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tv   FOX and Friends  FOX News  January 18, 2023 5:00am-6:00am PST

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one efficient stroke. all with a lifetime warranty. and if you want to keep the beard, use king c. gillette. a lineup of products designed to cleanse, soften, trim, and style- for your best beard. gillette. the best a man can get. ♪ ♪ >> making news the doj considered using fbi in the biden search but instead that personal attorneys but in the meantime right now far frustration a and i roles. >> are you being directed? >> i have been forthcoming. >> ana walshe is charged with her murder. >> brian could be in court as soon as today. the top prosecuting murder case without honest remains. >> el paso warning residents
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about "unexpected pedestrian as migrants pour into the union" fleming vice president kamala harris for handling of the crisis tweeting "you should be fired and replaced." >> it is pretty extraordinary. >> expecting a thousand private jets to fly there. >> a planet savior. >> i'm saving the planet. >> it is extraterrestrial. ♪ ♪ >> steve: i would like to go to that building. it is colder and let's see if i forgot which one to open up, do you remember? >> brian: i think it was -- three hours ago. this is reminiscent of the claimant. i love when they give me science of my client. i can feel what they are
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feeling. my climate inside 68 degrees. outside, i think we are looking at 38. >> steve: this is about 72. >> brian: they told us to keep our thermostat 68 degrees. now old enough to touch the button. [laughter] whatever happens, never touch the thermostat. speak to my dad used to put notes on it, do not touch! >> steve: thanks to technology we can do this with the miracle of a smartphone. sometimes my wife will be at home and i would have adjusted the air conditioning and she said, "are you doing something with the ac?" >> ainsley: yes. do you turn it up to save money? >> brian: every time we get something high-tech -- every time we get something high-tech and improve, i come home. how do i work this house? >> steve: what are you having trouble with? >> brian: i have a stereo.
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>> steve: a stereo! >> brian: i have music, and i have an ipad. all of a sudden, a brand-new phase. we upgraded. because the guy comes by, and i'm thinking to myself how do you work this? we are past the point as a country, nobody gives directions anymore. you buy something at apple and they are like "figure it out or google it." >> steve: it is so simple. >> brian: let's go back to the days when we get one page like ikea. they tell us to put together a bed and a bunch of -- >> steve: what are you having trouble with right now? we will try to help you. >> brian: i would like to go to a podcast to music. i was able to get serious but doesn't really respond. my thing is i think i'm doing it right but i think the machine is broken. so i'm doing it right. >> ainsley: everybody has a different role in my family. my brother has two go there
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because he lives 50 minutes from them. he has to go over and fix everything. we give my dad something technological for christmas my dad is like, "no, why did you give him that. i'm going to have to set it up. my parents have vcrs and stacks in their garage. get rid of them! when are you ever going to use it? you have to send those into those companies and they will put them on a -- >> steve: you can do it that way or little flashback, you can save the vcr, whatever, vhs machine and actually download yourself if you've got the technology. >> ainsley: to your computer? >> steve: i have transfer the data. >> ainsley: it is all of us growing up as children. >> steve: it is. >> ainsley: all the things to do. >> brian: i have no video as a child. >> ainsley: they are all on vhs tapes. i have a very southern accent.
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>> brian: you did, really? >> ainsley: hey, daddy. >> brian: did you have audio? >> ainsley: i had audio. my dad with an interview at the birthday parties. >> brian: my mom had her parents when they first came over filled. they would dress up in suits for the film at their house. i don't know if they slept in their suits. they went to ball games with suits and they went to sunday dinner with suits on. did they sleep in suits? >> ainsley: remember you use to travel. if you would fly, everybody would dress up at the airport. now everybody wears hoodies. >> steve: i was on the plane this weekend and somebody was wearing pajamas. >> ainsley: i love it! people just don't care anymore. >> steve: meanwhile here is something people do care about, the department of justice declined to monitor the president's attorneys as they search for classified material
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and both joe biden's delaware homes. can you imagine this? at the same time the white house gritting questions from the press. >> ainsley: peter doocy with the details from the white house, peter. >> we found out overnight the president's personal attorneys know how to get the fbi to back off because we found out a couple of days ago, the white house's lawyer was accompanied by something from the doj when he went to wilmington. but the new detail is that they were not also joined by agents from the fbi and windbreakers. "the wall street journal" is reporting this. they say the justice department considered having fbi agents monitor a search by president biden's lawyers for classified documents at his homes but decided to avoid it with complicated leaders stages and because mr. biden's attorneys had quickly turned over a first batch and were cooperating.
