tv Americas Newsroom FOX News January 17, 2023 7:00am-8:00am PST
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state senator nathan dome filed a resolution to reject bringing ukrainian troops to oklahoma saying he wants an end to the war in ukraine and that ukrainian troops being here could be seen by russia as an escalation. back out here live, bill, not every republican state senator here in oklahoma agrees with him. the state g.o.p. leadership said oklahoma has worked the foreign militaries for decades and that stopping doing that now would be akin to jeopardizing our national security. we'll send it back to you. >> bill: really intriguing story. interesting development. we'll follow it. >> dana: the white house in damage control mode faces growing fire over president biden's classified document scandal. republicans are crying foul as what they see as a double standard as how president biden is being treated as opposed to how president trump was treated when the f.b.i. raided
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mar-a-lago. >> bill: republicans launching multiple investigations into the mishandling of classified records. jim jordan accusing the administration of a double standard. here is what he told fox quote, why was president trump's home raided but not president biden's? why did the f.b.i. take pictures of president's trumps so-called classified document but not president biden's? republicans want fair and equal treatment under the law, end quote. here in turn is house majority leader steve scalise on the topic. >> you look at the 60 minutes interview joe biden did and the comments he made about former president trump having documents. he made the comments knowing that he mims had classified documents sitting in his garage. he will find out the rules apply to him and we'll finally start asking questions that haven't been asked for the last few years. >> dana: the secret service claims there are no visitor logs for president biden's home showing who may have had access
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to classified documents. the "new york post" accusing the white house of playing biden seek. first congressional correspondent aishah hosni is live in washington. >> good morning to you both. house republicans are super anxious to hit the ground running next week when congress returns. fox is told that they've already sent out records preservation notices, a big deal and even interested now in speaking with president biden's family members to get around the lack of visitors logs. >> we'll have to see it through testimony with family members or those who have been at the residence. it is important information for the american people. >> whether that means formal subpoenas or not or who they would want to talk to representative mike johnson said he didn't know that yet. what is clear here is how eager republicans are in getting answers. so much so that speaker kevin mccarthy has actually summoned
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top house republicans to assign lawmakers to those very important committees. the second meeting happening right now just getting underway, actually. all eyes are on the oversight committee and the new judiciary subcommittee on the weaponization of government that has subpoena power over federal agency. democrats say republicans are politicizing it. >> why did the f.b.i. go through every room? why did the f.b.i. take surveillance cameras from mar-a-lago but yet they haven't set foot, to our knowledge, on the premises of either the biden center for dip loam see or biden residence. >> republicans will take their time investigating before they announce any of those hearings. >> dana: aishah hosni on the
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hill. >> bill: as questions swirl over how and why the documents were found at his home in delaware and d.c. office building. numerous attorneys appear to be involved in the growing scandal. the white house has yet to explain what their roles are. the justice department, as the story moves on, david spunt. >> i wish we had more answers about specifically who was handling these documents. a handful of attorneys, though, officials being a little coy about who they specifically are. add the fact the special counsel robert hur is investigating and information seems to be in a black hole right now. we do know richard saaber is the white house special counsel. his name has come up several times over the past week. he was brought onto the team last spring to deal with controversial investigations. he is not officially the white house counsel. that title belongs to a man named stewart.
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but saaber's job is to deal with problems like this. the president's personal attorney is a man he has known for years named bob bauer and married to white house advisor anita dunn. she was working for the white house and left for a time and then came back because the president wanted her back in the mix when it comes to a communication strategy to the public. what is confusing, bill and dana, is the security clearance aspect of this developing case. one that seems to develop by the hour. who had security clearances and who was going through the documents? the short answer we don't know by name who went through every document but we do know some did not have security clearances to be even looking in the first place. saaber put out a statement saying the president's personal attorneys conducting the searches do not have active security clearances. so if they identified a document with a classified marking, they stopped and did not review it. suspended any further search in
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that box file or other specific space where the document was found as appropriate. richard saaber claims that he does have a security clearance but a lot of questions are raised because these original documents at the penn biden center were found back in early november more than two months ago and we know those were classified. the question is and we still can't get a firm answer, why were those without security clearances specifically rummaging through an area where likely we'll find classified information, bill? >> bill: questions at 1:45 in the briefing room at the white house. thank you. >> dana: joining us is jonathan turley a constitutional law attorney and fox news contributor and someone with questions himself. what about the lawyers going through -- they don't have a security clearance, they stop and start again. what do you make of it? >> well dana, none of this makes sense. this idea that we sent in lawyers without clearances and
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told them look but don't read is not a standard you will find in any security protocol. i have spent years working in cases and skiffs. i'm not allowed to bring someone into a skif and say don't look at the table or documents. that's not how this is done. the problem is really what happened after november 2nd. even if we assume that the white house did not know that there was potentially classified information or documents if the penn biden office, they clearly knew that after november 2nd. yet we're hearing that until quite recently, they were still using uncleared counsel. the question is why? this is the president of the united states. he has got a large staff of security officers. he has the f.b.i. they all could have been used for this purpose. i this i the only answer is that they wanted that added buffer and control of using private counsel. >> bill: interesting.
