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tv   Fox News Live  FOX News  January 15, 2023 10:00am-11:00am PST

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>> now we are finding time and again a locked garage door that opens and closes by a push of a button, how many years has this vice president been in office for more than 40 years had these documents, whose been in and out of there? >> that was speaker of the house kevin mccarthy on sunday morning futures criticizing the white house's handling of new classified documents found at the president's home 20 pages of classified documents have now been turned over from at least 3 separate locations prompting the
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speaker to question whether there is more to come. with welcome to fox news live in washington. i'm gillian turner, bill, great to be back with you today. bill: this is the story that keeps changing by the day, right gillian: at this point by the hour. bill: certainly is, i'm bill mel gun, a republican led panel set to look into this matter by counsel that was appointed by doj. father or mother team coverage with lauren blanchard, charles watson following the president's trip to atlanta and lucas tomlinson live from the white house. are we hearing anything from the white house today or are they laying low? >> it appears laying low. on sunday talk shows republicans are talking and republican tony gonzales says he wants to see this probe into for president biden widen. >> i think biden has highlighted
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incompetence for the world to see and i'm concerned about the vice president, vice president harris hasn't necessarily showed level of confidence as border czar has anyone looked to see if she has classified materials in her kitchen table. lucas: lawyers were done looking for classified document but on sunday morning before your show, of course, the white house issued famous statement 5 more pages of classified documents were found at biden's home in wilmington on thursday night and many people here wondering why the white house didn't say anything about it all day friday. here is a tweet from senator ted cruz reacting to the news, quote, with so many classified docs in home, have they considered checking glove box yet. democrats saying it's not a good look, another democrat that appeared on fox news sunday. >> i know exactly what president biden said when he was informed that the documents were found in his office, in his office in
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washington and that was oh, followed by a four letter expletive. it's embarrassment, no doubt about it. is there more to it, i doubt about it. we will find out more from the special counsel as he goes about his business. lucas: first classified documents were discovered on december 20th, one day before he met ukrainian president zelenskyy here at the white house, bill. bill: lucas, on thursday we heard karine jean-pierre say the search is complete, she said it over and over again. then we found out it wasn't complete because they found more documents. do you get the sense that the white house press shop and the white house attorneys are on different pages here? lucas: incredible montage on media to plug another shows showing the white house press being frustrated being asked questions and karine jean-pierre but president biden himself said his lawyers were done looking for classified documents on thursday only to have the statement land yesterday at the
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white house saying on thursday night five more documents were discovered and keep in mind december 20th was when classified documents were discovered. 20 days past between classified documents were discovered at the wilmington home and we learned about the other ones. this is all coming from the white house, single source, guys. bill: no white house press conference for tomorrow for the holiday so unclear when we will hear from them next. lucas tomlinson. thanks. gillian: the president is questioning details of timing and details of classified documents found in home and office. lauren blanchard takes a closer look. >> let's look into the timeline. in early november the president's lawyers find ten classified marked documented in biden center and merrick garland gives the case and the president's counsel tells louch
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there's more documents in the president's delaware garage. >> classified material next year corvette, what were you thinking? >> by the way my corvette is in a locked garage, so it's not like they are sitting out on the street. >> this month on the ninth, news breaks of the documents not through the white house or justice department but another news network, two days later another document is found then the 12th special counsel robert herd is appointed. >> you should assume that it's been completed, yes. >> but then thursday sauber is in wilmington and he finds five more but we don't learn about that until yesterday. jim jordan told sunday morning futures he's going to look into what he calls a double standard and if there's anything else, we don't know. >> this lack of transparency, even though the white house says
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they are being transparent. it's just been the opposite. >> the house oversight committee now wants the white house to release visitor logs for the president's wilmington and they want info on what properties have been searched, gillian. gillian: lauren blanchard here in washington, thank you. bill. bill: gillian amid up hoar of mishandling of several batches of classified documents president biden speak at ebenez baptist church in atlanta in honor of dr. martin luther king, jr. charles watson live in atlanta with the details of his visit, hi, charles. charles: hey, good afternoon, bill, as expected president biden made no mention of the investigation to his handling of classified documents during his time as vice president instead the president took his opportunity during opportunity in ebenez to respect reflect on mlk weekend and king's 94th