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jonathan turley ed says. >> when i said the fbi didn't do with income i was talking about doing something in terms of actual searches in securing the documents. the fact is when it came to searching the documents, they continued to say no, use your private counsel, and clear unknown persons. they were doing the interviews and sending the u.s. attorney to look at the spear the documents themselves, the search for the documents remain in private counsel's hands. that works to the advantage of the president. >> brian: also knew inconsistency in the white house and a story we have told so much and working the lawmakers in chuck schumer and joe manchin. now the story has changed and white house officials say the residence is strictly personal peer that is why there are no visitor laws. and also it sounds like changing at the white house but the press secretary disputes that. >> on friday, did you or did you not know about the additional -- >> i literally just answer that
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question. >> was that a "yes" or "no"? >> you are not too far sitting next to her. you guys can ask me this 100 times, 200 times if you wish but i will keep saying the same thing. i hear your question and it's been asked, it's been answered, it's been noted. >> they keep telling us for the details specific details about any of this we need to check with special counsel or the president's personal attorneys yesterday. the briefing room they did have steph curry from "the war years" but not the president's lawyers. >> brian: peter, do you think we know what prompted the november 2nd trip to the closet at the biden center? what prompted that november 2nd trip? do we know? did i miss this? >> we don't know. and it might be classified information in there but it would be unclear why sending out they did come updated security clearance. >> brian: they never said, let's get you out of here, joe.
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they did not push them out, correct? >> they were shutting down the office where they were removing that stuff somewhere. but again, when you are moving stuff, i just moved and i didn't open up every box of paper and look at each one to see what it was. you just move it, and i will deal with it probably the next time. >> steve: peter let's get in the wayback machine. when you traveled up to washington to delaware to cover joe biden announcing he was going to run for president, they didn't tell you where it was going to be. so you actually are the only reporter who showed up at this house in wilmington where apparently a bunch of the secrets were. and -- i know your picture from your iphone is on foxnews.com. they were it is right there. wide open, nobody in the guard gate. so, those documents clearly unprotected for who knows how long.
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>> well, the reason that photo is relevant now because now that he is the president, that street has checkpoints. they were secret service officers in the driveway. there is a new gate. people in a guard shack. during the time after he left the vice president's office and when he got secret service protection again in march 2020, there was no secret service protecting him. a lot of folks on capitol hill are asking for secret service visitor logs. whether or not they can piece that together retroactively, we don't know, but there was no secret no secret service there for years. so, they can ask come up with the secret service has an incredible excuse appeared or fix have moved on. >> steve: i was going to say peter when you go to an event for a home or white house isn't the secret service the one that says, "let me see if you are on the list." there is usually a list. >> you have to send in a name, date and run your
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social security number and make sure you are not a fugitive. elsewhere who should not be around the president. >> ainsley: peter any reason why they waited two months to tell us about this? we should know this about the classified documents. >> we don't know anything except the residence or secretary karine jean-pierre was not involved in a decision. she said quoting yesterday for the first time, that she just learned about this when she was getting calls last week from the reporters at cbs who had this information. >> steve: there could be more, right? >> yeah, there could be more. >> steve: thinks. >> brian: the thing is, all's well so, to not have fbi agents go to the house was, his compounds, his officers commit makes no sense here they were be transparent so we didn't see a reason to have relationship here they waited six years and discovered on december 20th,
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january 5th, that to me is not being transparent. to me right away, listen, right there with the fbi agents. little by little with more documents may be saturday or today, you would want an fbi agent they are right away with clearance. number two, why take the risk? joe biden's personal attorney has this. maybe it makes joe biden look bad. if it makes joe biden look bad when nobody is around in a windbreaker, that person may be keeps it or keeps it in a place. >> ainsley: i think for a lot of the american public and i heard somebody talking about this on fox news, i think it is something we can all forgive the president because it seems like they are all taking classified documents with them but just give them back to the archives. or highly classified information in the country secrets don't need to be in the garage next to the corvette. so give them back. but the problem i have for this is the double standard, the way they treated trump the way they treated biden.
