tv Americas Newsroom FOX News January 10, 2023 7:00am-8:00am PST
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military, mexican government, the police and you are going to win. this was a black eye. an embarrassment to the mexican government. something like that would never have happened in the united states. >> bill: i know you don't like his slogan but these are bad people as you well know. we'll stay in contact with you, sir and hope for some progress south of the border. thank you for coming on. >> these floods are deadly and have now turned to be more deadly than even the wildfires here in the state of california. common sense. just be cautious over the course of the next week. again, particularly the next day or two. >> dana: california's governor as forecaster warn residents to brace for damaging cyclones over the next week swamping roads, battering coastlines and forcing
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evacuations of towns with mudslides. >> bill: good morning, i'm bill hemmer. good morning. the storms will roll in for at least the next two weeks it looks like in the forecast. the latest storm in a parade of severe weather began a week ago leaving more than a dozen dead in california. 200,000 customers have no power. firefighters rescuing two people trapped in a car at the bottom of a sinkhole in suburban los angeles. the entire seaside community of montecito ordered to get out five years after a mudslide killed 23 and destroyed more than 100 homes. >> very intense. i mean it almost doesn't seem real with that going on. >> it's unbelievable. >> i had ptsd from the last one for a couple of years and it is just bringing it all back. >> bill: senior national correspondent william la jeunesse live in l.a. to bring us up to date on what's
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happening today. hello. >> good morning. we have a slight separation of the bands of rain that i had coming in this morning. the irony is last year was the second driest year on record. this, of course, could be one of the wettest. we have had five atmospheric rivers in the last two weeks. one of those carries, according to the meteorologists, as much water as in the amazon river. simply it is way too much water that this state can handle. now you have 34 million people under a flood watch. 90% of the state. nine rivers are already overflowing. 32 more are at risk right now. basically let's talk about l.a. county where i am. right next to the l.a. river it is near a flood stage as we speak. 51 miles long and basically the san gabriel river watershed and it is getting hammered with
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rain. last night was as hard as i've ever seen it. go to santa barbara and montecito is under evacuation orders five years ago when they had the big mudslide. they have very steep terrain there. you get a lot of mudslides. a lot of rock slides in the canyons. the 101 today. central coast more flooding there. a woman tried to cross one of these washed out roads and rescued but lost her 5-year-old child swept away in the water. you go further north in the sacramento, san francisco area, 300,000 people up there without power. trying to get it back on but the big oak trees, the saturation in the soil, you have 60 mile-per-hour winds are toppling power lines and knocking out power. you go farther north to santa cruz county. some of the cleanup has begun there. crazy because we expect more storms later this week.
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no sound bite. sorry, bill. expected to go to a woman up there trying to clean up some of the mud coming out of her house. the good news. right now snow pack is at 200% of the normal level. that is our winter water -- rather our summer water. the snow pack is where we store stuff. the reservoirs are near historical average and rainfall by the end of the week in l.a. 15 inches a year we'll hit that mark. so on one hand the rain is needed, it is a drought-stricken state. on the other hand, it is too much water at one time, bill. >> bill: unbelievable. william, thank you so much. unfortunately we'll hear from you a lot more in the days and weeks to come. you can follow all this. download the fox weather app. free and online right now and you can follow the story from california and across the
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country right into your neighborhood. check it out online right now. four minutes past. [inaudible] >> dana: president biden ignoring questions about classified documents found in a private office he used after serving as vice president. the papers were discovered in a locked closet just days before the mid-terms. the administration says the white house is cooperating with the national archives and the department of justice regarding the discovery of what appear to be obama/biden administration records including a small number of documents with classified markings. the documents were discovered when the president's personal attorneys were packing files housed in a locked closet to prepare to vacate office space at the penn biden center in washington, d.c. so let's bring in karl rove because, well, this sounds a little similar, karl? >> well, there are differences
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but you can't make this stuff up. there are differences. for example, how many documents in biden's case, there appear to be about ten. in the case of president trump, hundreds. how did we get there? we don't know how the documents got to the biden office connected with his activities on behalf of the university of pennsylvania. we know president trump ordered the removal of the documents to mar-a-lago. how responsive were they? when the biden people funneled out they called the appropriate authorities and turned them over. we spent a year and a half watching the drama unfold in mar-a-lago and had to end in a police search to recover the documents. but despite the differences it will create lots of headaches for the department of justice deciding how to handle president trump's issues because now they have an issue that at least in the minds of a lot of ordinary americans will be conflated as being roughly the same and why i think they did a smart thing in