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dana and i were talking last hour as long as the story is out there you'll get comparisons between biden and trump. they are just going to be there. we want to know if they're legitimate. "the new york times" characterizes it this way today in the paper this morning. the two cases are different, they say. mr. trump fought with officials for months about whether to return government materials in his possession. mr. biden's case his aides and lawyers returned the documents and contacted authorities swiftly after discovering them on their own. it continues. let me stop there and a simple question. is that true? >> it's technically true that no two crimes are identical. you can have two bank robberies carried out in different ways. one with added crimes. it doesn't mean the underlying offense is different. but more importantly, we don't know how different they are going to be because we aren't getting any information. for example, let's say that the president did work off these
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documents. that would mean these statements given after november 2nd were false, that this wasn't inadvertent. we're looking at not just what the president knew or intended when these documents were removed in 2017. we're also looking for knowledge that these documents existed through that six-year period. if the president worked off or looked at classified material, he clearly had knowledge. it wasn't inadvertent they were in these locations. we just don't know that. so the answer to the "new york times" article might be the same. >> bill: it continues now. we're trying to figure this out on our own and using your big legal mind to help us through it. back to the "new york times." in addition the documents found at mr. biden's residence were in a garage in his private homes that serves as a gathering place for his family on the weekends. by contrast mr. trump's estate is a private club that hosts large parties and events close
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to where the classified documents were found. again, is that true? trump says they told him to put a padlock on and he did that. answer that from a legal perspective. >> that's when i reach that point that's when i got off this train. this was going nowhere. the problem is that the mar-a-lago documents were held in a storage room that the f.b.i. stipulated additional security for. it was an area protected by the secret service. had camera surveillance. even though it is not a secure location for classified documents. i don't believe classified documents should ever have been taken there. that compareson works against president biden. there is no comparison between that storage room and keeping documents next to your corvette in the garage. i have no idea why they would want to raise that comparison. >> bill: it's been raised. >> dana: it is now raised.
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we'll continue to be in touch with you as this story has got a lot of threads that can be pulled. thank you so much. >> bill: nice to see you. in a moment $5 million each is how much san francisco would pay african-american residents under a reparation plan to make up for decades of economic harm. well oh he see what is happening there and whether or not the plan goes forward. >> dana: new york city mayor is putting pressure on the governor to tackle the growing migrant crisis pushing a plan to send some of the migrants to smaller communities upstate. >> look what has happened in new york city and the fact that a city of 8 million people with lots of resources has been overwhelmed by a few thousand migrants. imagine what it does to a small rural community with limited resources. ncing minerals; and it helps eliminate odor, instead of just masking it.