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fbi went into his house and let personal attorneys in there. trump's attorneys were told to wait outside. they rated president trump's house. >> how about this mike gallagher said if i had these documents i would do ten years so you talk about double standard between presidents. what about between officials? >> steve: speaking officials, d.o.t. officials that spoke to "the wall street journal" the article peter referred to are worried if the fbi was there as the biden team look for any documents, that could complicate the ability to execute the search warrants or subpoena documents aside the investigators ultimately considering a grand jury, which is the last thing the biden want. but we could be headed that direction. >> brian: we have to switch gears. let's keep it in washington, d.c. you would think right now washington awash with crime of all shapes and sizes like new york, like california, every major city in california and
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chicago. you would think the last thing we would need in 2023 is a backoff of major crimes and make sure the punishment is minimal as possible. believe it or not the city council in d.c. is doing just that. the maximum penalties for carjackings, and mandatory sentences are being reduced. it goes down the list of illogic that makes everybody in the nation's capital more in danger and imperil. >> ainsley: the maximum sentence you can get is 45. they allow sentencing reconsideration in 20 years and allowed jury trials in almost all misdemeanor cases. what a burden that will put on the court system. if you live in that area, peter doocy, you can be called up for jury duty a lot. >> steve: absolutely. that was the suggestion. the meric vetoed it and the council overruled. the law enforcement is concerned because the maximum sentences will be reduced and ultimately what is going to be happening in our nation's capital when it
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comes to crime. do these democrats and neighborhood commissioner says i'm with the commission which voted 12-1 on this to override the mayor got it all wrong. >> we have violent crime in washington, d.c. and the d.c. council is writing a bill that minimizes accountability for crime. so i don't know what they are thinking. i had a carjacking in front of my house last april. it is an incident that terrified myself, terrified my neighborhood. they voted 12-1 to override the veto. but then right after, you know what, we will revise the revised criminal code because it's not good enough. well, if it is not good enough, why are we pushing it forward? why not take the time to say, hey, we have to look at things. one example we should not let rapists out early but should serve the full sentence. >> steve: she is absolutely right. muriel bowser said this does not
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make us safer. this is a once in a sentry opportunity to make it right. she does not like it. >> b>> brian: to mccright againt democrat and crime doesn't directly affect me. i can sit there and think criminal first. and sadly, these 13 city council would be the victim of a crime. >> ainsley: let's handed over to carley with headlines, hey, . >> to massachusetts we go brian walshe officially charged with murdering his wife. missing massachusetts mom and a wash. he is being charged with improper transport of a body. authorities faced the of prosecuting a murder case without her remains. according to the district attorney, brian can appear in court and saying "the arraignment may be as soon as 9:00 a.m. today depending on defense attorney availability. at least 17 people are dead including ukraine's helicopter
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crash in the outskirts of kiev. the chopper going down next to kindergarten residential building and three children and other senior government officials and at least four children are among dead. 29 others including 15 kids are injured and appears no foul play was involved. the interior minister was with eight others in the helicopter when it crashed. he was a prominent member of president zelenskyy's cabinet. outrage in kentucky after a teenager who was charged with making a list of students he wanted to kill is now allowed back on campus. the mother of two students at that school joined us earlier. >> i was shocked that i had no idea that i was sitting in the room with him. the principle of the high school, his own son was on the kill list. so the superintendent made this decision alone, to my understanding, without the board of education's thoughts or
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concerns. >> come the school responding to the backlash of this safety and the staff is its greatest priority. mississippi state university mascot was ready for action while the big basketball game against tennessee. the ball bounced out-of-bounds and nearly collided with a tennessee player. unfortunately the ninth-ranked volunteers beat mississippi state squad by 11 points. there you go, guys. >> brian: but everybody is okay? >> everybody is just fine. >> steve: and made the highlight reel. >> brian: thanks, carley. >> steve: coming up for the second time in a month the colorado library closed its doors to clean up meth contamination. the next ghost said if kids can't be safe in libraries, where can they be safe? ♪ ♪ er.