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turning it over to the u.s. attorney in chicago to look at initially because that's one of the two remaining trump-appointed u.s. attorneys left in the justice department. that and delaware u.s. attorney looking into hunter biden. this strikes me as being very problematic for the biden justice department. >> bill: what he said in september of last year a few months ago on 60 minutes. >> president biden: how that could possibly happen. why anyone could be that irresponsible. i thought what data was in there that may compromise sources and methods? by that i mean, names of people who helped, etc. and it just totally irresponsible. >> bill: i don't know how he changes his tune now. we'll find out when he chooses to answer. there is another story that broke yesterday. six years later after the election of 2016, we get a report suggesting that all the
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russian trolls had 0 impact on the outcome of the election of 2016. six years later. >> really interesting study done by a group of academics looking at one social media channel. it is not everybody but yeah, this confirms what we said or what many people thought, which was the impact of the russian-sponsored attempt to influence the election on the internet was minimal and had really no significance. let's be careful, though. going forward the thing about the efforts of our adversaries to undermine american democracy, they don't stand still. so they are probably -- they have probably long ago looked at what they did and concluded they needed to do more and different things in order to affect the outcome of our election and we better be ready next time around. if we can study it and find out they were ineffective they can
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study it and find out they were ineffective and they want to be effective. the russians, the chinese, the north koreans, other non-state actors want to affect american democracy and they will be coming way in some way, shape or form in the future. the other thing not said in the report that i thought was interesting was look, we know looking at what they did that their object was to discombobulate both sides and undermine not just republicans but also undermine democrats and not only undermine -- not only attempt to stir up animosity among republicans but democrats as well. it will be interesting to get a more full understanding of how all of those efforts worked. >> bill: you make a great point coming back again. karl, thank you so much. you'll come back again soon. nice to see you in austin, texas. happy new year. new york university did that study and found minimal influence or effect.
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>> dana: twitter is not real life apparently? >> breaking news. should we roll the alert? ten minutes past now and there is no end in sight to covid and now we're seeing more and more variants emerge. the government is resisting the urge to go back to tightening the covid restrictions but encouraging people to be responsible for themselves. the northeast is getting it apparently. jonathan serrie at the cdc in atlanta has more on this. >> you have that highly infectious new variant driving cases especially in the new york area and the northeast area. but hospitalizations right now are still a fraction of what they were last winter. governments are reluctant to reimpose lockdowns and mandates. they are urging people to take voluntary action based on their level of risk. things like masking in public don't require an all or nothing
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approach. >> if you are inside an airport and you know there are a lot of people, keep the mask in your pocket. when you see a lot of people put it on. when you don't see a lot of people. maybe only a few people in line. >> a new study found that vaccinated people 65 on older who also received pfizer's new omicron targeting booster had an 81% reduction in hospitalizations and 86% reduction in deaths over vaccinated peers without the new booster. here in the u.s. nearly 62% of seniors have not gotten the updated booster shochlt as china eases its 0 covid lockdowns a top health official says 89% of residents in one province have been infected with covid according to reporting in the "new york post." that figure is much higher than what state-controlled chinese media are reporting. they pushed back against criticism from the american
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media accusing the u.s. of trying to divert attention from its own failed covid response. bill. >> bill: jonathan serrie thanks in atlanta on that. >> dana: california's governor newsom attacking leaders in red states along with their policies claiming get this that california is the true freedom state. new reaction to that swift and intense. >> bill: schools in one major city taking aim at social media. the new legal battle to protect children from harmful content amid a growing mental health crisis. >> peer pressure is a terrible thing when it is used in the wrong way and that's been known for many years. but with the addition of social media, it is like peer pressure on steroids in terms of the kind of thinking that instills into our children. liberty mutual. they customize your car insurance... so you only pay for what you need! whoo! we gotta go again. only pay for what you need.