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birthday. the president taking time to praise the efforts of king who was assassinated in memphis in 1968 after feeling the passage and the votes right acts of 1965 in front of congregation once led king once led ebanez and baptist and applauded the progress since king pushed for civil and voting rights and the president also making it very clear that the work toward democracy is not finished. >> my message to the nation on this day is we do forward, we go together. [applause] >> when we choose democracy over autocracy, a beloved community over chaos and we chose believers and the dreams to be doers, to be unafraid, always keeping the faith. >> yeah, this is the president's first public appearance in
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georgia since he delivered the speech focusing on voting rights here in atlanta, almost a year to the day last january, senator raphael warnock the senator who led ebenez baptist extended the invitation for biden to speak america's most famous black church, that's notable, of course, because during midterms warnock kept distance from biden. remember the president didn't travel to georgia to campaign or warnock or any democrat for that matter as the president looking forward to potential 2024 presidential campaign, particularly black voters in te state pivotal for the president if he wants another term and a lot of folks say georgia is a good starting point who you'll remember won the state in 2020 by a narrow margin if by 12,000
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notes. bill: several days when the president commented on classified documents. we will see when he speaks about it next. gillian. gillian: let's dig into what we know this hour about classified documents found at the president's delaware home, our political panel if here, bill mcginley and democratic strategist former fundraiser for hillary clinton. great to have you. al, the former director of national intelligence ratcliffe was on earlier this morning, he said with every passing day, every document that surfaces, it makes it harder for the biden team to try and press the argument that this was aberration and this was done accidentally, take a listen to what he had to say. >> we've got from one set of documents in one location to four different sets of documents in four different locations and we frankly don't know where
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that's going to end, where we are going to be at this point next week and so that makes it really difficult for joe biden, you know, cooperation is not a defense, one of the things that the white house keeps talking about and also it can't be an inadvertent mistake when you do it four times. one time is inadvertent mistake but four times. >> first of all, that's an exaggerated criticism in my opinion. cooperation may not be a defense but legally intent is very important, right. if you want to compare president biden to president trump, president biden perhaps negligently handled documents, when they were found telling archives or lawyers, we need to turn them over. gillian: well, so they say, so the administration says. >> fair. that's why you have a special counsel and jim jordan wants to investigate. all of the people should do that. if you think about the difference between president trump who kept hundreds of documents. not ten or 20, number one, number two when asked to produce
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that, we've done it, we have done all of it, not true. so his lawyers obstructed by his lawyers assisted, of course, not and it makes harder for ag garland to go after president trump. gillian: also not the case, bill, that national security policy distinguishes when it comes to intent. doesn't matter whether president biden knew that he was doing this knew -- he violated security clearance. >> that's correct. the fact that president biden's documents were out and in unsecured environment for six years before anybody brought them to light and brought them to jus department of justice. >> as opposed to six months. >> we found documents in multiple locations that former dni ratcliffe identified and the
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question becomes when they were originally delivered after the biden -- the obama-biden administration ended, where were they delivered to, have the documents actually been stored at multiple locations before they were discovered by the president's personal attorney os were they always in the same locations because they were delivered to the residents and to the biden-pence center in washington, d.c.? what was the chain of custody? who had access to these documents, we have a better idea from court filings and we have no idea from the biden matter. there's a lot of troubling questions that still need to be answered in the biden matter where it's only a week old even though it's month's old since the scandal began with the disclosure of the department of justice. jim jordan and speaker mccarthy and darrell issa and others have questions that need to be answer sod they can be satisfied that national security wasn't compromised and the american people have a much better idea what happened. gillian: let's put this up. i want to get your take on this.