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♪ ♪ >> ainsley: for the second time within a month, a colorado library had to close its doors after meth contamination. denver said they were found in the facility restrooms and countertops to require specialized cleaning. community members calling for increased security to keep the kids say. here to react executive vice president, foundation for drug policy solutions, good morning, luke. >> thank you for having me on. >> ainsley: thanks for coming on. tell us more about this. the the latest one from inglewood city library and a library in boulder, colorado. what is happening? are people going into the bathrooms and using math? >> what is really unfortunate
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and confirms the fears across colorado when the state started to realize the drug policy beginning with a decade ago. a few years later d.phil. and icing drug use. so what we see his explosion in drug use. we've heard about the opioid crisis and historically, the trend use is followed by -- i think that is what we are beginning to see now an increase in meth use. and colorado is seeing a lot of homelessness. folks have nowhere to go. they want to use that for other drugs. so we are finding public facilities are being used for the use of these drugs. so, a number of libraries, it is not just meth but certainly this is the issue right now. they are coming into bathrooms and smoking meth and that smoke getting into the ventilation systems. meth is obviously very toxic, toxic to produce it and toxic to
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use it. a lot of second and issues documented but when you have that smoke going through the ventilation, that is a big risk for kids and people passing by. so this is an issue in libraries right now. >> ainsley: was anybody injured come employees or children in the library? >> nothing that we have seen reported yet. this is a big risk factor though levels of meth contamination is higher than what is allowable according to the code and colorado. so, definitely something that somebody could have been hurt. and just didn't realize nobody is going into the library. nobody going into the library expecting to be harmed by second hand meth related events. and so, meth, we have to find out more from the reporter. >> ainsley: you said colorado legalized marijuana ten years ago. i know they've changed a lot of other laws. how have you seen the state change since then? >> i will tell you drug laws
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have consequences. a lot of folks spoke up but they continue to speak up as we have loosened the drug laws. "look, this will hurt our kids." what they told you are. fearmongering and no kids will be hurt. and unfortunately, what we have seen, it doesn't just stop with marijuana. most people who are addicted to the hard drugs start up with marijuana. and you can ask anyone who has an addiction, they will tell you they were child, they are young adult did not start using as the primary drug of choice. they started with marijuana and moved onto the harder harder drugs. so, if you legalized drug, there are increase in property crime come up violent crime and of course come across the board we see crime go up. so it's not an individual issue to enforce the drug logs.
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but a community safety issue. and right now what we have is a lot of corporate interest to make a lot of money off of the drugs. so, we had marijuana and decriminalized the drugs in colorado. last year we decriminalized at psychedelics appearance of these policies have consequences. we can't think of drug use in silos but people use a lot of drugs and not just one drug. that is why we see meth in libraries and other fentanyl. >> ainsley: i can't believe we say that, meth in libraries and we check out books to become more intelligent. here, you have people shooting up, shoot it up or smoked it, i guess and getting in the ventilation system. it is ridiculous. thank you for coming on with us. >> thank you, ainsley, i appreciate it. >> ainsley: netflix looking for a flight attendant and salary is sky high. how much you can earn to stop the private jet. lust, how high can it go? lawmakers scrambling for the
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deal of the debt ceiling deadline approaches. senator john kennedy will join us on the latest from capitol hill. that is next. ♪ ♪ possibilities are endless. from paying your people from anywhere to supporting your talent everywhere, we use data driven insights to design hr solutions and services to help businesses of all size work smarter today. so, they can have more success tomorrow. ♪ one thing leads to another ♪ a dental tool is round for a reason. so is an oral-b.