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>> bill: virginia's investigation into the withholding of merit awards expanding from just thomas jefferson high school to all fairfax county public schools. now the a.g. has launched a civil rights probe last week over concerns that thomas jefferson high engaged in discrimination by not informing students of their national merit-based awards until after college application deadlines had passed. >> we want our students to not have this war on merit. what we have seen unfortunately in some areas of the country is what i call woke racism. reverse discrimination against the wrong groups and those individuals' minds. we want to make sure everyone has an evil playing field and achieve their dreams and nobody to be held back because of who they are and their ethnic
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background. >> bill: could you imagine if you were one of those high school students and worked all your life. >> dana: it's interesting. last week when the story first broke it seemed that the school's statement was it was unique and just a one-off thing and now we know that's not true and why you have the attorney general of virginia looking into it. >> bill: who knows how deep it runs. >> dana: another school system check this out. seattle public school system is suing social media companies accusing them of contributing to what it says is a worsening mental health crisis amongst kids. grady trimble is live in chicago with the details. hi. >> the school district says it has had to hire more mental health professionals to deal with an increase in anxiety, depression and eating disorders among students. now in addition to other asks the district says it wants social media companies to pay for treatment for the problems it says those companies have caused. seattle public schools blames
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tiktok, instagram, facebook, youtube and snapchat for the growing mental health and behavior disorder in district students. a quote. defendants have successfully exploited the vulnerable brains of youth hooking tens of millions of students across the country into positive feedback loops of excessive use and abuse of social media platforms. worse, the content that they direct to use is harmful and exploitive. section 230 that proper depths social media companies from legislature action doesn't apply here. the attorneys for the district allege the platforms themselves are recommended and promoting harmful content. legal experts we've spoken to say while the allegations in the lawsuit may be true it is too broad to hold up in court. >> almost akin to suing the internet for having information that potentially damaging. that is true and it could be
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damaging. does that mean they're legally liable? that's a whole different story. >> here is what meta says. we've developed more than 30 tools to support teens and families. we don't allow content that promotes suicide, self-harm or eating disorders and of the content we remove or take action on we identify over 99% of it before it is reported to us. a number of social media companies sent similar statements to fox business saying they care about the safety of users, including kids. they cite resources for people dealing with mental health issues that they provide. they also cite parental controls and screen time limits. >> dana: i think parents, students, communities are concerned and trying whatever they can to try to get at a solution. grady trimble. thank you. >> bill: gavin newsom coming under fire for his latest claims promoting his state while attacking republican leaders in
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red states. >> california has been freedom's force multiplier, protecting liberty from a rising tide of oppression. more than any people in any place, california has bridged the historical expanse between freedom or some and all. >> bill: dave rubin now lives in florida. he used to live in california. you saw the story. what did you think? >> man, gavin newsom cannot say one single word of truth if his life depend on it. i did a little homework before the show today and i'm bringing receipts. do you know how many people have left california in the last three years? i actually checked the numbers, 275,000 in 2020. 360,000 in 2021, 340,000 in 2022.
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that's 975,000 people in three years. i carried the one and did all the work on that to double-check it. 975,000 people flee california because they were fleeing his t tyranny, lock downs, mandates. he was the former mayor of san francisco. what he did to that city is now throughout the whole state. 800,000 people have moved to the free state of florida which is flourishing and announced yesterday california now has a $25 billion deficit. florida has a surplus. the proof is in the pudding. you don't have to do too much digging. where are people leaving and where are they going? that's how you know who is doing it right and wrong. >> bill: appreciate the math. singer phil labonte, new hampshire resident here. i don't pay income tax, i don't need permission to carry a
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firearm. i can collect rainwater and way less crime. we're the free state, thank you very much. arrow webber, i think he lives in california. he said the harm reduction centers throughout california sent out a video of san francisco officials giving away free bags of needles to drug addicts saying this california under gavin newsom. pick what you want there. >> right. it's as simple as that. i love the fact now new hampshire and florida and texas and tennessee and south dakota are all competing for the freest state. those are all the states people are moving to. the simple truth is if you were a young person saying i want to go ahead and start a good life, a decent life as an american citizen. how could you do that in california? how can you open a business in california with high taxes and
