction.
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that's important because this needs to get the resources of the federal government, too many people are dying and i want to stop that. >> sadly the dangers of fentanyl struck woodland hills, california where risa and genre cently son kade after taking a pill laced with the deadly drug and decided to go public in terms of preventing this happening to other families. >> these kids just sometimes make really bad decisions and it doesn't make them a bad kid. >> every kid needs to neglect that these pills kill, they are poison. >> drug overdose deaths in general are now topping 100,000 a year, more than half of them involve fentanyl and other synthetic opioids, arthel. arthel: too many kids dying, too many parents mourning. >> absolutely. arthel: thank you very much. later this afternoon i will speak with asia expert gordon
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chang and former dea agent and februfentanyl crisis. >> terror may finally have ended. they believe that they have put a stop of year and a half worth of serial killings, authorities arrested this suspect, wesley brownly. took him into custody after tip from the public. they say brownly was found carrying a gun and mask around his neck and he was, quote, out hunting for his next victim. brownly is now rescued of shooting and killing six people as they simply walked in the city's streets and wounding another. senior national correspondent with the very latest on this break news story. hi, william. >> police say that 43 wesley brownly, stockton resident, he was out looking for more victims when they made arrest on
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saturday. they had gotten a tip on crime stoppers that he might be the suspect, they had his home under surveillance and when he drove away, police stayed back but they followed and they realized he was looking for another victim. >> we watched his patterns and determined early this morning he was on a mission to kill he was out hunting, dark clothing and had mask around his neck. he is also armed with a firearm when he was taken into custody. we are sure we stopped another killing. >> all police had to go on was this surveillance video the man they believe was responsible for six shootings in stockton and one in nearby oakland and four involved the homeless and ballistic testing right now they believe links the same gun to each crime. charges are pending, arrangement is tuesday, records show
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criminal history, he has one in california and in arizona including a dui and drug possession according to the san joaquín county da. >> this crime was solved because of stocktonians and bring this kind of terror and mobilize 780,000 in this whole entire country. mobilized, mobilized and captured this individual who reigned a terror is no longer. >> the shooter was wearing a mask, eric, for physical evidence the police in atf are going to fire the gun and compare the markings on the bullet and the imprint of the firing on the casing to see if that gun that they now have matches those that they got from the scene of the victims. they will go through his house
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as well and go through presser tuesday following arrangement. eric: hats off to crime stoppers and m man or woman who had suspicions. arthel. arthel: eye-opening new fox news polls on top issues and which party think they can handle those issues next. that's up next.o! that's up next.o! ♪ i had a family member who over a hundred years prior have walk these grounds. as someone living with type 2 diabetes, i want to keep it real and talk about some risks.
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eric: fox news democracy 2022, the midterms are soon upon us and this comes as new fox news poll show disappointing poll numbers for president biden. let's take a look at that. right now only about a third, 33% of voters asked would reelect the president overwhelming, 54%, the majority actually want to elect someone else. what does this mean for midterms and for the 2024 presidential election, fox news contributor and pulitzer prize winning journalist judy miller. judy, the one-third number how deep in trouble the president is in? >> well, that trend is clearly not good for the president, eric. there's no debating that. you -- even the most arden
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democrat has to concede that biden is now in trouble, however, it is a long way between now and 2024 and i would just remind viewers and i'm sure you know this, eric, that in 2010 president obama when he was going to be running again was at 39%. he was below 40 as well. so politics is a strange business and opinion can change, but, yes, inflation, the economy, these are the concerns of the american people and they don't help biden right now. eric: inflation, economy, crime, these types of things. you talk about politics being strange, here is something that's just bizarre. you have 33% right now that approval, take a look at this poll, if you ask democrats, i mean, it's overwhelming 71% of democrats do want to reelect the president, so how do you explain that apparent split when only one-third would support him now
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but, you know, 71% of democrats would vote for him again? >> i think there are two factors here, eric. the first is the flat necessaryh around president biden. when you ask fellow democrats, by the way who would you like to support in 2024 if not biden, democrats can't seem to come up with anybody who could clearly beat a republican contender or rival. and the second is just, you know, what the democrats have going for them is the prospect of donald trump running for them because that unifies democrats in a way that nothing does. if democrats believe that donald trump is going to be the nominee, 71% i'm surprised it's not 90% say that they would vote to reelect biden despite concerns about age and policies.
