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tv   Fox News Live  FOX News  November 19, 2022 11:00am-12:00pm PST

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we're carvana we created a brand new way for you to sell your car go to carvana answer a few questions and our techno wizardry calculates your car's value and gives you a real offer in seconds we'll come to you pay you on the spot then pick up your car that's it at carvana arthel: a community on edge as police still have no suspect in the brutal killings of four university of idaho students. this has gripped the nation, and now authoritied are asking the public -- authorities are asking the public for any if help he can get in solving this mystery. welcome to "fox news live," i'm arthel neville. new and chilling debails on the -- detail thes on the victims. investigators say all four students were stabbed to death in their beds at the off-campus home they shared. pressure is growing on
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investigators to make a break in the case as they gather more evidence from the crime scene but have yet to identify a suspect or person of interest. christina coleman is lye in moscow, idaho, with the very latest. christina. >> reporter: or hi, arthel. yeah, so many people who live around here in this tight-knit community are terrified because the killer and this horrific crime has not been caught. police have not even put out surveillance video or pictures of a possible suspect or mentioned a name, so quite a mystery here. we want to take a live look from our drone. you can see how close the fraternity house is where two of the victims were at before they went back to the home where they were killed. it's just around the corner, very close by and part of this crime scene. now, today moscow police released new information saying the two young women who were at the food truck before the murders did not ride home in a uber as police initially reported. surveillance video shows madison
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and caylee at the food truck near the idaho university campus around 1:30 in the morning early sunday morning last week. again, police now say they received a ride home from a private party. now, it's unclear who gave them that ride home, what could have been discussed during that ride or whether the driver was interviewed by investigators. last night at that food truck people told us that they were scared, they're concerned over these unsofted murders. unsolved murders. >> i hope that they catch the perpetrator quickly because it's just -- the uncertainty and the rumor mill is just rampant here. i mean, this is like a jigsaw puzzle that the pieces aren't adding up. they are not adding up, and you can speculate for hours. smart people are sitting there and speculating, and these -- the pieces just don't add up. >> reporter: late yesterday moscow police also put out this map that pieces together a
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timeline of where the four college students were hours before they were brutally murdered. caylee and madison were many downtown moscow. officers believe they went to a bar and stopped by that food truck while ethan chapman and zana were at the fraternity house before they returned home. i mentioned that fraternity house was part of a crime scene, just part of this information because that is where the two victims were at before they were murdered. the coroner said the victims were likely asleep when they were attacked, and there's still a lot of unanswered questions that we don't know, but here's what we do know: authorities believe it was a targeted attack. two other students were in the home at the time of this quadruple homicide. officers say those two with students are cooperating with law enforcement. police say there was no forced entry into this three-story, six-bedroom home. a murder weapon within has not been recovered, and authorities believe all four victims were stabbed to death between 3 and 4
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a.m. early sunday morning last week. a 911 call was placed for an unconscious person at the home hours later, just before noon, and detectives have questioned local businesses to find out if a fixed-blade knife had been purchased recently. and also there is the evidence of defensive wounds in this attack as though the victims were trying to defend themselves. so just an absolute tragedy here. a lot of people are on edger. -- edge. we also learned that the university is going to be holding a candlelight vigil the wednesday after the thanksgiving break, is so on november 30th, that wednesday evening students will gather to mourn and honor those students who lost their lives in this brutal attack. arthel? arthel: and my heart goes out to those families. those students will not be home for thanksgiving. christina coleman in moscow, idaho, thank you. eric? eric: that is for sure. authorities are trying to piece together the timeline of what happened leading up to the
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gruesome murders and who the students may have been with before they were killed. that driver we just heard about who apparently drove them home, who is that? is that the person a suspect? for more, let's bring in steve car cardinny, former police sergeant, former chief investigators for the new york cityd. department of investigation. steve, first, the time type of crime this is, vicious stand stabbing, often times emotionalling revenge, retaliation, payback, potentially a romantic rejection. what does this tell you if people are so savagely stabbed in their beds? >> anytime someone uses a knife to commit a murder, it's up close and personal. the manner in which it was carried out is very vengeful, there was a lot of rage involve ised. so law enforcement has their hands full, but they're going to haved to do step by step, good, old-fashioned police work and walk it through and get to a conclusion, and i'm very glad the fbi's been brought in. eric: what type of old fashioned
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police work is that? >> a lot of what's going on behind the scenes that we don't know. the forensic evidence, both computer and phone. the physical evidence that's being collected, we're looking for a mixture of bloods there. using a knife like that there's two things that happen, the knife is very slippery, the predator sometimes loses it, and he can cut himself quite often. so they're looking at things like that behind the scenes plus many additional things. eric: so you're saying if someone, let's say, a realizes that someone has some wounds on their hands or came home in the early morning hours of that night, they potentially -- authorities should be alerted? >> if somebody came home at that hour? griff: yeah. well, authorities someone would have heard what was going on and the authorities were, but they were not, unfortunately.