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there's this letter now this morning, house oversight republicans are demanding visitor log from the biden administration, so far secret service has denied -- they're not accommodating a foia request from the new york post, now it looks like they might have to give this information to congress. >> now, look, information, transparency that's a good thing. as i said at the start. there will be investigations. that's unavoidable. there's a special counsel, that's a good thing. let all the facts come to light. for bill and friends in the republican party it's a god send: you had house republican caucus run a muck in the most chaotic speaker. politically again it's terrible, legally there's significant distinctions that will come to light over time. gillian: why is it, bill, presidents, as we are learning certainly above national security, certainly above national security policy, i was
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talking to bill during commercial break, i was 23 when i got my top secret security clearance to work at the national security counsel, i was fully expected to execute policies and protect classified information. why is the government asking 23-year-olds to carry the responsibility but not the president of the united states? >> with a democratic congressman who raised it earlier today or this weekend, a lot of the aides who handled the documents whether it's the president of the united states or vice president of the united states, when they leave office, it's the aides that are packing the boxes, it's not the principles. gillian: yes, that is true. >> one of the things that need to happen, either it's the department of justice or somebody else that will have to put more detailed guidelines on how the documents are vetted before they are put in a box to be delivered. but once they are there, i think there's an obligation to keep them secret. presidents get taxpayer funded offices that have secured facilities within them. presidents have the authority to
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declassify documents as commander in chief under two powers they are granted. vice presidents do not. that's one of the distinctions also between the trump and biden matters is that president trump while in office had the authority to declassify documents and could tyke them with them and vice president on the other hand did not have the authority and didn't receive secured facilities that the president would receive. >> through history -- >> violations on both sides. it is. sitting president of the united states is dealing with this. all right, gentlemen, we have to leave it there. thank you for taking time. >> you bet. bill: getting live look images from the southern border, the u.s. side of the river in eagle pass, texas where illegal crossings have hit record highs repeatedly under the biden administration, now new york's mayor eric adams is in el paso, texas today to get a firsthand
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look at the growing crisis, we are keeping track of all the movements. first we will send it to national correspond griff jenkins with the latest and, griff, it sure seems like all the migrant buss to new york city might have been a wake-up call for mayor adams? >> griff: that's right, bill, it's business as usual which can you are too familiar with. you can see that bridge connecting eagle pass and piedras niegras, multiple title 42 explosions but far more coming across and being processed and put on buses and sent to soft side campses ho here in eagle pass-del rio sector which is on record with more than 150,000 migrant encounters since october 1st, just over 101 days and then processed and sent elsewhere but you mentioned eric adams, mayor adams trip to el paso, we still
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are waiting for me details and images that he will among other things meet with el paso's mayor and he will visit a shelter, he will also visit a center that helps with migrant asylum process and visit the cbp processing center where the migrants are loaded up on the buses and sent to places like new york city and hopefully he will, indeed, see some migrants. now let me show you some drone footage we shot, bill, you have seen it multiple times. the same every morning almost. this is drone shot that we shot early this morning of 149 migrants, many of them coming from the usual places we have been seeing which are ecuador, cuba, colombia and also, though, there were a few in this group from sinegal, western countries coming from a very long place. congressman tony gonzales,
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republican that represents this area was on fox news sunday talking about what he hopes the administration's plan to address this and specifically secretary mayorkas' job in all of this. take a listen. >> one of my roles is oversight of the executive branch so sitting down with secretary mayorkas one thing in particular that i have pushed for two years is to get border patrol agents out of the field, out of the processing centers and back into griff: and bill, finally not to drive the point home too hard, but as you and i have both commented on this channel, it's actually difficult to not see a migrant as president biden did in el paso. so i have consulted our cbp sources and asked them in the last 24 hours in el paso how many migrant encounters were there. they told me 1,128. so we will see if mayor adams does, indeed, see and visits
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with the my great, or not it will be something remarkable. bill, back to you. bill: migrants are easy to find if you want to find them. one quick follow-up question to you -- guys, we lost griff right there, but, gillian, we do have griff. one last question to you, the administration announced new program mass parole for cubans, nicaraguans and haitians and that will drop those folks dropping at the word illegally in ports of industry, that's a hot spot in del rio for those nationalities, have you noticed a drop in those countries since that policy was enacted? >> there's no significant drop, bill, in those countries. we've had cubans, haitians, venezuelans since i have been here on the ground and, you know, that 30,000 number is pretty much viewed two different ways. the administration saying it's going to cut down on it but at