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eric: how are those investigations of the january 6th committee, how is that playing in their view. >> who people are watched them are deeply moved and frightened by them but they don't seem to have had an impact on the general public. i mean, the polls that have been done show that public opinion has not moved substantially since the january 6th hearings despite all the revelations of what president trump was doing, ketchup on the wall anecdote from some of his staffers but once again, sometimes you need time for messages and subtle messages to settle on the public and depends on what is happening in november as we go to the polls. eric: politics as they say is a long time away. washington post has an interesting list. they rank like a horse race the democrats and here is the list. look at this. number 1 president biden, he's
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incumbent, of course, look at who is coming up at number 2, the post thinks that pete buttigieg would be the second choice and then the vice president and then kind of a surprise for some, maybe michigan governor grisham whitmer, what's your spin and sense of this list that pete buttigieg is number two over the vice president and michigan governor would be number 4 right up there? >> well, i'm not surprised that that the vice president's ratings and popularity is below pete buttigieg. but i think that neither of those two candidates if they were to be candidates and represent the democratic party would do well. the person who heads the ticket and whether president biden will run again and word is his wife does not want him to run again but if he does or doesn't whom
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he would anoint or appoint would suggest make the strongest candidate. what started out as a joke, that is the term hillary clinton, many democrats believe that she would still be the strongest contender against donald trump if he were to run if he gets the new mexico nation. eric: you cannot count the clintons out. i'm going to tell you that. >> never. eric: covered him and traveled him in 1992. and quickly, do you think the president is going to run again? >> i really don't know. my personal view is that he has aged substantially in office. he has a much better record than the polls reflect. he's stimulated the economy when we were coming out of the pandemic, he's done the tax -- the child tax credit. he's put a lot of money in americans pockets but he doesn't seem to get credit for that because all of that is now viewed as overly stimulating to the economy and he's to blame
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for inflation. so i just doesn't know where his head is going to be in 2023 when he -- or 2022 after midterms when he has to make that decision. >> he's saying and they are waiting to see what happens in the midterms, judy, always good to see you, thank you so much. >> good to see you, eric. eric: of course, fox news, we will continue covering this, of course, and you can see it later on tonight. there it is. the big midterm show, dana perrino will be, denia, 10:00 p.m. eastern time as we get ready for big day coming up on a tuesday in a few weeks, the midterms, don't want to miss the show with dana, arthel. arthel: indeed. in other news, at least four inmates dead at a notorious iranian prison housing dissidents and protestors and many rocket attacks in ukraine. those details up next.
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were killed yesterday during a riot at notorious prison that houses antigovernment activists and political prisoners. this as widespread protests continue across iran over the death last month of 22-year-old masa amini while in police custody. her alleged crime, violating the state islamic dress code. kitty logan following the story from london, kitty. kitty: hi, arthel. well, it's not easy to get a clear picture of what what is really happening in iran but what is evidence is that the defiance continues despite a government crack-down. the demonstrations are still going on and what we saw yesterday was a very serious fire of the notorious prison in tehran, antigovernment movement still has momentum even within prison. iran state media says the fire
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was put out but no prisoners escaped, around 40 people were injured and independent human right groups says the fire started after a riot inside the prison, of course, this is the facility, the detention facility for those who have been held in the recent wave of protests are, those protests, of course, began following the funeral of 22-year-old masha armini who died in police custody. she was arrested by morality police for not wearing a head scarf. her family say her injuries weren't consistent with official account of what she died. the anger over her death continues now, reports of more demonstrations on saturday all across the country and international solidarity with iran's protestors too like here in chicago and even women around the world have been cutting their hair to demonstrate support. now the question remains is whether these protests can really make the change that these young women want or
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whether it can go further than that and perhaps topple the iranian regime. arthel: kitty logan, we will take it back here. eric. eric: now to ukraine where intense fighting continues against russian forces. russian state news agencies report that rockets have hit the mayor's office in a key eastern ukrainian city that is controlled by prokremlin separatists and it continues to appear that the ukrainian military is pushing back the russian invaders. trey yingst with the latest from there. hey, trey. trey: eric, good afternoon. a lot of developments today as ukrainian officials look to balance the desire to liberate new territory with addressing the challenges that the civilian population faces in the months ahead. >> residents line up to receive humanitarian aid while the winter months approach. the recently liberated area is without power and heating as