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and i understand that the main entrance on the ground floor, the door was left open all the time. eric: let's look at the timeline of what they're looking at of the two the girls, kaylee and madison. they're at a corner bar arriving at about 10 p.m. that a night the, and you can see on the left they're there about 1:30. they leave the corner bar, go out to that food trick -- truck, and there's surveillance video of them and someone else talking to them that's been cleared. they're driven home. 1:45, we don't know who drove them, what type of vehicle or who that was, and then they're viciously attacked an hour later. so you've got a timeline of 1:45 arriving back at hair -- their home at the house, and they're stabbed to death an hour later. is it possible that the killer was that person in the home for a while, they go up to sleep? what can you extrapolate from being in a home at 3:00 in the morning, two young women going
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up, going to sleep on the same floor and then murdered? >> well, certainly that's a possibility. anything at this point is a possibility in this investigation. and, again, law enforcement keeping it very close to the vest. it could have been a ride home, they say that it's a private party or personal party. it's likely that they know who it is. however, they're looking at all possibilities including what you just mentioned, that there could have been some sort of an argument, someone was slighted and he did go up into that house and commit the murder. that's a possibility. eric: and finally, could it be -- this echoes, to me, and this was first fox news story we ever covered back in 1990, it was the murder of five college students at the university of florida in gainesville, florida, and that was danny rowling who was finally executed. in 1990 he stabbed to death cent students and coeds and, horribly, even decapitated one
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and put the head up on a shelf so when authorities walked into the house, it was of just horrible. could this then be an outside situation, someone like rowling, a psychopath who just they were in the wrong place at the wrong time and guy does this? >> oh, it could be. law enforcement has to explore everything including a serial killer. at any given time there's 20, 30 serial curls operating throughout the united states. -- killers operating throughout the united states. this is much like a ted bundy killing. it's something they will look at, but right now it looks like a crime of passion, it looks like these were known entities. and with the amount of rage that was involved here, it's going to be a lot worse than we ever could imagine. eric: oh, boy. 20 or 30 serial killers. steve, thank you for your service in law enforcement and thank you for your insight today. >> my pleasure, eric. thank you.
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eric: of course. arthel: well, the american academy of pediatrics is urging public health officials to declare an emergency over rsv. the children's respiratory virus has spread at an alarming rate on top of covid e and during flu season. children's hospitals are now reporting an overwhelming surge in patients. lauren green is live in our new york city newsroom with the very latest. >> reporter: hey, arthel. this surge in rsv could be one of the unforeseen consequences of the covid shutdown, and experts urge the government to have a similar response. pediatric hospitals are overwhelmed by the unseasonal increase in rsv cases and flu, more than three-quarters of beds are full and in seven states 90%. according to the cdc, infants six months and younger are getting hospitalized with rsv as seven times the rate recorded before the covid-19 pandemic in 2018. the children's hospital association asking the biden administration to declare a
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health emergency saying these unprecedented levels of rsv happening with growing flu rates, ongoing high numbers of children in mental health crises and serious work force shortages are combining to stretch pediatric care capacity at the hospital and community level to the breaking point. rsv is actually a common virus usually causing mild cold-like symptom, runny nose, decrease in appetite, coughing, sneezing, fever and wheezing, but it can be deadly serious for infants and the elderly. the spike in cases likely a residual effect of covid isolation. >> when you suppress mother nature, you create what's called anism moonty gap meaning -- inimmunity gap the basic virus bacteria that we're normally exposed to. and our bodies, our immune systems are primed when we are exposed to the various viruses and bacteria. it's especially a problem for
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newborns and infants born during the pandemic or right before the pandemic. >> reporter: rsv can lead to bronchitis, lung infections and pneumonia. the cdc recommends taking -- talking to a health provider before giving children nonprescription if cold medicines. arthel: yeah. as if parents don't have enough to worry about. >> reporter: exactly, exactly. aaron arkansas all right, lauren, thank you. eric? eric: president biden is spending this weekend at the white house in washington because he's celebrating his granddaughter naomi's wedding at the white house today the. the president is also celebrating his 80th birthday tomorrow. meantime, the administration is now asking the supreme court to step in to try and save the president's massive student end loan forgiveness program. lucas tomlinson live at the white house with more on the policy and the nuptials. hi, lucas. >> reporter: that's right, a lot of sell brailling here at the white house. earlier today pride president biden's granddaughter getting