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>> dana: as new york city struggles to keep up with the arrival of migrants the mayor is threatening to send more migrants upstate. madison has details on how new york and the other cities are dealing with a crisis with no end in sight. >> mayor adams is hoping to off load migrants but governor hochul has been slow to respond to the plan. it seems some movement is already happening. in jamestown one of new york's more northern communities around 35 migrants have already arrived. this shuffling of migrants without state or federal coordination is not going well. >> governor kathy hochul said nothing about the surge of migrants in new york state in her recent state of the state arrest trying to sweep it under the rug. we'll try to get those folks help but at the same time there
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needs to be a recognition of the problem that was created by the lawlessness at the border and the declaration of us being a sanctuary state. >> we have seen the same with denver. after receiving around 4,000 migrants since december 9th . the city put a 14-day limit on shelter stays and they have already mrcompletely closed onef their shelters and paid half a million dollars to bus migrants from denver to chicago and new york. something not received well by the mayors of those cities. in philadelphia the city has launched the philadelphia welcoming fund to help nonprofit organizations stepping up with services. all of these mayors will be meeting today in washington, d.c. for the national conference of mayors. the migrant crisis and questions over federal leadership are both on the agenda. it will be fascinating to see what comes out of this meeting. >> dana: i would love to be there and ask them. but you do that for us. thanks. >> bill: more on the migrant
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crisis in new york city. former candidate lee zeldin in studio. congressman, ran for governor and failed but ran a really good campaign and drove a lot of these issues into the conversation. question for you. here is "new york post," got it. bravo to eric adams with his verbal volleys at the border but what will he actually do? this is the biggest statement he has made of mayor of new york. >> i agree. instead of this red state and blue city and red city blue city battle going on, reality was even if all the democrats and republicans battling and on the same page for fixing this you won't resolve it until the federal government and biden administration steps up and does what they need to do to secure the southern border. it is appropriate and he is right by saying it is on the federal government first and foremost to resolve this. >> bill: some of it ran
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yesterday. sunday at the border here is eric adams, new york mayor. >> it's a national problem. we must be real immigration reform and we must immediately have a short-term fix making sure that the course of this does not fall on the local cities. >> bill: the case he is making is new york city is spending millions and millions of dollars. new york has said we're a sanctuary city. if you want to come here, you are welcome. so what now? >> that's a problem. new york city operating as a sanctuary city, new york state operating as a sanctuary state having these incentives and rewards is sending a message to people who aren't yet in the country. if they can get here and make their way to new york. this is the environment waiting for them. it is encouraging people to just go through their own process of coming to the country even if it's illegally. so i do believe it needs to get changed. as far as the drain on resources, we see with shelters and hotels and schools with medical facilities.
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the costs for taxpayers for people who are here hard working struggling to make ends meet and are in new york legally, it ends up being unbearable. this trajectory is unsustainable. the city and state can do its part by reversing the sanctuary city policies. >> bill: he has had tough language for the feds and fema. did he say president biden by name? >> it's a problem. the thing is eric adams, which credit to him for saying that it is important for the federal government to take action and leadership here. when he talks about immigration reform, i don't think he is talking about finishing construction of the border wall or ending catch and release and forcing the remain in mexico policy. we should be better supporting customs and border patrol agents. using the term we need immigration reform from the federal government doesn't mean it is coming with the specifics to actually solve it. >> bill: we've been there for two years.
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other media outlets have been there for the past month. the buses worked. it drew attention to the issue. the flight out of florida to martha's vineyard drew attention to the issue. would you agree with that? >> 100% absolutely. it ended up adding pressure. mayor adams, would he be at the southern border puftting pressue on the federal government if not for the way new york city has been forced to bear this brunt. i'm not advocating for buses and flights to come to new york city. the fact is, absolutely. when this was not just a florida issue, a florida -- a texas issue, a texas challenge and you had some of these blue city/blue state leadership forced to figure out what to do ended up changing the conversation and media in places like new york city joining what, as you pointed out, fox has been on
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this for years. >> bill: we have. another quick story. a study out of california looked at 16 major american cities. they found asian hate crimes in 16 counties rose 164% in the first quarter of 2021. what's that tell you? >> they are very fed up with the democratic party. crime is a top issue for them. we won in our gubernatorial race. sunset park and we won the asian american vote they are predominantly democrat. why? people in the community pushing for n front of a subway car and killed. beaten on the street with a hammer. not just an assault. we talk about people losing their life. the asian american community in new york city felt like an attack on one was an attack on
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all. they felt the democratic party wasn't serious enough about fighting crime. >> bill: very interesting. nice to see you again. i see you recovered. lee zeldin. here in new york. >> dana: a democratic run city on the verge of opening supervised injection sites for drug users. is that throwing gas on the fire in a community where crime has spiraled out of control? the migrant crisis frustrating farmers and threatening america's food supply. >> it is very frustrating when they say there is not a border problem and that it is closed. it is not closed. t you're rightk to reach your goals. my ameriprise advisor helps me feel confident about my financial future. he knows me and my goals. it's not the first uncertain environment he's helped me navigate. probably won't be the last. but with his advice, i know i'm on track. the plan we created can withstand uncertainty.
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controversy. jeff flock is in the city to find out what's happening there. jeff, good morning. >> good morning to you from the kensington neighborhood in philadelphia. the epicenter i think of the city's drug problem. you don't have to go far to find -- i don't know if you see it down there, little orange caps. those are the tops to needles which, as i said, you don't have to go too far in this neighborhood to find discarded needles. drug use on the street is prevalent here and the organization is trying to provide a safe place so people don't o.d. you look at the numbers in the u.s. last year over 100,000 people in the u.s. died of drug overdose. pennsylvania number five on the list of drug deaths to overdose. this organization safe house is trying to provide like in new york, you know, the place where you can come in and shoot up under some supervision. doctors there in case you o.d.