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regulation knowing the government could come lock you down at any moment and have all sorts of crazy regulations related to who you hire and the diversity stuff and everything else. you can't do it there. but you can move to some of the states i just mentioned where you will have every opportunity. let's not forget, i'm here in miami where our may or put out a tweet saying how can i help when he heard that all these tech people wanted to leave california? now they've left and miami has become the promise of silicon valley while in san francisco the old silicon valley is drug dense and rampant crime and just general state of decay. >> bill: i know why you left. thank you for sharing your story today. good math, too. >> i will bring my abacus next time. >> bill: enjoy florida. thank you. >> dana: republican passed a new
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rules package. only one republican defection and we'll talk to that person coming up. will president biden's trip to mexico yield progress on drug trafficking and immigration. what he is hoping to accomplish. ♪ first psoriasis, then psoriatic arthritis. even walking was tough. i had to do something. i started cosentyx®. cosentyx can help you move, look, and feel better... by treating the multiple symptoms of psoriatic arthritis. don't use if you're allergic to cosentyx. before starting...get checked for tuberculosis. an increased risk of infections some serious... and the lowered ability to fight them may occur. tell your doctor about an infection or symptoms... or if you've had a vaccine or plan to. tell your doctor if your crohn's disease symptoms... develop or worsen. serious allergic reactions may occur. watch me. ask your rheumatologist about cosentyx. hi, i'm william devane. did you know there's only been two times in american history
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>> dana: president biden facing a diplomatic challenge south of the border. he met with mexico's president yesterday. the talks turned very tough over migrants and drugs. serious issues. jacque heinrich is live in mexico city with more. >> anyone who was hoping for a plan that would crack down on the cartels that are pushing migrants and drugs illegally into the u.s. addressing this
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issue in a serious way might be disappointed by the list of deliverables we got from the white house. buried under 11 other bullet points on supply chains, education, emissions, food waste. decarbonization, electric vehicles and conservation are plans to address irregular migration and drug trafficking. finalizing and implementing the plan to address root causes announcing an app to give migrants information on legal pathways and balance public narratives on migrants and refugees. drugs, resume dialogue and strengthen public health approaches to substance use like sharing information on chemicals used in fentanyl. that's a far cry from what biden's critics were hoping for. >> i plan to introduce legislation to authorize the use of military force against these cartels. look, maria, they are defeating the mexican army.
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>> we need to put military and cyber options on the table. >> if the president does designate them as a foreign terrorist organization it empowers the united states to take certain actions against them. >> but the mexican president wants money for latin american development accusing the u.s. of doing basically nothing for them since jfk was president. >> at that time the united states invested in ten years' time $10 billion. at today's prices it would be $82 billion for the benefit of the peoples of latin america. i hold that this is the moment for us to determine, to do away with this abandonment, this disdain, and this forgetfulness
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for latin america. >> president biden hit back. >> president biden: i might add, just in the last 15 years we've spent billions of dollars in the hemisphere, tens of billions of dollars in the hemisphere. the united states provides more foreign aid than every other country just about combined in the world to not just hemisphere but around the world. >> we have a press conference later tonight where we hope to learn how the rest of that conversation went and hopefully get some of our own questions in, dana. >> dana: thank you. >> bill: let's bring in tony gonzalez republican congressman from el paso member of the house appropriations committee. good morning to you. thanks for your time today. why weren't you invited to join the president in your hometown in your home district on sunday? >> thank you for having me. i don't know why the president didn't allow me to join. you know, they put out this statement that said there wasn't
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enough room on the plane. what i this i is comical i didn't ask to be on air force one. i wanted to have a policy discussion. >> dana: good for you. that's right. you would have been there already and if he wants to actually show that he is moving to the middle for his re-election in 2024 what better way than to say here is tony gonzalez. let's make sure he is on the plane or with me when we walk through these things because then you wouldn't have to say that you don't know why you weren't invited. what do you think about the fact his visit seemed so sanitized? >> it frustrates me and highlights the fact that who is controlling the white house? i think the folks -- it was clearly this was a political statement. they handled this as if it was a political visit with only friendly people around it. i wasn't going to embarrass the president. when i hosted him in uvalde.