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here at 11 a.m. it was not open to the press although some photos have emerged from the associate ised press taken outside the white house. coming back from his overseas trip to asia and the g20 summit, president biden insist his plans to fix the economy are working. >> our approach, i believe, is working, but it's going to take time to get inflation back to moral levels as we keep our job market strong so we can see setbacks along the way, i don't doubt that. but thus far, we're in good shape. >> reporter: it's not just taming inflation, but getting student debt relief back on track after some federal appeals courts blocked the executive order. critics say biden's plan is unconstitutional. it's congress that controls the purse and not the white house. the biden administration filing an emergency request to the supreme court hoping it can help the white house resume its student debt relief plans. our own rich edson asked if spending hundreds of billions of dollars, up to $20,000 per student, will make inflation
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worse. >> reporter: does the -- has the administration analyzed any potential inflation their effects of student to loan forgiveness? >> it's a good question that you're asking, but, look, the president has always -- i don't have any data to share with you on that particular question, but the president has been very clear, he wants to make sure that he's lowering costs for the american people. >> reporter: president biden turns 80 tomorrow, the oldest president in u.s. history, will be its first of course that yes marijuana to hold the office, he'll mark to case with a simple brunch tomorrow. eric quite a weekend percent bidens, lucas. arthel? arthel: former president trump is blasting the justice department's decision to appoint a special counsel to oversee two criminal investigations into him. the former president telling fox news digital that he, quote, would not partake in the probes. this comes days after he announced he's running for president again in 2024. attorney general merrick garland
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has appointed jack smith as the special counsel. smith is a longtime prosecutor and former war crimes investigator who will lead two investigations into key aspects of the department's january 6th probe and the handling of sensitive government records at mar-a-lago. eric: republicans now looking at a variety of white house hopefuls for 2024. some of the biggest potential names are addressing the republican jewish coalition in las vegas. among them you see there former vice president mike pence who addressed that group a few years ago and florida governor ron desantis, top of the list for the presidential campaign for 2024. alexandria hoff is live at that event with more on what the republican potential hopefuls are saying. hi, alexandria. >> reporter: hi, eric. yeah, this is considered the first cattle call, if you will, of the 2024 election cycle, and there is just one confirmed
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candidate right now. but that is likely to change as was pointed out last night by former secretary of state mike pompeo. listen. >> who knows, the next time we're together we could be on a stage, multiple podiums, who knows who else might be with us, yeah, who knows? [applause] and who knows what nicknames we might have. >> reporter: that's clearly a mod to some of the debate tactics used by former president trump who will make his address virtually this afternoon. we also heard or from form former vice president mike pence last night. and this evening we're going to hear from ambassador nikki haley and perhaps trump's biggest potential rival politically, gore governor ron desantis. right now we are hearing from senator ted cruz, and the general consensus of these speeches is that the party needs to make a change to focus on current issues rather than past leadership. earlier new hampshire governor
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chris sununu did not mix words, and chris christie blasted president trump for boosting candidates who campaigned on the belief that the 2020 election was stolen. >> let me tell you, that's not what this party stands for, it is -- it's not what we should stand for in the future, and we've got to step up and stop it now. [applause] look, here's a good policy, i've got a great policy for the republican party. let's stop supporting crazy, unelectable candidates in our primaries and start getting behind winners that can close the deal in november. [applause] >> reporter: clearly, this is an energetic event, an influential event as well, and it's going to press on late into the evening and, eric, we will be here for all of it. eric eastbound seemed like governor sununu was addressing election deniers. alexandria, thank you. arthel: it could be a photo finish in the alaska senate race. incumbent republican lisa murkowski has take a then the