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the same time it's also encouraging the migrants already in the pipeline which which as you know stretches to south america through gap, honduras, guatemala, all the way up, encouraging them to move faster to get here and officials on the ground are watching across the river in the shelters that are grow to go see if they get a rush here which usually doesn't happen this time of year, bill. bill: the new policy also expected to increase the number of got aways at the southern border, you and i hearing from cbp sources, more than 70,000 of those known got aways at the border in the month of december alone. absolutely stunning numbers. griff, fantastic work down there as always. we thank you for the live report. gillian. gillian: i have to say, bill, you were telling me that you've encountered folks at the u.s. southern border who have traveled from as far away as west africa. pretty incredible. bill: starting since 2021i met people from countries i had to google where they told me,
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mortania, countries in africa, i never heard of before and systemhow arriving tat southern border, makes you wonder. gillian: new details breaking on that catastrophe earlier this week. ♪ ♪ ♪
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gillian: faa is facing outrage and intense scrutiny leading to first flight ban since 911, was shut down by a single database file that corrupted the entire system, took it down. mark aviation lawyer, mark, if you take a look at what faa officials are saying, the consensus this week at first seemed to be this is a technology failure problem. befbut you say a story of human error. >> there were two employees of a contractor that had misentered information and the primary
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system actually was corrupted and when the backup system went into operation it was using the same data, so as a result it essentially was corrupted. so what we are talking about by least of way most recent media reports that it did involve human error. but i don't think that really addresses in a sense the larger issue regarding the technology, the updating of technology. gillian: it is an old system, more than 30 year's old, i was reading earlier this morning it's not slated to be updated for another 1 years, that sounds crazy but i don't know, maybe, in your universe this is sort of the norm? >> i think in many respects and world of aviation it's not unusual. you have airplanes that are flying that are 30, 40 year's old and issue becomes of updating, maintenance. true for air traffic control system. we have the most efficient, safest national air space system in the world and it doesn't mean
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that it doesn't need to be updated. it does need to be updated and i think it's a fight all the time for the faa to get the funding that they need to congress. >> well, on that point, i'm glad that you went to funding, take a listen to john geramendi on fox news sunday today. >> what we need to do is to properly fund the faa for the last ten decades we have been trying to put in place a new air traffic control system and every year there's insufficient funding, it's been stretched out for ten years. gillian: so $5 billion, the faa got from the president's infrastructure bill, the airlines themselves got 25 billion-dollar bailout during covid, how much more money did the systems need in order to work? >> i think it's a function not only of money but technology. i started in the world of aviation when they were still use to go track airplanes and radar facilities what's called shrimp boats, little pieces of
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plastic that controllers use and moved around to radar screen which was flat so they wouldn't slide off. gillian: sounds terrifying. >> it was the norm and the way the system worked. they brought in the system called arts 3 in which everything was automated, it was computer driven and all the handoffs from this controller to next controller were driven by the computer but the technology continues to grow. gillian: so we have made advances is the good news, i certainly hope so. one solution that was interesting to me. my colleague bill melugin interviewed bradbery. >> it's been around a very long time and the last faa and essential subject to discussion. it was not included in the legislation. i have no doubt that the events that just occurred with respect to the notice to air mission system, notam system are going
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to reraise the issue regarding the issue in 2023. gillian: something to look at. we have to leave it there. thank you for coming in. >> thank you. bill: gillian more classified documents discovered at president biden's delaware house, a look at the legal fallout from the white house's response right after the break. ♪ ♪ ♪
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>> obviously the statute is very clear that it's a gross negligence or reckless standard and but you do look to what qualifies under those -- those intent like characteristics and if there was one location and he says he takes it very seriously then maybe that was inadvertent but now we have at least 3 locations. 20 pages have been found of classified clearly marked documents. and, you know, if he takes it seriously then he knew what the markings meant and having them in the library, home in addition to his garage, i think suggests that maybe it wasn't inadvertent. >> how can it be inadvertent, correct me if i'm wrong, don't these classified documents all essentially have red markings or these red cover sheets that would be pretty difficult to look at it and not realize, maybe i shouldn't have this sitting next to my car. >> to your point, if you remember the famous picture of what they found at mar-a-lago, that's what they looked like, very obvious red or yellow --
