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tv   Americas Newsroom  FOX News  January 18, 2023 7:00am-8:00am PST

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not make sure we all recognize how we got there? how we presentent it from going further? >> tomorrow the treasury secretary will implement extraordinary measures to stretch the money until mid june and then we hit the ceiling. >> bill: you will need a bigger calculator, edward. thank you. nice to see you. thank you. >> dana: fox news alert. let's get going on the top of the hour topping the news. the husband of missing massachusetts mother ana walshe appearing in court last hour now formally charged with her murder. prosecutors revealing new details about the investigation including dna evidence found in the trash to support the murder charge. liberal cities across the country are considering reparations for black americans affected by racial disparities. the debate over this is a distraction from bigger issues like crime and homelessness.
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investigators find a link between bryon kohberger and one of his victims. he sent a series of direct messages on instagram two weeks before the slayings. >> bill: meanwhile more breaking news. a drip, drip, drip on the classified document story. peter doze doocy reporting from the white house. the d.o.j. went to the residence in wilmington, delaware where documents were found in the garage and personal library to retrieve and take possession. they did not go to the office on capitol hill but based on that reporting so far they did go to delaware to retrieve the document, doj officials. >> dana: when you have a story like this and every eight hours a new nugget. lawyers are wonderful people but sometimes they drive a
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communicator crazy. they said they went to the home to retrieve them to make sure everyone is clear. when a timeline keeps changing it makes people question what's going on. >> bill: the "wall street journal" reported late last night suggesting that the attorneys -- the attorneys from the department of justice allowed the president's lawyers to retrieve the documents from all the locations. that was the impression we were given from the story there. now so it's changed a little bit. dana, you know the story has been changing a little bit every day. sometimes a little bit every hour. now the question is, were there logs kept at his house for visitors? we're told there were -- there was no log kept. but last february in the briefing room jen sauky addressed it this way. >> i will note that while every president can work from anywhere they are. that is how the presidency is
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equipped it is traveling to delaware for the memorial service of a family member and he will be -- that's why he is traveling there this weekend. the president has the capacity to make a secure call from anywhere he is, yes. >> dana: that is true. what she just said. the other thing is that these documents haven't only just been there when he was president. presumably they were there since january of 2017 or around that time. and as a former vice president, the secret service doesn't keep visitors logs and that's when hunter biden was living there. there are questions. you don't have visitors logs of hunter biden's visitors i don't imagine. >> bill: all fair questions. we don't know whether or not it's the end of it. >> dana: it is certainly not. >> bill: or even the end of where the documents could be or maybe there are more that we don't know just yet. peter doocy has the story and joins us now from the north
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lawn. if you were listening tell us what you have now. hello. >> we learned overnight that the justice department and attorney general decided not to send f.b.i. agents to supervise the biden lawyer search of the wilmington residence. now we can report there were justice department officials there. justice department had folks go to the location that the classified material was found to retrieve it and take possession of it and then be on their way to go take the classified material and put it back where it is supposed to be. just because -- that means just because the f.b.i. didn't go and send a bunch of agents with windbreakers doesn't mean the biden lawyers' search was completely unsupervised the entire time. it doesn't sound like the justice department had folks there throughout while people were going through every
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possible place that these documents could have been. the special counsel here at the white house alluded to this in a statement on saturday. he said that he transferred the material to d.o.j. official eaves that accompanied him. what that means is these d.o.j. officials did go to the spot at the biden house where the material was that the biden lawyers who do not have security clearances found and they took it and so when biden officials over the last few days here at the white house has said they did everything the right way, this is a new detail in the way they consider things to have been done right. >> bill: one question here. they raided mar-a-lago in august, right? and they were saying the lawyers for the president cooperated the entire time. maybe that's the case. that's just what they are saying. has anyone asked the white house as to whether or not they had
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concerns that raids could be carried out in wilmington at the home? >> so far not yet. we have reached out to find out exactly from the president's lawyer exactly what they told the justice department to basically keep the f.b.i. from coming in, because if the attorney general is saying we're not going to send f.b.i. officials in to execute a search warrant or anything like that because you are cooperating, we're trying to find out what exactly the d.o.j. told the biden team. you have to do this to be considered cooperating. but whatever it is, these lawyers they got the d.o.j. and f.b.i. basically to back off. they did something or said something or showed something to merrick garland that satisfied him that they don't need to be
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in there right now doing a sweep for national security secrets. >> dana: i just can't imagine -- sorry, i will weigh in here. having had the privilege and honor of having a top secret clearance i can't imagine walking out of even my office into another office with a document like that. so carelessly take them home and have them there and he didn't know or remember, they're in the library and the garage, no big deal. i wonder, peter, if you could get the answer to 1 or 2 questions today what would you like to hear aside from i've been completely transparent? >> i would be curious when did president biden first find out that there was classified material in his house, and why is it that whoever it is that located it on november 2nd sat on it until after the mid-terms. i'm curious about that. i would also be curious what
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exactly happened with this material just in terms of -- we understand that the president has secure phone lines and he has like a scif. a secure place that he can get the brief at the wilmington house. we know that is a very sensitive kind of a briefing where an intel official, somebody from the cia brings material to show the vice president or now the president, and like you were just saying, that is -- it would be very uncommon for materials to just walk out of there in front of a c.i.a. official. are these things that were in a briefcase from the naval observatory, from the white house? we don't know. there is a lot we don't know. it does sound like whatever the explanation is, president biden thinks it is pretty reasonable. because when we last heard him talk about this on thursday, he said that he hoped to talk about it more in detail.