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lead over republican challenger kelly chewbacca. the state uses a ranked choice voting system letting voters list candidate by preference. neither candidate has enough votes to claim an outright majority in the first round, so counting will move on to a second round. that's going to happen next week. eric: it ain't over til it's over. meanwhile, the sudden collapse of the cryptocurrency exchange ftx, you know about that. well, it stunned everybody from wall street to washington, and now some democrats who took political donations are being told, return the cash. we take a look at that next as "fox news live" continues on this saturday. i brought in ensure max protein with 30 grams of protein. those who tried me
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>> reporter: yeah, it could be, erik. look, the fallout from the collapse of ftx has been nothing short of disastrous certainly for folks who invested their money on to to the that market, that includes at least one investor we heard from this morning. he tells us he lost $2 million in the alleged ponzi scheme that ftx founder sam bankman-fried is accused of orchestrating. listen. >> this was a con man like sam bankman fried who fooled everyone from the highest level government officials. he is the closest to getting regulated, but this was all intentionally done. -a very calculated plan or i would say a crime that has taken place. nobody ever expects that to fund an exchange that you're using is spending your money, right? >> reporter: yeah, meantime democrats are trying to distance themselves from bankman-fried after campaign records show the disgraced ftx cryptocurrent --
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founder -- among those that benefited is new york congressman hakeem jeffries who is poised to succeed nancy pelosi as the next house caucus leader. he's not alone. several democrats who sit on financial committees that have oversight duties over the crypto space also got campaign cash dollars from bankman-fried, that includes new york congressman ritchie torres who told fox business' hillary vaughn that he would give the money away to a good cause and suggested others do the same. >> i would recommend donating it to charity because it would seem odd to return money to someone who's accused of misappropriating billions of dollars. >> reporter: yeah. there are also now calls for bankman-fried to be extradited from his multimillion dollar penthouse in the bahamas to the oust so he can answer to a class
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action lawsuit. celebrities like tom brady, chicago, larry david who all promoted ftx in commercials like the one that you see here on your screen and, eric, there were a lot of questions surrounding nearly half a billion dollars that were, that was in ftx's possession that seemed to just disappear. well, we heard from the bahamian securities commission earlier week who said that they transferred those funds to the secure digital wallet for safekeeping as ftx goes through bankruptcy proceedings. so a lot of questions that people want answered and a lot of folks looking to this hearing from the house financial services committee that will take place next month, eric. eric: just unbelievable how so much can go poof. charles, thank you. arthel? >> reporter: are you concerned that democrats, that they received millions of dollars from him, might not be able to
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conduct the oversight effectively because they have benefited from his money? >> well, as i understand it, there were republicans who received money from his business partner -- >> reporter: 92 the % of his money was spent for -- >> his partner contributed heavily to republicans. i'm confident in the ability of congress to conduct robust oversight. people are going to see the hearings and the tough cross-examination and will judge for themselves. arthel: democratic lawmakers facing questions about overseeing crypto markets with ftx founder sam bankman-fried reportedly the second largest e donor to democrats this election cycle. let's bring in sarah westwood, investigative reporter at the washington examiner. sarah, tell us more. what are the alleged intake thingments -- entanglements? >> sam bankman-fried gave millions of dollars through a superpac that he establishes and also direct campaign contributions throughout the midterms, usually wading into
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intra-democratic contests to support whoever the pro-crypto democrat was in the primaries. so, obviously, there are a lot of questions about whether democrats right now as they remain mt. majority -- at least for the next couple of months -- can conduct credible oversight. i mean, for example, this house financial services committee hearing that's coming up is going to be chaired by congresswoman maxine waters who, you know, has been photographed with sam bankman-fried's arms around her. he has really worked to ingratiate himself with the committees of jurisdiction over the clip to currency industry. so while democrats in the media have tried to make the story of the collapse about this need for regulation in the cryptocurrency industry and that's certainly a big part of it, you know, they've really tried to steer away from questions about how he was able to pull off a scam of this proportion. arthel: let's look at how much the crypto industry spent lobbying washington during the