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and takes the problem off the street, they say. other people are concerned about the message this sends but first the safe house folks saying why they are doing this. >> we see the neighborhoods that have been destroyed by drug use. and what we believe based on what we've seen in other places is that these sites can make things a bit better and bring overdose use inside or prevent overdoses. it can reduce drug litter. >> talk about drug litter. maybe you see it, bill. as i said in new york they've tried this and, you know, the debate continues. are we sending the wrong message about this? the organization that's trying it here in philadelphia said they are just trying to save people's lives not trying to push drug use. they are just trying to save lives out there. this is -- i don't know, there
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are no good answers to this. it is everywhere in this neighborhood in philadelphia. >> bill: we saw your live shot in the park waking up on another morning. it was some site to see. good to have you in philly. see which way it goes. thank you, jeff. >> dana: farmers in yuma, arizona say the migrants coming across the border is hurting their crops. they turn out 9 billion service of leafy greens per year. alex mueller is the president of a company in yuma. thank you, alex, thank you for being here. for everyone at home to understand, what is the risk to the nation's food supply? >> good morning, dana. thanks for having me. well, we do a lot of -- we invest a lot of money in food safety and making sure that the product that we put out to the
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public is safe and healthy and edible. and we keep track of people who enter the field and animals intrusions and things like that. when people -- we have certain branches that are on the border and people are crossing through the branches, we have to flag those areas off and we have to disk them under just because of the risk of food-born illness. >> dana: you have to destroy those crops. >> yes. >> dana: are there a lot of farmers that are maybe reluctant to talk about this? >> yeah. this is our livelihood and we're very proud of what we do. and it is farming. we don't have control over the weather. there are a lot of things we don't have control over. what we do have control over is the -- people who enter the field, food safety situations. we have control over those things. and it would be helpful if we
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could get some help from the government in terms of keeping the border a little more secure. >> dana: you also have some concerns or your female workers have concerns. >> yeah, we talked to fema workers scared to go to certain ranchs at certain times. you don't know who is crossing. it is -- in the last two years it's an insane uptick of crossers. there will be 100 people out there, 25 people. or there will be 2 or 3 guys out there crossing through. you aren't sure who you are encountering. we have had some female workers that have wanted to -- they don't want to be alone out there at certain times. can't blame them. we're tracking the inflation story. the cost of lettuce has gone up a lot and you are well aware of that. is that one of the reasons contributing to the high costs?
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>> i can't say directly. i don't see that yet but it is just like we're the canary in the coal mine. i think it's coming because with the question in title 42 up in the air and we just -- you could just see this is not going to stop. we had containers at the border that sort of funneled people away from certain areas so the border patrol could control the situation a little better. but we have a new governor now and the containers are gone. >> dana: you don't have help from the federal government. the biden administration is the one who sued the previous governor and said take that them. they lost in court and the new governor won't do it again. they had to take them down. the numbers crossing through in your area there in the yuma sector in 2020 it was 8800 people. 2021, 114,000. look at 2022, 310,000 people and why you are here to let
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everybody know you have to protect your crops so that we can be -- eat our salads and be happy we're getting the nutrients but you are on the hook if anything goes wrong and you have no help thousand from the federal government and state government also is maybe not helping you as much as you like. one final word. >> whether they say the borders are closed, they are 100% not closed. it is very alarming. it is not just food safety. i feel like it's a national security issue and everybody should be aware. >> dana: it is a good point and we appreciate you being here and you farming. it means a lot to us and to america. thank you so much. >> bill: challenges. >> dana: you don't think about that. if there is a problem with the product, they will be on the hook for it and if a migrant group comes across their field you have to destroy the field. it's not right. >> bill: we talked to a lot of
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ranchers dealing with similar issues in texas. everybody knows it's a problem, right? everybody knows this is a problem. >> dana: let's do something about it, america. >> bill: san francisco considering a $5 million reparation paycheck to every african-american resident with certain qualifications. tell you what those are in a moment as the city crumbles to crime and homeless crisis. one state pulling the plug on the old electric car hoping a ban will save that state's job market. we'll tell you where. kids are so expensive, dad. now katie needs braces. maybe try switching your car insurance to progressive. you could save hundreds. i don't know, dad. ♪ maybe try switching your car insurance to progressive. you could save hundreds.