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i want solutions. the people i represent wants solutions. what they are doing doesn't work. they need to change direction. every presidency before them has had to deal with the immigration and border crisis. they are failing at it miserably and trying to blame it on politics. i think it's important that you have members of congress go wait a second, i want to work with the administration. >> bill: roll this. henry cuellar, democrat lives in your state with us last hour. >> you have to listen to border communities because look, what new york is getting or chicago or washington is only a drop, only a drop of what we get down there to the border. listening to landowners, mayors, county judges and all that. >> bill: i don't know how long we'll keep listening to the same pleas to the same people. you are one of them and we'll continue that topic again. another topic, sir, you don't like the rules package on behalf
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of your fellow republicans and feel defense spending shouldn't be touched. make your case. >> i spent 20 years in the military. it is a terrible idea to cut defense. the republican party used to be the party that supported defense and democrats were the ones coming after it. i worry what's the future of the party going to look like? we need to defend our allies across the globe, but we also need to make sure we have a strong military to push back against china. the other one the vacancy of the chair rule. i think it is a terrible idea. last week was chaotic. terrible to watch on tv and even worse to be in person. i don't want to see that happen month after month. the house has to get to work. i was pleased to see we passed some legislation last night about the doing away with the i.r.s. agents but we need to get back to border security. i dropped the security first act
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yesterday. it labels cartels as terrorist organizations. if you want to secure the border, this is fundamental to it. >> dana: one quick question. the mexican president says that americans need to give them more money in order to support them. he says we haven't done anything for them since jfk. quick response on that. >> look, money is not going to solve the problem. what i have agree with the mexican president on, the united states needs to show attention to south and central america. for too long all our energy is focused in europe and the middle east and turn a blind eye to our backyard. we need to spend more time on that. one way to do that is usmca agreement is coming up on renewal. this is one of the things i would have had a discussion with the president on. what are we doing to make sure this trade agreement stays intact and we benefit from it? >> kudos to the president for defending the united states on that. he said we've given billions to latin america over the years and
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don't forget about nafta that helped mexico still to this day. >> tony gonzalez in texas. thanks. >> dana: idaho police still investigating evidence in the suspect bryan kohberger. how strong is the case against him so far? off your monthly expenses, call newday the newday 100 va cash out loan lets you take out an average of $70,000. use that low-payment home loan to pay off your high-rate credit cards. then, pay off your car loan. and then take the cash left over and put it in the bank for the financial security that every veteran deserves. (jennifer) the reason why golo customers have such long term success is because the golo plan takes a holistic approach to weight loss. we focus on real foods in the right balance so you get the results you want. the release supplement makes losing weight easy.
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♪ every search you make ♪ ♪ every click you take ♪ ♪ i'll be watching you ♪ - [narrator] the internet doesn't have to be so creepy, the duckduckgo app, lets you search and browse pria blocking most trackers all forf your search history is never tracked, so it can't be shared. and when you leave search, duckduckgo helps keep companies from watching you as you brows. join tens of millions of people making the easy switch by downloading the app today. duckduckgo, privacy simplified.
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>> bill: that show looks amazing in hd. >> dana: i want to watch every moment. >> bill: a federal judge ruled to uphold west virginia's existing law that bans transgender athletes participating in female sport. that's the first federal ruling in favor of women's sports. we have the details. >> a big victory for those worried about the future of women's sports relating to
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transgender athletes. a former west virginia state university soccer player defended west virginia's save women's sports act. the argument for her side is female athletes deserve to compete on a level playing field. she says this isn't just about fair play for her it is about protecting fairness and safety for female athletes across west virginia. the west virginia attorney general told me the law introduced nearly two years ago defends opportunities for female athletes. >> i call it the protecting women sports act. we fought long and hard to give women to play sports and led to advances for women. wilmington ceos, they participated in sports and thought it was great. let's not take that opportunity away from women. >> aclu of west virginia is expressing its support to the transgender community. the fight for true trans equality will not be won with a single lawsuit.
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the fight is not over. the federal judge found the law which defines girl and woman as biologically female for the purpose of secondary school sports is constitutionally permissible but this may not be the end of the legal fight. >> bill: no doubt about that. nice to see you. >> dana: prosecutors putting together a timeline in the case against a husband of a massachusetts woman missing since new year's day. they allege brian walshe bought hundreds of dollars in cleaning supplies in home depot around the time of her disappearance. a shopping list for murder. let's bring in former f.b.i. special agent and it is great to have you here. listen to the commonwealth attorney yesterday. this just happened yesterday. watch. >> surveillance at that time purchasing about $450 worth of cleaning supplies, that would include mops, bucket, drop
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cloths, as well as various kinds of tape even though he said he never left the house. blood was found in the basement area as well as a knife that also contained some blood. >> dana: put up on the screen call for two evidence against brian walshe. police felt they had probable cause to bring him in. an arraignment yesterday. does this look pretty clear to you, bobby? >> great to be with you. i think it does look clear. the key to that home depot shopping trip said he never left the house and they find the video and receipts of the things he bought and calling them cleaning supplies. to us in the criminal investigation business it looks more like a body disposal kit. a tarp, tape. he had -- a knife with blood on it in the basement. they -- he has only been charged with impeding a criminal investigation. he hasn't been charged with murder yet. they need their ducks in a row as a prosecutors before they
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lodge the charges but done enough to hold him now and certainly the evidence is mounting by the day against this husband. he failed to notify police in a timely manner when she was missing. it took days. the blood in the basement. lying about his whereabouts. it doesn't look good for this defendant. >> dana: nor for ana walshe, right? the police -- >> unfortunately, yeah. >> dana: because of his lies it took them off the trail trying to find her and it could have delayed that. what is the next step then for investigators? they found a knife that had some blood on it. any other clues that they are looking for at this moment? >> they are going through the crime scene. what we think is a crime scene carefully in the basement. analyzing the blood. was it her blood? the next step the to get the lab results and tie it together. it doesn't look good for this mother of three unfortunately. any missing person if it's legitimate the first few hours
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and days are crucial. this man has done nothing but lie the first few days. the next steps are to analyze that physical crime scene data and evidence and if it matches up then, of course, on the prosecution side the next steps will be to lodge murder charges. >> dana: molly line is following the story. let's go back to idaho for a moment. while the police continue to put this case together against bryan kohberger for the quadruple murder apparently there was a white vehicle that was seen returning to that crime scene or at that crime scene the next day. would that be something maybe typical that a criminal might do, return to the scene of the crime? >> yes, very typical. in fact, we know his phone pinged just hours after the murders about five hours after the murders in the location near the home. so he probably drove by there again looking to see if there was any police activity.