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some of them sort of more loud covers on them that say this is an important document. it's not something that you would just have in your papers. bill: the white house karine jean-pierre said repeatedly on thursday during press conference the search is over, the search is over, we have given everything to doj, yes, you can assume we are done, then we find out yesterday 5 more pages found. do you see there's some sort of a disconnect between maybe what the white house press shop is saying and hearing and what the white house lawyers are doing? >> well, i'm hoping that she went to the people that gave her that information and was not very happy about being put in front of the american people and not telling the truth unless she knew the tr -- truth and was trg to hide that. either way it doesn't look good on the white house. the white house promised to be the most transparent, open administration in american history and we are seeing exactly the opposite. bill: first batch of documents was found in dc, early november,
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we only found out about it this week and went public because of the cbs report. do you think we would have ever found out if not for the cbs report? >> i don't. if you look at all the steps along the way, the department of justice knew, they still appointed a special counsel. they learned about -- each step it appeared that they did not expect the news was going to see the light of day so they could continue with the trump case but without fear that this biden behavior would ever be discovered and then cbs through good reporting released it and appears that the white house continues to try to catch up to the story as the continuing revelations happened. bill: realistically speaking here, is the president looking at significant legal exposure or political headache and bad pr problem. it started off as one batch and then another in the garage, now a third batch. if this drip, drip keeps continuing and there's more documents realistically what kind of problem is he going to
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be looking at? >> well, twofold. it's major political issue and undercuts any hope that donald trump is going to be prosecuted for what they found at mar-a-lago. but that being said, you can't indict a sitting president. you're going to have to wait till he gets out of office. i just don't think based on what we heard in the hillary clinton case that this ultimately is a -- is a legal jeopardy for joe biden but we don't know enough about the case and depends what the content of the documents are because that's going to drive the intent question. bill: we now have a former president and current sitting president both under special counsel investigation for alleged mishandling of classified documents. the story keeps changing by the day. we will see where it takes us next former acting attorney general matt whitaker. gillian. gillian: well, at least 30 people now are dead, dozens of
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others injured after russian missiles rained down in apartment building in dnipro according to ukrainian military officials this morning. alex hogan from kyiv with the latest details on the strikes, hi, alex. alex: hi, gillian, rescue teams searching through the night into a new day hoping to find more survivors after the missile strike on large apartment complex heart-wrenching moments just like this one as teams were able to save one woman who was found in a rubble and eventualy get her to safety after attack in the building in dnipro, 30 residents are dead but 40 are still missing. >> people are squashed by con secrete slabs and the temperature is 46 degrees fahrenheit. people are chilled to the bone and intoxicated by fumes.
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>> children are among the heavily injured and hospitalized. russian attacks rocked ukraine and damaged infrastructure in six regions according to ukrainian government. across the country this war has created more orphans and fox visited orphanage this week hearing some of those stories. >> adoptions were put on pause at the start of the invasion but some of the orphans had found families in the u.s. like yulia who even traveled to meet hers in chicago. >> we are waiting for the war to end so i can go see them again. >> or sasha who is learning english. >> thank you. you're welcome. thank you very much. >> he talks to his american family online but this year instead of settling into that new world, this is his as he shows off how he cranks fresh air in the shelter in the orphanage. >> some of these kids have
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really sweet perspectives of what their life will be like when they eventually go to america, what their family would be like and interactions that now remain in limbo because their paperwork was not finished before invasion and a year later they are still waiting, wondering if that will happen. gillian. bill: brand new details of massachusetts mom of two, her husband now arrested for allegedly impeding that investigation. we will have the latest details right after the break. stay with us. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪
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gillian: the investigation into the disappearance of massachusetts mother ana walshe, bryan llenas with the latest details into the investigation,
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hi, bryan. >> over the last week there has not been an active search for ana walshe which has been missing two weeks. investigations say this has shifted to missing person to murder person. brian is also a convicted fraudster awaiting sentencing for painting andy warhol paintings for $80,000. we spoke to the silvas who are friends to the walshes. >> she's very smart. >> the first and only one to get one off of that. >> we are part of that buddy. >> he got one off on us and everybody else. he portrayed himself to be something that he's not now. reporter: brian was smiling
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after being arrested by police in a 2019 affidavit a friend of brian's father described as sociopath and angry violent person. in 2014 ana filed brian threatened to kill her. >> she had threatened to be killed. he's a true sociopath. he has no empathy, he does not care. he's not going to necessarily obey the law. if you're a sociopath, you have no limits. >> forensic lab results in this case will be key. there was blood found in the basement as well as damage knife and blood on it and reportedly a hatchet hacksaw and reported internet search that was made on the unit on how to dispose of a woman's body. the family's 3 children, ages 2, 4 and 6 all boys remain in state custody.