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>> we are concerned that numerous states have outlawed our petroleum vehicles. we'll be the only state that makes that statement that we didn't actually outlaw vehicles like the other ones did. ours is a resolution that just says no more e.v.s after 2035. >> dana: wyoming moving to pull the plug on electric vehicles. they unveiled a bill to phase them out in 12 years designed to protect jobs in wyoming's oil and gas industry key to the state's economy. the measure points out the importance of gas-powered vehicles in commerce and the transportation of goods. >> bill: that's your home state, right? >> dana: yeah. >> bill: good idea for the folks in wyoming? might be. >> dana: it might be. it might be something that gets overridden by events if the market decides.
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i do think the natural resources of wyoming and colorado and those states will be very important for the foreseeable future. >> bill: first significant pushback from a state. see how it goes in wyoming. california this now. san francisco's long-time african-american residents could each receive $5 million. there is a committee called the reparations committee that proposes this, quote, a lump sum payment would compensate the affected population for the decades of harms they have experienced and will redress the economic and opportunity losses that black people in san francisco has been perpetuated by city policy. chairman of the republican party in san francisco john dennis. thank you for being here. i have a ton of questions. let's begin. who pays? where is the money coming from? >> presumably the people of san francisco would pay. that's the proposal right now. they have made this recommendation to the board of
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supervisors. and the frightening thing is when i spoke to people about it last night, a lot of people thought oh, this will never pass. i did a head count on the board of supervisors. we have 11. they only need six votes. i think they have a solid five right now. there is a good chance this could be presented to the mayor for her signature. >> bill: how many on that board? >> 11. >> the president supports the propose all given to him from this reparations committee. you have to be 18 years of age, must have identified as black or african-american on public documents for at least ten years. then you have to prove at least 2 of 8 additional criteria of which they include born in san francisco between 1940 and 1996, proof of residency in san francisco for at least 13 years, personally or the direct descendant of someone incarcerated by the failed war on drugs.
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what do you make of this criteria? how were they able to arrive at some of this? >> there is not a lot of analysis in the report. i read the report yesterday. i can say the committee -- there were no larry elders on the committee. it was a foregone conclusion. the analysis on how they arrived at the numbers, $5 million number and other numbers are never revealed. what is also interesting, one element of this. they are saying they want to give those folks $97,000 a year for 250 years. the total price tag on this is $50 billion. the city of san francisco's budget is 14 billion and already running deficits. we have structural problems. homeless people. crime, companies leaving in droves. i think in many ways this is just a massive distraction from the failure of democrats who
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have run this town for over 60 years. >> bill: homeless population was 7700 in february of 2022. total population 815,000. in july 1st of 2021. am i reading that correctly? is that right or the total population -- >> we lost a lot of people during covid. a lot of people found san francisco too expensive to live in. they decided toggles where. we have the jobs -- sorry. without the jobs in the economy we are -- we'll continue to lose folks. >> bill: there is a bit of delay in the signal and why we're talking over each other. crime stats in san francisco in the last week, two homicides, 43 robberies, 44 assaults. motor vehicle left. 89 larceny theft and 362. as you said yourself you have problems already in that city. now 11 on the board. do you believe as of today this
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will pass? >> i think it's likely that it will. that would be my guess. i wouldn't bet money on it. there are five solid votes right now. the two swing votes will have a lot of pressure. they have to face 1 of 2 options. either getting recalled because i can tell you, i can't speak for my committee but i think we would push for recall of anyone who votes for this and certainly look to oust them. but those two swing votes will have to face an unclear political future voting for it or charges of racism. it is a tricky position they will be put in. i just can't say how they will vote. >> bill: interesting point. john dennis, thank you for your time in san francisco. thank you for coming on today and explaining that to our viewers. appreciate that. one little thing here, sheila jackson lee proposed this last week in the u.s. house. republicans in control it won't pass but could you see it some day? >> dana: i don't know.
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they get more specific. the one in san francisco says it will be $5 million but you ask the follow-up questions and they are hard to answer. so i don't know where it is going. interesting to see. >> bill: it's out there on the table. >> dana: following this story for you. more than two weeks since a massachusetts wall ana walshe disappeared. new developments in the case here. what could be coming down the pike next. who says good things don't happen to good people? this man rescued two dozen people during a blizzard in buffalo and wait until you hear how he is being rewarded. ♪ all across the country, people are working hard to build a better future. so we're hard at work, helping them achieve financial freedom. we're providing greater access to investing, with low-cost options to help maximize savings.