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last five election cycles. 2014, 80,000. 206, 80,000 -- 2016. 2018, $1.5 million. 2020 the, $2 million. and then 0232 -- 2022, 14.8 million. so, you know, with this kind of money being spent, it does seem impossible that it stayed on one side of the aisle. but might the ftx fiasco cause lawmakers now to really scrutinize lobbyists a bit better? >> well, certainly with regards to the cryptothe currency industry, i mean, sam bankman-fried, his firm also a spent millions of dollars, a big chunk from ptx lobbyists, and they were lobbying for regulations that were favorable specifically to the way ftx is doing business -- arthel: well, of course, that's what they do, right? [laughter] >> those sorts of proposed regulations are going to come under the microscope. the problem with the public trust in congress' ability to do this is there aren't a lot of
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restrictions on what lawmakers and their a families can invest in, and a number of lawmakers have invested themselves in cryptocurrency, a currency that has its inherent value on the fact that it is unregulated and decentralized. that's the reason it's popular. so it's difficult, i think, for the public to trust lawmakers to put regulations on an industry that's making hem money personally. arthel: well, look, some financial banking experts, as you know, say they saw this ftx train wreck coming. and in the past few days, the oversight of the cryptocurrency i have has definitely been raised by congressman hakeem jeffries who received an ftx donation, congresswoman max see waters, senator pat toomey. so it does seem congress will put some bipartisan muscle behind preventing future collapses like this and protecting the very people you're talking about, all those people who have invested in cryptocurrency. i mean, can we see -- do you have faith in congress, and i
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hear what you're telling me that the democrats are on blast because it seems that they received the the bulk of those donations. but now that this has happened, do you think that they, i mean, it's hair duty to act many good -- their to act in good faith to oversee and have proper oversight of this industry? if do you think they are capable of doing that? can congress do it as a collective? >> i think politically democrats now need to champion some sort of regulation on the cryptocurrency industry just because it's such a bad look for them right now that they did take so much money from sam bankman-fried and not only did they take all that money and didn't propose regulations that could have limited his ability to rake in the cash that he was giving to hem, but they asked very few questions about where that money was coming from, so they have to ask more questions now. arthel: a lot more. sarah westwood, thank you so much for joining us. eric? eric: arthel, a border patrol agent has been killed in a wild
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shootout with drug smugglers. it happened out on coast off of puerto rico as one border governor plans to send armored reinforcements to help what he calls an invasion. we'll have more on that and how our government is trying to protect us straight ahead. up to 300 miles of range on a full charge. and a starting price around $30,000. evs for everyone, everywhere. chevrolet.
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and our shipping is fast and reliable. help protect yourself against inflation. make gold your new standard. call rosland capital today at 800-630-8900, 800-630-8900. that's 800-630-8900. arthel: texas governor greg abbott is at it again, taking matters into his own hands as migrants continue crossing into the u.s. he's sending armored personnel carriers to the southern border as the crisis shows no signs of slowing down. this only days after the governor declared an invasion there, and it's not just texas. bill melugin is live from new mexico where the border crisis is also red hot there. bill? >> reporter: arthel, good afternoon to you. part of border patrol easel passes sew sector has been the bittestst along the southern border for -- busiest along the
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southern border for weeks now. in the last 4 hours alone -- 24 hours alone, nearly 1,700 crossings. take a look at this video we shot moments after arriving here. we started seeing groups of illegal immigrants climbing over the border wall and then running off into the desert of the united states. as we were tracking a couple of guys, two more run right in front of my vehicle. all these guys ended up running towards a neighborhood in the united states. there were no border patrol agents anywhere around. we tried following them for 10 minutes, they were never caught or apprehended, they disappeared, so they are presumed gotaways. and a cbp source tells us there were more than 64,000 known gotaways at our border in the month of october alone. take you to eagle pass, take a look at video early this morning. our fantastic drone team finding this large, massive group of several hundred migrants crossing illegally into eagle pass all at the exact same time, all self-surrenders.