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♪ ♪ >> ainsley: we are back with your headline starting with the crime crisis in new orleans. a staggering 404 cars have been stolen in the city in the first 17 days of 2023. that is an average of more than 23 vehicles stolen per day comparing to last year's total, a whopping 444 cars, car theft reported. 559 cars stolen as well as 482 kias. big numbers there. u.s. claim on voyage this select group attending at the world's economic forum in dublin, switzerland as planet savers. >> it is pretty extraordinary
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when we come together and actually talk about saving the planet. i mean, it is almost extraterrestrial. >> ainsley: fortunately a lot of the planet savers traveled to dall post by private jet and slamming the speech as hypocritical. speaking of netflix hiring a flight attendant for one of its private jets. it will pay up to $385,000. you just have to be able to lift up to 30 pounds -- i can do that, travel the world, would love to come a stand for long periods of time. you have to complete faa certified's flight safety training. the desired opening as the streaming giant struggles with stagnant subscriber growth and layoffs last year. they do have a private jet, guys. looking to hire your. >> brian: exactly, thank you so much. >> ainsley: thank you carley, officially reaching the debt
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limit, secretary janet yellen warning this could include the link government payments as the white house refuses to budge on its spending plans. >> we should be dealing with the debt ceiling without conditions. it is important. we will not work our way around this or negotiate on this. this is the basic, the basic duties of congress is to deal with this issue. >> steve: why have a debt ceiling if you never negotiate? sitting on the budget committee, senator, are you happy with that tone? >> no! when it comes to the debt ceiling, everybody wants the truth, but nobody wants to be honest. here is the truth as i see it. if you are going to have a part, you have to pay the band. if you are going to borrow money, you have to pay it back. that is true as a moral
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principle and a principle of practicality. and you don't have to be a senior at caltech to figure that out. here is the truth part, congress had a spending part. more specifically, the house democrats, not the house republicans come at the senate democrats had a whole lot of senate republicans have a spending bill. i didn't vote to do with. i would be happy with a couple of beers after work. but they wanted to have a spending party and it wasn't just democrats. those bills passed with a lot of republican support, the omnibus, the so-called infrastructure bill, the chips, big tech bailout bill. even the gun-control bill which passed with republican support cost $15 billion. and that is the unvarnished truth. now, are the house republicans
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correct? absolutely! the house republicans have been pretty consistent. there principle is we run out of money, you don't get to spend anymore. and i agree with them. and i voted that way in the senate. but here is what i fear will happen. the house republicans are going to pass a bill raising the debt ceiling with cuts to spending. i will support it, but when they sent it to president biden and chuck schumer, those two gentlemen will not even pause they were video games to look at it. they are going to say "no, we will not negotiate. default if you want to." i'm working on a bill. i don't know if senator schumer will bring it to the floor. i don't know if the senator will supported, but to try to force the parties to negotiate. i don't know if it will work. but i don't know anything else
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to do at this point. i do know this, i am not going to vote to default on the debt of the united states of america. even though i didn't run it up! i'm not going to do it. i have a food dishy airy obligation to the american people. i am a senator. i tried to rise above it but i'm a senator. i'm going to fulfill my food dishy area obligation. >> ainsley: are right, senator we will be watching because the deadline is tomorrow. thank you so much for coming on. >> you bet. >> brian: still ahead the white house takes an awkward turn. >> ainsley: clay travis on the cringeworthy moment coming up. ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ [cheers and applause] >> brian: why? the golden state warriors visit the white house with an awkward turn yesterday according to a gushing political peace. by the way, she should have taken a knee. less scrutiny for vice president harris? at this, the former aide says "now it looks like he's running, president biden. he's being treated like what i would call a normal vice president. just less attention which frees her up to focus on excelling." she is too busy to excel. tomorrow, the declared borders are heads to arizona where she will not visit the border. joining us is clay travis founder of elk kick in so much more, clay, sometimes as an angle i come by and to but i don't know why the grouped this story. what does that mean?