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now we have video from fox news and others of the news crews already on scene now after the police were there and the case broke open in the public of a white car driving that looks like it fits the description of his car. now i'm sure they are going over that video trying to enhance it to see if it's his car. now we talk about the next day after all the news vans and coverage started on tv he may be back in the area again. >> dana: interesting. bobby, wonderful to have you and your expertise the help our viewers think it all through. >> bill: thousands left unemployed after president biden canceled the keystone pipeline. the lasting impact far worse than imagined. we'll talk to one man who laid off from the project in a moment. an adorable one-eared dog named van gogh. wait until you hear what this little one has done. >> dana: oh oh. ♪
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>> harris: the biden administration has a new target. no more cooking with gas. the federal government wants to block any new sales of gas stoves, cook tops permanently. u.s. senators are at the border to see what president biden missed. one of those senators, marsha blackburn of tennessee will join me live from the border. the football coach who won the right to pray with us players. the question for him, could we see more prayer in sports like we did for damar hamlin? coach joe kennedy and jason chaffetz. "the faulkner focus" top of the hour. >> dana: president biden left thousands without jobs when he canceled the keystone pipeline
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after taking office. to add insult to injury the administration's department of energy admitting the pipeline could have created up to 59,000 jobs and added more than $9 billion to the economy. mr. allen was laid off after biden canceled the pipeline. we hope you are doing well. what did you think when you first heard this? i assume you thought we all knew this at the time but now they are finally admitting it. >> it's what you call karma. coming around to bite him right in the butt is what it will do. the american people are hurting right now to where they can't hardly afford to buy food. you look at what drives the united states of america that fills these grocery stores and our goods is diesel. and we've got to have it. there is no electric that can compete with oil and gas. it never will and these people
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are going to have to come to their senses and see that hey, our american people are hurting. we was first, now we're fixing to be dead last. >> bill: you think about gas prices have come down a little bit in the last few months but you think about the run-up of the past two years, things like keystone influenced the markets whether you want to admit it or not in terms of supply. keeping those prices lower. >> well, the whole thing about it is. it wasn't just all about the keystone. there was many more big projects that could have went but yet they hamstringed every one of them. and right now they are just trying to come in here and say hey look, we have the gas prices down, all, well that's good i give them credit there. but when all these crops and everything was planted. you have to look at the farming. that's your primary source. when all them tractors was out
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there burning thousands gallons of diesel a day they are fixing haar veinings all that and all that cost will come back on the consumers and it is already hitting a play right now with your farmers and your -- the feeds that are so high and the fertilizer. let me tell you, all that will be passed down. biden, he is behind the eight ball right now. >> bill: we just want to squeeze there a quick question about you. >> dana: and -- i know you talk to people laid off. what has this past couple of years been like for you? have people been able to find jobs? john kerry told you to find a green job. >> john kerry don't run my life that's number one. i welded for 34 years, that's my calling. i want to tell you, there are lots and lots of people that i
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talk to constantly, yes, they are hurting. our health insurance in the union went up $7 hundred a month now. biden was supposed to be for the union. he ain't done nothing but hamstring us. it is just not me. >> dana: we appreciate you coming on, bugsy, you give your message loud and clear and why we love you. take care. >> thank you all for giving me a voice and god bless america. >> dana: harris faulkner is up next. >> harris: that was a big voice, love it. fox news alert. president biden is south of the border today meeting with north korea american leaders after seeing the united states side for the first time ever. a three hour pit stop sanitized by leadership. we don't know who ordered th
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