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as you can see, this is a huge drain on border patrol resources when he was to have so many agents show up and do the processing, they pull agents off the front lines elsewhere. take a look at this second piece of video, again, about an hour later also in egg eagle pass, other side of town, another group of more than 200 that crossed illegally with a source telling us in that del rio sector there have been more than 1400 illegal crossings in the last 24 hours alone, and since october 1st there have been more than 72,000 illegal crossings. just mind-boggling numbers when you think about that. then lastly, take a look at this mug shot right here. a convicted child sex predator arrested by border patrol in the tucson, arizona, sector after he crossed illegally. this is a mexican national, and he has a previous conviction of child rape in the state of washington back in 2004. thankfully, agents were able to arrest him as he tried
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reentering the united states. back out here live, i mentioned how el paso sector which includes this part of new mexico has been the busiest along the border in recent weeks. listen to these numbers. a cbp source telling us since the new fiscal year began on october 1st, the el paso headache to have -- sector has had more than 81,000 illegal crossings in just about a month and a half. back to you. arthel: mind-boggling numbers, indeed. bill melugin live on the border in new mexico, thank you. eric? eric: structure -- drug cartel smuggling is not limited to the southern border. federal agents taking to the high seas. three officers were hit by gunfire in a shootout with smugglers off the coast of puerto rico on thursday. they were airlifted back to land but, tragically, one of those agents was killed in the gunfire. the two others, one in critical condition and the other stable condition. three of the suspects on that boat involved in the shootout have been captured.
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this, a reminder of the dangers that the men and women of the customs and border patrol protection agency, the largest law enforcement agency many our nation, the dangers they face every day. art dell cueto is the vice president of the national border patrol council and joins us now. art, with all the attention on the southern border, you kind of forget there are operations elsewhere. this seems really unusual. tell us about your sense of this shootout out in the ocean, you know, off puerto rico as agents are trying to capture smugglers on a boat who were trying to smuggle fentanyl and other drugs into our country. >> this is the lawlessness that agents have to face each and every single day. and why is it happening? because we have individuals and politicians in the white house that are not doing anything about it. there's no consequences for these individuals who commit these crimes constantly. so that's why they're continuing to do this. it happens, you know, you see agents get rocks thrown at hem, see all kinds of attacks, and
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unfortunately, i think this is just going to get worse. and a couple weeks ago before midterms, everyone would have been talking about it. but once the midterms are over, you have to really dig deep to find the stories on something like this. and where's the commissioner and the politicians that continue continuously were talking about it before elections? you know, just a while ago there was agents out in texas that they tried to make them out like villains. there was press conferences by leadership of the agency, there was leadership of of the administration doing press conferences, but something like this you don't hear much about it. they'll send out a little memo or a bleep about it, but that's about it. we had an agent out there risking his life that died defending our nation's borders, and we hardly hear anything about it. it's angering right now. it is angering right now, and we're seeing it across the entire border, and enough is enough. somebody's got to get the political will to actually do something about it because this will not end ebb until someone decides to do something about it. eric: just think of this, you've
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got two boats, imagine it in your head, and you've got border patrol agents on one, they come under fire. my question is, you know, where's the coast guard? how about the u.s. navy? if can the u.s. navy, we've got aircraft carriers, battleships, can the u.s. navy step in? why can't the u.s. navy do something to better protect our shores from this, this naval brigade of smugglers who are bringing in fentanyl on the ocean? >> and you're seeing it everywhere. you're reporting about the high numbers that are coming across areas like el pal sews -- el paso. all that is being handled by the criminal cartels. they know what areas to send people in to distract the agents to get drugs across. it's happening throughout the entire southern border, and it's going to take political will and individuals that are going to look at the past administration's policies that actually worked so you can have the men and women that are
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defending our nation's border out there defending the nation's borders with the right resources, with the right amount of backup to do their job. but it's going to take this administration to finally say, you know what? we were wrong. we were wrong, and the last administration was doing it right, and they need to do -- and everyone's got to call them out. i'm telling you, everyone's got to call them out. you have some governors and politicians that have called hem out, but it's going to take a group effort to tell these people this is a serious problem. eric: can the administration beef up, can they bring the u.s. navy in this when you're dealing with this overseas, in the ocean off the coast of puerto rico and elsewhere in the caribbean? >> and they need to -- they have to have real consequences for these individuals that are coming across. they need to have real consequences, individuals that are also coming across that are requesting for asylum, they need to detain i'm sorry until their cases are -- until their cases are heard.
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the cartels know what they're doing. again, i will tell you, they bring these groups across, they release them, there's no consequences for that. that's why they're bringing their drugs across and acting the way they're acting in puerto rico now. they say, hey, there's no consequences. let's just do whatever we want to do. we need to have a strongfect to stop the criminal cartels and stop the crimes from happening. you have to have real consequences. that's the only way you're going to stop. eric: and i do want to point out that homeland security secretary alejandro mayorkas did address this issue on thursday in a congressional hearing about that, and we certainly hope to hear more from the officials later today. art del cueto -- >> they need to speak more about it. eric: absolutely. art, thank you for what the agents do for our country. arthel? arthel: we're going to switch gears now. are you ready for some football? 32 teams fighting for the championship in the fifa world cup kicking off tomorrow.