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ukrainians return to their homes. we tried to prepare firewood. we warmed the windows marian says, we covered everything, i want to warm up. eastern ukraine is bracing for continued fighting in the coming weeks but civilians are finding it difficult to get by with ongoing shelling and lack of resources. >> where should we leave? we don't have any money. it's our 7 month without a job, without anything this woman says. now it's the second month without power or gas. near the town soldiers that freed the area from russian occupation try to help fellow ukrainians but they face uphill battle. a few town asway intense fight asking going to reclaim territory. front lines now stretch more than 1500 miles. overnight an inside attack in russia's region left 11 soldiers
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dead and 15 others injured. russian state media says the shooting occurred on a military base filled with new recruits. today ukrainian troops reportedly fired into russia targeting an airfield in the region, the event highlights the expanding capabilities of the ukrainian army. eric. eric: all right, trey, thanks so much. arthel. arthel: trey and eric, thank you for more on the war on ukraine let's bring in lieutenant colonel darren, he's an army veteran, black hawk helicopter pilot, international battalion commander and military strategist also cofounder and executive director of restore liberty. colonel, i want to start here, picking up on what trey was just reporting, how will winter impact the war in ukraine? >> first of all, thanks, arthel, for having me on. winter is a pretty big deal in this area. first of all, winter is going to impact the population the most
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and forces fighting and in some regard it's going to help because it makes the ground more solid and makes it easier to fight on if you're going to work with tanks and the armored personnel carriers and things like that. ultimately what this is going to come down to is the ability for the civilian population in the east and south and those affected to survivor. winter is pretty brutal. arthel: very sad conditions. so let's talk about the bridge explosion. if ukraine was behind the explosion on the kerch bridge is that order offense or defense and is putin us using that to legitimize somehow his continued barbaric attacks and unprovoked war on ukraine? >> yeah, i think that it would be considered both offense and defense with mostly offense and i know said his intention is to rebuild the bridge and that doesn't mean that ukraine is not
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going to continue to target that bridge. it's a listening bridge and it is difficult to secure and it's going to move supplies and resources into the crimean region and what they can also expect then that putin will do what he's doing now and has done over the last 72 hours or so which is -- flurry of activity in multiple rocket launches and drone use to -- to -- in essence punish the entire country of ukraine for their actions on that bridge. arthel: yeah, even though he started this. president putin has new commander and 6,000 of his soldiers have been killed in the past eight months. does russia have the troop stamina, weapon stock to wont for much longer? >> it's almost taking on the
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final matching and slow to those watching. two sides that are both exhausted and i do not believe right now that russia has the capacity to -- to carry on at that level that you've seen in the couple weeks they are going the finish this and try to raise up to 300,000 soldiers and their own people a are rebelling agait that and it's not very popular. i just don't see it sustainable. arthel: they are running, they are running for their lives. leaving home countries so they don't get snatched off the street and force to fight in this war. let me ask you this, it seems that it's coming into its final stages, if you will. ui mean, ifputin realizes, there massive consequences if he were to use nuclear attack in ukraine, widespread or more targeted. is this why he's ramping up conventional military attacks on ukraine? kind of your analogy and can
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continue off the body blows because the ref won't call off the fight? >> you change the game when you start talking and actually using the "nuclear option" and putin has had health issues. we know he's declining i guess you could say in his health and you don't know whether he's going to pull off in the movie road october and will he do that and lose whatever support he may have internationally already and really change the landscape of the globe in doing it. arthel: and more so, does he care? >> he may not -- >> what's his priority, it's hard to say at this point. arthel: we can list the weapons and military aid the u.s. has provided ukraine and it's substantial. but is it enough? what will it ultimately take to end putin's brutal war in
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ukraine and civilians as we saw in trey yingst and no threats of consequences seem to deter him. is there something that would stop him? >> well, first of all, you really have to have the truly united and focused western europe and europe in general. that is at risk given what is going to result from the energy crisis that's going to impact ukraine with costs both in energy and food security. but without that solid unity and a fully focused supplying of ukrainian forces, i don't think they are going to get him to stop the way we would like him to stop. it's possible for sure but right now it's going to be difficult to do that. arthel: yeah, energy is key especially the winter months are upon us. i have to leave it there but i'd love to have you back on, lieutenant colonel darin gaus.