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it sounds like he thinks there is some sort of a reasonable explanation to this. but it would stand to reason that the lawyers here and his lawyers -- personal attorneys don't want him talking about it until the special counsel decides what they are going to do or not do. >> bill: one more question here with the saw in the background and the atv. beautiful day, by the way. so they -- his lawyers report the classified material on the second of november at the penn biden center a few days before the mid-terms. is it too much to say or assume that the attorney general had to know around that time that there was an issue here with classified material? >> well, that would be -- we don't know. we don't have any reason to think merrick garland was sitting on this but it would be
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up to the biden team ultimately. these guys with no security clearances going through documents or going through boxes that they were moving. and again, dana had asked earlier what some of the questions would be. i know that many legal experts on our air over the last couple days have posed the rhetorical why were they looking for documents in the first place? i think maybe more relevant question here is, so for some reason they started looking and they found these documents in the penn biden center in a cabinet or closet or whatever. why is it that they then started looking at the house? because if somebody had something at their office in washington, d.c., a place they only occupied after they left the vice presidentsy and before they got to the white house, why then -- what was the connective tissue from that to the garage? >> bill: fair point.
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be thank you for the breaking news on that. more to come we presume. don't go far. in the meantime professor jonathan turley is on the phone with us. how are you doing? good morning. top line -- what comes to your mind based on this latest twist here. >> the first thing that came to mind is the curious drip, drip, drip of information. none of this would undermine the investigation. the department of justice and f.b.i. just simply be clear and complete about what occurred here. what was said to the d.o.j., when d.o.j. was present. none of that is being revealed except when they have to. in many ways to counteract a narrative. so this is the first thing. the second question is it is not surprising the d.o.j. went to the residence to collect the material. there are special protocols for the transport of classified material. when i do classified cases, i
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have to get a courier to transport the material. it is not that surprising. what we really need to know is how long were they at the residence and did they observe the searches? the "wall street journal" is saying the f.b.i. was told to stand down to let private counsel conduct the searches. keep in mind the searches of the residence came long after the discovery on november 2nd. so during that period, private counsel was left to its own devices to essentially look for documents. one of the problems i have with that is it means that the only account of how the documents were found and how visible they were, were they in classification folders, all that information will now be largely dependent upon the president's own private counsel to relay.
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>> dana: and so, jonathan, i think what you are saying is that why can't the d.o.j. today set up a briefing time at 3:00. doesn't have to be the attorney general. get the deputy there or whatever and the communications person and let us tell you once and for all what we know, when we knew it and walk through the timeline. as you are saying it would not jeopardize the investigation. it might jeopardize what the white house has said or the future for the presidential election. it might be uncomfortable for them politically but you say the d.o.j. today could walk through with a detailed timeline to clarify some of these things. >> of course they could. the potential targets of this, it is a criminal investigation. the potential targets already know this information. you aren't protecting information from people who might be targeted. but more importantly you have these conflicting accounts as to what occurred.