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arthel: well, the hype is real. it's a big weekend for soccer fans. the world cup gets underway tomorrow in qatar, the first time the tournament will be held in the middle easts, and it's coming with some controversy. alex hogan is live in doe doha -- doha with more. hey, alex. >> reporter: hi, arthel. well, all this muse coming just yesterday -- news coming just yesterday, the government announcing it will no longer sell beer at its stadiums. this is a complete reversal from what people knew earlier but, again, it is just at the stadiums during the event it. still, we did talk with some fans who say they were disappointed that this change took place, but more so concerned about the timeline, just two days before the world cup begins. activists argue that this opens the door for the government to step back on other promises made
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like promising the safety for lgbtq+ visitors here where same-sex relationships are considered illegal. and there's growing concerns that those assurances could fall flat. the president of fifa, however, responded today that that is not going to happen. >> i have been speaking about this topic with the highest leadership of the country several times, not just once. heavy confirmed and i can confirm that everyone -- they've confirmed and i can cop firm that everyone is welcome. >> reporter: also calling on international condemnation and human rights concerns saying that all of that is critical and hypocritical and argues that this is a time to unify and celebrate sportsmanship and the valueses at the core of what the world cup is. the world cup will kick off tomorrow on sunday, and then the
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u.s. will play wales on mono. we've seen a lot of people coming here from all over the world wearing their jerseys, mainly fans from brazil and argentina. a couple of americans but not as many. many of them, of course, will be coming in to see those games on black friday and the following week. arthel? arthel: go, team usa. what an assignment, miss alex hogan, good for you. thank you. [laughter] eric? eric: no snow there, but did you see the snow in buffalo? and more could be on the way. we'll have that when we come back. age is just a number. and mine's unlisted. try boost® high protein with 20 grams of protein for muscle health. versus 16 grams in ensure high protein.
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♪ eric: well, a dangerous lake are effect snowstorm has left three people dead and paralyzed parts of western and northern new
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york. at least 6 feet of snow already on the ground in buffalo, and they say more is coming. meteorologist'd adam klotz is here with what they can expect. adam: you said is it, it's a lake effect show event which means we're seeing dry air running across the great lakes, picking up moisture and dropping heavy snow on the western side of new york, on the western side of michigan, then it snows itself out. dry air continues off to the east, so lake effect snow is what we're watching, and it's all counties right along, again, western portions of new york stretching down into pennsylvania and getting into northeastern ohio. winter storm watches, warnings and advisories stretching across this entire area, also back across portion of michigan. this is future track, so it is not over. expect to see rounds and rounds as we've seen the same upper-level flow, wind's moving across the headache all the way through sunday evening, yes, still more snow falling across this region, ultimately, maybe a lot more show. we've said we've seen as much as 6 feet of snow, some of these
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purples mean several more feet is still along the way across this entire region taking you all the way into monday morning, and it's not just across portions of new york and ohio, maybe even heavier snow across portions of michigan here. winter storm watches and warnings in place, how much more snow to come? up over a total the foot taking us all the way through sunday, something to certainly pay attention to, eric. eric: that's true, adam. wow, thank you. arthel, can you imagine 6 feet of snow? you can't even open your door. how do you deal with that? arthel: it's dangerous. it looks like it could be fun, but it's not because you've got some people who are shut in, you know? you always think about the elderly who may not be, may live alone and all that stuff, so it's pretty dangerous. but we're going to keep following that snowstorm. we're back in one hour at 4 p.m. eastern. thank you for your time thisced afternoon. ♪ ♪ supply fuel for immune cells and sustain tissue health.
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conoco ♪ ♪. paul: welcome to the journal editorial report. as we wrap up another busy week in politics. i am paul gigot to republicans officially securing a slim majority in the house of representatives. former president donald trump kick starts the 2024 presidential campaign. announcing his third run for the white house. stepping up his attacks on potential gop opponents buried here trumps main target florida governor ron desantis responding this week. >> when you ar

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