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gillian. gillian: bryan llenas, thank you. bill: for more on this case which is starting to draw more national attention we will be joined by psychiatrist daniel. >> great to be here. bill: looking at the video of this guy, his wife has been missing and gets arrested, he looks at all the media cameras and he start smiling and smirking. what is your reaction to seeing that? what's the deal with that? >> well, when a lot of us smile inappropriately during certain situations sometimes it can be because of anxiety, i think he likes watching the police scuring and the evidence is circumstantial. we are waiting for that at this point. bill: speaking of that evidence,
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let's go through it. a laundry list as you mentionedn purely circumstantial evidence, he says he went to whole foods to get groceries, there's no evidence of that. he left the house to go take son for ice cream but surveillance cameras ended up finding him at home depot buying $450 of $450 -- ofcleaning supplies. it's all circumstantial evidence but in your opinion is this starting to paint a bigger picture of what happened here. >> he did everything but lead a trail of bread crumbs from the police station to his house. it looks very obvious who is someone who is probably is the killer but we don't know that for sure. they may never recover her body but we don't need to body to win
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a conviction. the case can be won on largely circumstantial evidence. it really remains to be seen what the police have but we probably know that they have more than what they are telling us at this point and arresting him to misleading him they are clearly containing him while they continue the investigation to gather more evidence. bill: by looking at him smirking, sometimes suspects like that they might enjoy this, they might enjoy the attention, they might enjoy the fact that somebody is following what they've been doing. when you look at the video again, when your wife has been missing, you're little kids are terrified, you're arrested, and you come out and your image to the media is smiling and smirking, in your professional opinion was he uncomfortable or gloating on this? >> probably gloating. i think we have the makings of a psychopath here. i haven't examined him but when you look at the actions, lying,
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manipulation, taking advantage of people acting without conscious and history of being convicted of fraud he may very well turn out to be a psychopath and that's behavior of psychopath while others are looking on when your wife is missing and your kids are scared at home. bill: pretty chilling stuff. still no both found and still no charges of murder or any homicide charges against the husband yet as we mentioned a lot of the circumstantial evidence really starting to mount. dr. daniel, thank you so much for joining us this morning. >> my pleasure, bill. gillian: deadly tornadoes leaving a trail of devastation across the southeast united states, more details on that after the break. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪
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♪ every search you make ♪ ♪ every click you take ♪ ♪ i'll be watching you ♪
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- [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. bill: all right, welcome back, president biden has issued a major disaster declaration for the state of alabama. this is after a series of deadly tornadoes ripped through parts of the southeast killing at least 9 people and causing catastrophic damage. the massive storm system flipped mobile homes over, derailed a freight train, snapped utility poles in half leaving thousands without power. the president directing federal aid to help out with recovery efforts, gillian. gillian: president biden approved emergency -- new round
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of emergency funding for the state of california after recent storms pounded the region. killed at least 19 people so far and another wave of storms is slamming the golden state, meteorologist adam klotz has more from the weather center. >> since around christmas time we have seen 3 and a half to 3 feet in northern california and more of rounds of rain continue to be on the way. the ground is saturated and with that nowhere the rain to go, flood watches across in place. highlight with the next round from northern california stretching down the coast getting to central california. this is our future forecast. you can pay attention to time stamp and run this evening all the way through monday once again you will see rounds at times heavy raining running on shore before again brief break but isn't the only round, by midweek another round of rain. those dark greens, maybe another inch of rain with the ground so absolutely saturated any additional rain there's almost nowhere are for it to go.
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snowfall and we are way ahead of how much snow we typically see not just in california but entire west. all of the systems are shooting inland and bringing tons of snow to ski resorts and regions. the place has been hit absolutely the hardest is the sierra nevadas. you start to see the pink colors, another 4 to 5 feet of additional snowfall falling here over the next 5 days and they have seen a ton of snow, more trouble on the way across the west, gillian. gillian: adam klotz in fox weather center. that does it for us, this hour of fox news live. fox news sunday with shannon bream but you can catch bill one hour from i at 3:00 p.m. eastern. we are coming back. >> see you then.efun ♪ ♪ ♪ .com
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i am the shannon brain pray the presumed 2024 presidential front runners. >> i take classified documents and classified material seriously. it's not like they're sitting on the street. shannon: so i do try to quiet concerns about the handling of classified documents. after blasting from her president trump on the wake of the mar-a-lago search. and house republicans officially invite the president to deliver his state of the union address. as they launch multiple investigations and press for

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