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>> i think honestly it means joe biden so incompetent of late that there hasn't been much focus on how bad kamala harris is at her job. >> brian: who's done nothing? >> in the white house, and when you can't get on an airplane and fly in the country on the heels of the tide when you couldn't shift anything in the country, what your transportation czar small city in indiana becomes under fire. when joe biden can explain why scott classified documents scored in t stored in the garage by the corvette commit they don't notice what is going on with kamala harris. it's not that kamala harris is doing better but not failing as noticeably as everybody else on the biden administration. and there is some truth to the fact if biden is going to run in 2024, it does seem that is his plan that there is not going to
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be that much focus on kamala harris as the leader of the game to potentially take over for joe biden because really, kamala harris is applauding this brand. who will she call racist? who will she call sexist? how many people would she do that to to ensure she ends up the nominee for the democrats when joe biden steps into office? >> brian: she doesn't have to cast the tie-breaking vote in the senate. she doesn't have anything consequential to do. she was going to focus on the democratic voter rights. she was going to focus on the border, she did a couple of zoom calls and went to an empty border crossing. so, they are saying, these are good times because nothing is expected because, great, she won't do anything. how crazy is that criteria? she does not want to have pressure to excel. this is good news? >> this is where we are in
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joe biden's administration. remember george wrote a great book "team of rivals" a history guy and put together the biggest and best cabinet that may be ever existed at that point in time in the united states history. joe biden put together a team of incompetents and really a competition to see who can screw up the most and take the attention off of joe biden for being the worst president in any of our modern era. reality is, like i said, may repeat and joe biden have been taking the competence and hiding away kamala harris in the meantime. >> brian: we realize this was the opportunity of a lifetime. you go in there and excel. you are the 50 something-year-old vice president with an 80-year-old president. it is your chance to prove competence and excellence. like governor d santos came out of nowhere to establish himself in florida. she decided the best thing for
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me to do was nothing and therefore i won't have to lead anybody down by exceeding expectations, a crazy world we are living in, thank you so much. >> no doubt come appreciate you all. >> brian: let's check in with janice dean exceeding always expectations with the forecast. >> that is very nice. will you put that on my resume? >> brian: with a brand-new book. >> what is your name? >> st. louis. [indistinct] >> george from kansas city. >> mary from pennsylvania. >> pennsylvania. >> pennsylvania. >> hi to jane, hi, jean we know you love "fox & friend." let's look at the weather. warm temperatures, do you like the warm temperatures? pretty nice we don't want to see snow but a snow deficit in the northeast. we do have the potential for severe thunderstorms for friends in kansas city. south of that with large hail my damaging winds and possibility
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of tornadoes here. behind the cold air and snow that will pilot for the rockies ultimately to the upper midwest. double the trouble and look at the snowfall troubles in colorado, close to 3 feet of snow and that is one of the big stories we will follow on foxweather.com. say hi to brian kilmeade, everybody. [cheers and applause] >> brian: and then go to barnes & noble and pick up the eye of the storm. >> ainsley: i will go with them. >> brian: no, you have to stay. a nonprofit paying its way forward to bridge the gap between police officers and the communities in which they serve. let's check in with dana perino. just yesterday, i was on "the five" with you. >> it was interesting if greg gutfeld asked if people love you. janice does. >> brian: you know how greg feels about me. >> hey, thanks, two major crime stories breaking has become on the air. murder charges in the disappearance of mass is the mother of three and idaho murder suspect how was he communicating
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with one of the victims the weeks before they were killed? the justice decided against the fbi searching for classified documents at the president's office. and pledge allegiance to diversity, equity and inclusion? you won't believe what is going on it and arizona's universities. look forward to a big day and we will see to you at 9:00. later chest congestion. hello 12 hours of relief. 12 hours!! hmmm, ok. not coughing at yoga? antiquing not coughing? not coughing at the movies?! hashtag still not coughing?! aaah. oww! mucinex dm gives you 12 hours of relief from chest congestion and any type of cough, day or night. it's not cough season. it's always comeback season.