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psoriasis really messes with you. try. hope. fail. no one should suffer like that. i started cosentyx®. five years clear. real people with psoriasis look and feel better with cosentyx. don't use if you're allergic to cosentyx. before starting get checked for tuberculosis. an increased risk of infection, some serious and a lowered ability to fight them may occur. tell your doctor about an infection or symptoms or if you had a vaccine or plan to. tell your doctor if your crohn's disease symptoms develop or worsen. serious allergic reaction may occur. best move i've ever made. ask your dermatologist about cosentyx®.
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veteran homeowners, have you looked at the interest rates on your credit cards lately? get ready for a shock. the rate on credit cards is now over 22%. if you want to save hundreds of dollars every month, pay off the balances on your high-rate cards with a lower rate va home loan from newday usa and get the financial peace of mind every veteran deserves. no one takes care of veterans like newday usa. >> harris: lawmakers are dug in for the debt. the president wants to keep
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borrowing money. republicans say put away the credit card but this is the swamp. who put their hands on the documents that biden had in many locations? the political fallout is looking pretty bad for biden. the new show is uniting the nation in total disgust. house judiciary chairman jim jordan, pete hegseth, tammy bruce, "the faulkner focus" top of the hour. >> bill: see you in a few moments. there could be new developments in the case of a missing mother of three in the state of mays mass. 39-year-old ana walshe vanished on the day that 2023 began, new year's day. now her husband is charged with misleading investigators pursuing the case. bryan llenas has the latest from what's happening in massachusetts. >> we're waiting whether or not additional charges will be filed
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against ana walshe's husband, brian and the forensic results on the numerous items recovered including the blood in the basement as well as a broken bloody knife found at the home. the 46-year-old remains in custody charged with misleading investigators on the disappearance while -- he said he last saw ana6:00 a.m. new year's day when she left for the airport to washington, d.c. no record she ever left the house. the d.c. employer was the first to report her missing three days later. there was an internet search made on how to dispose of a woman's body. the mother of three was last seen at her home at the new year's eve gathering. exclusive photo shows a champagne bottle inside her home hours before she disappeared. the box was written by her to her husband says wow, 2022, what
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a year and yet we're still here an together. let's make 2023 the best one yet, love ana. they didn't see anything ube usual with her behavior. she is an optimistic and having a magnetic personality. >> bill: thank you, brian, in massachusetts. >> dana: a good deed now getting its just rewards. jay helped helps cue people from their cars. the buffalo bills gave him two super bowl tickets. former bills running back thomas making the surprise announcement. >> we love you and we know what you did on christmas eve was very ear -- heroic and you are our hero. he joins us now. what was the moment like when you found out? >> my brain just melted in my
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own head. something you can't take in. >> bill: especially being a bills fan, right? you guys got 52 inches of snow around christmas. you helped a lot of people and included breaking into a school. you left a note for the administrators when they came back. the note said to whom it may concern i'm sorry about breaking the school window and breaking in the kitchen. got stuck at 8:00 p.m. friday and slept in my truck with two strangers trying not to die. there were seven elderly people stuck and out of fuel. i had to save everyone. i needed to do it to get a bathroom and food. how did this happen? have you heard from the school? >> i have. we did an interview with the school. i had 3 or 4 other people i got in the school there also and it all started.
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i went to help a friend. i ended up getting stuck myself and i picked up a stranger along the way and then another stranger throughout the night while she was stuck also. and then push came to shove and save myself and the two people that i took responsibility for and once i got in the school i realized there were probably people stuck in the same situation i was and time to go get them. >> dana: it is amazing. i get goosebumps thinking about it. we want to thank you on behalf of our audience for your courage and bravery and being who you are. we learn about buffalo, every time something happens in buffalo, whether it's a storm or the tragedy that happened in hamlin and you see everybody coming out with support the community in buffalo is quite amazing. tell us about growing up there in the last 30 seconds we have. >> i don't know if it's
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something in the water over here but we are different. you can hold us down but you won't keep us down. you don't get more resilient than anyone from buffalo. we are a family like none other. >> bill: well done. thanks for sharing your story. we'll see whether the team makes it to the super bowl. >> dana: they'll be in buffalo on sunday. >> bill: i hope your people are nice to me. >> dana: harris faulkner is next. >> harris: a live look now at an enormous number, the amount we owe as a country. we are in deep debt. republicans and democrats are leaning all the way in on each other. it's a battle over what to do next. if president biden wants to run for the white house again, he better figure out how to invite the invest, public mistrust, democrats silent. the meaning of classified documents is about to get
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