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eric: i once covered a story in ohio a poll worker accused of voting repeatedly not just once but twice, three times, four times, five times, six times, what the state is doing now to prevent that from happening again, series protect the vote is next with state top election official on how the midterms will be safe. ♪ ♪ ♪eric: now to series protect
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the vote where arizona republican attorney general is asking the fbi and irs to investigate the election group truth the vote. uncovered widespread voter fraud in the 2020 election but officials say they never provided any evidence of it. the ag say that is true to vote raised money from the public from unproven fraud claims and may have broken federal tax
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laws. state investigators only found 20 suspected voter fraud claims out of more than 4 million votes. majority of americans say the midterm elections will be conducted fairly and the results will be reliable. the brandon center for justice poll found this. 54% of people are very or somewhat confident the elections will be free of fraud, 46%, though, not very or not at all confident but the number changes when people are told about how election officials are protecting the vote. you can see it jumps to 67% do have faith in the electoral process and 32% still not very or not at all. one key swing state is taking steps to protect the vote, that's ohio and ohio republican secretary of state frank joins us now with what they are doing in the state. welcome to fox news. >> thanks, eric. great to be here. eric: welcome, how can you assure viewers about the vote and reassure the election in the
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your state will be fair, honest and credible? >> well, it's important for ohioans to know the fact. we take election security very seriously in the buckeye state. we want to make it easy to vote and hard to cheat and we have accomplished that over the years and one of the things that we do is simply following the law. this isn't something that we just do at election season. see, we work year round to maintain active voter roles, we take deceased voters only a monthly basis and and instancesn we catch we take them seriously. eric: how many cases recently? >> during my administration we have referred 555 cases either to attorneying or county prosecutors and that's something that we take great pride in and we evaluate risk. and catastrophic is when that
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occurs and in the case of voter fraud it is unlikely but it's catastrophic. we don't want any ohioan to think that ohioans are fraudulently casting ballots and so we go after and that's one of the reasons why we created the public integrity division at our office. eric: what does the division do and how does your office like to spell some of the midsts, people think that voting machines are widely connected to the internet and someone could push some buttons and change the votes. we heard about the falsehoods of massive vote dumpings at 2:00 o'clock in the morning to change an election result, can you explain that? >> one of the things that our public integrity division is going to do is consolate some of the operations that our offices has long been responsible for is auditing campaign reports and the work of maintaining accurate voter roles but the exciting thing that we are adding is full-time investigators so when we get reports of election fraud. we can put people that have a law enforcement background on the case so that they can
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actually build the evidence and turn it over to a county president and wrapped up what's logic logic and accuracy and it's a group of r's and d's that do this. voting machines in ohio are never connected to the internet and we audit election because 100% of ballots have a hard copy piece of paper associated with it and we reconcile and hard copy paper that is the post election audit that i've ordered everyone of our board elections to do in elections. eric: they go through it twice and they count on the paper. how reliable has that been and does that show that the system electronically does work properly? >> question, it does. i've had some people use voting
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machines and they can't cheat with paper. that's not true either. we don't trust either one as the final answer, we have the electronic tabulation that gives us rapid results that ohioans want to know on election night and we go back 3 weeks later and audit the paper, that means democrats and republicans working together count those, compare the two and they have to reconcile and again, we've been well over 99.9% throughout my administration. eric: wow, finally, astounding case i studied in your case in 2012 and afterwards, poll worker in cincinnati, admitted she voted twice and she was accused of voting 8 times in 3 presidential elections even voting for her sister who had been in coma since 2003 and pled guilty to some of that. how do you prevent that from happening again? >> well, one of the things that we do is maintain strict count of voter rolls and make sure there's only one ballot cast for every voter. obviously in the case of somebody like that. they need to be investigated and they need to face justice for
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it. eric: and she has, she served some time though she got out early. astounding case so hopefully things are working out much better now. ohio secretary of state frank larose, mr. secretary of state, thank you, thank you for protecting the elections and reassuring some of our viewers about the election. >> thank you, eric. eric: of course, we will have more in just a moment.
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>> millions of americans are still enjoying the beautiful fall weather but for some an early taste of winter is on the way. meteorologist adam klotz is here with the forecast. hey, adam. adam: hey, arthel, big winter weather middle of next week here on this sunday, though, especially across the southern portions of the country, a lot of rain. desert southwest across texas heavy rain stretching up to mississippi valley rain moving through meme sis area and other system that we are watching, spin into the up. that at times has been snow because, yes, some of that colder winter air just the very beginning of it is beginning to slip in. currently 41 degrees in marquette and beginning of a trend where we will see colder air in the middle of the country over the next couple of days. frost and freeze advisories from new england all the way the ohio river valley and getting back
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over towards colorado so a large area here we are talking a lot of very cold air. these are some of early morning temperatures and you can pay attention in the corner from monday morning lows getting down to 20's and dives deeper and deeper and by the time you get into wednesday morning you're pushing all the way down to the south temperatures will be in the 30's, this could be record early morning cold temperatures here in the next couple of days. winter at least feeling like it pretty soon. arthel. arthel: adam, i would like to order an extended fall, please. adam: i would. don't shoot the messenger. arthel: fall is my favorite season. eric. eric: it's not winter yet. we are going to stop winter at least for a -- i don't know. arthel: enjoy while you can. hold it off, hold it off. [laughter] it's the number one doctor recommended brand that is scientifically designed to help manage your blood sugar.
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>> new fox news poll show 78% that the condition of the economy is only fair or poor. this as the biden administration faced a tough week of inflation news, only 3 weeks away from the midterms. welcome to fox news live. i'm mike emanuel. president biden now back from a trip from the west coast where he touted massive spending package as many americans are worried about filling up at the gas pump and heating their homes this winter. fox team coverage with alexis mcadams in new york. but let's start off today with lucas tomlinso
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