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>> ainsley: a nonprofit in washington state to bridge the divide between police officers and the communities that they serve. blue bridge alliance provides officers with debit cards that they can use to help others on the community. they can do things like pay for gasoline for stranded drivers or by a meal for somebody hungry. joining us now with more is the cofounder of blue ridge alliance, brian and east, police chief. thank you for being here. brian, i will start with you. what a great idea. i think you came up with this idea but tell us why. >> well, back in 2011, there was an officer at that was fatally shot 5 minutes before that happened, he actually was at mcdonald's picking himself up some dander. there was a little guy next to
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him in the community trying to buy himself something and the officer looked over at him and said, "hey, i got you." he bought him a meal. what if officers officers actually had the opportunity to do these random acts of kindness was simply dolma community support funds. we got the program together and that is exactly what we do. we offer agencies the opportunities for the officers to be in the field and do those types of things. it might be a single mom who is working to code jobs. she's trying to make ends meet and her car is broken down on the side of the road because she's out of gas. the officer can actually buy her some fuel into those types of things. what that really does is bring a point of contact between officers and struggling community members that they might not have otherwise had and really nonlaw enforcement context.
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it really shows the humanity of officers. >> ainsley: so sweet for you all to do this. what a fabulous idea. chief johnson, what is the reaction from the recipients? >> this really works to build relationships and situations where we may not otherwise have an opportunity to do that. one that comes to mind is resource officers and one of our school resource officers, jacobson uses to purchase art supplies for someone new to our community. it has really opened the bridge for them to have a relationship, positive relationship with the police. and the communities for blue ridge. >> ainsley: brian, where you getting the money to pay for the debit cards? >> so it is community supported. that is one of the big things about our program is it is hyperlocalized. what we do is provide the tools and resources for local agencies to actually run this program
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with the supportive community. and when we start to get the community involved, then it really becomes community ownership of the program here at a lot of things happen including safer streets. >> ainsley: chief we air all types of videos where the parents are telling the kids police officers are bad. this is a great way to show children and families that is not the case. what kind of reaction have you had personally? >> are officers, they enjoy doing it. the officers across this cou country, this gives them more opportunities because obviously, the funds can be limited to peer at the community overwhelmingly supported it and raise nine without actually pulling any fund-raising for it. >> ainsley: well met, that is great. if people watching want to contribute, what is the website? >> blueblue ridgealliance.org
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>> ainsley: chief johnson, brian, thank you for your service, brian, for supporting the police officers and our community. >> thanks, ainsley, have a great day. god bless, stay safe out there. more fox & friends just moments away.nd ♪ a ♪ when i think of the veteran out there that needs to refi his home, he may want to purchase, we can help them and provide that financial solution for them and their families. it's a great rewarding feeling. everybody in the company, they have that deference and that respect and that love for the veteran that makes this company so unique. trelegy for copd. ♪birds flyin' high, you know how i feel.♪
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♪ >> we're only halfway through. you have a three-hour radio show. we love to work. >> do you know want to know who is on? we'll lead are rich lowry, andy mccarthy and other surprises. >> bill: all right, guys, good morning. the man arrested and accused of misleading police about his wife's disappearance is now charged with her murder. in minutes he will be in court arraigned. the courthouse in massachusetts where brian walshe will appear. he was charged with the murder of his wife, ana. she disappeared on new year's day. updates on that hearing when it begins south of boston. it is one of the burning questions of the classified document scandal. why did the d.o.j. not participate in the search of the president's ho

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