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this is an important matter for public interest. now, with the mar-a-lago situation, we had a tsunami of leaks including what many people view as staged photos coming from the f.b.i. so we have a very sharp difference in what was known. if you have a call to mar-a-lago we got all these reports in the media about nuclear codes and nuclear information that might have been housed at mar-a-lago. and here you've got almost complete radio silence. no, i'm not saying that the department of justice should be engaged in press conferences and feeding information on sensational issues. this is very basic information. even if the department of justice doesn't itself explain what happened here, they could issue a statement that the f.b.i. is not under any limitations in talking about the timeline or what they were told
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by the department of justice. that would be a simple way to handle this and then all of these press conferences with the spokesperson refusing to answer the most basic questions would be shown to be a fallacy. >> dana: it would help the white house press secretary in the justice department did a background briefing and walked through the timeline. >> bill: i would not be surprised, professor, if today we learn that attorneys for the department of justice went to the penn biden center. like you said, the transporting of this classified material is super sensitive and the d.o.j. >> dana: it can't just go in an uber. >> bill: went to wilmington for a reason. if the shoe drops we'll cover it when it does. >> dana: this closet has more shoes. they keep dropping. in the meantime in the back drop of all this house republicans are setting the scene for a
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series of explosive hearings finalizing assignments to key committees including marjorie taylor greene and paul gosar after losing their seats two years ago for controversial remarks. >> talk about white house heartburn this morning, right? republicans haven't begun their hearings yet and the white house is already pretty upset over these appointments. speaker kevin mccarthy giving powerful positions on the oversight committee to republican fire brands, several hold outs who nearly tanked his bid for the gavel including representatives lauren boebert, scott perry, byron donald and freshman luna led my james comer who called on upenn to released all communications related to china originating donations to the penn biden center.
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one more little fold in the story. representatives marjorie taylor greene and paul gosar will be on the committee. they were stripped of their assignments over controversial statements. you can expect fireworks in any future hearings because of all of these members, mtg wrote a statement kind of addressed directly at the president here. she wrote joe biden be prepared. we are going to uncover every corrupt business dealing, every foreign entanglement, every abuse of power and every check cut for the big guy. so the white house is responding blasting these appointment. spokesperson for oversight wrote in part chairman comer said his goal was to insure the committee's work is credible. yet republicans are handing the keys of oversight to the most extreme maga members of the republican caucus who promote violent rhetoric and dangerous conspiracy theories. by the way, judiciary committee was also finalized yesterday.
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representative matt gaetz and chip roy will stay on board and chairman jim jordan will oversee the panel and the new committee of weaponization of government with subpoena power over federal agencies like the d.o.j. they will start to issue subpoenas as soon as the committees are finalized with the democrat members and begin meeting. they want to talk to biden family members. don't know if they will subpoena them. >> dana: thank you. >> bill: meanwhile back on the border, the southern border facing a tsunami of criminal activity in 72 hours alone. border agents apprehended 12,000 migrants. they seized more than 1,000 pounds of narcotics. they arrested six alleged sex offenders. and confiscated six firearms. three migrants currently in critical condition after a smuggling attempt gone wrong. greg jenkins with the rundown
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for another day on the border. >> good morning. in the busiest sector in the entire southwest border is the del rio sector particularly ground 0 where we are in eagle pass. if you go up to our flight drone high above our live shot at the river crossing into mexico, we can tell you in just this sector alone this fiscal year they have had more than 400 criminal aliens, six offenders, seized 33 weapons. let me show you a graphic here, bill. i have tabulated in just 12 days since i have been on the ground here they have had more than 5500 gotaways averaging to about 461 a day. now, speaking of gotaways, let us show you some video shot early this morning in the rgb sector. the texas dps elite brush team making apprehensions of mexican national who did not want to be caught. the gotaways is a problem
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they're seeing here. some that wanted to get away but did not over in another place in texas north of laredo were in a horrific car accident. three migrants had to be airlifted to a hospital. one did flee on foot. here is what the police chief there had to say. listen. >> it's increased over 100% from last year. the amount of stolen vehicle recover reese and amount of incidence regarding human smuggling and undocumented citizens being apprehended have increased tremendously for this department. >> now back to the actual encounters themselves, the number of countries coming, bill, is yet another issue in this area. we have the cubans, nicaraguans, columbians and including egypt
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and syria yesterday and a lot of chinese as well. >> bill: 170 countries and counting. griff jenkins, eagle pass, texas for another day. >> dana: speaking of chaos from across the border. mayors are gathering in washington, d.c. for their annual winter meeting. the immigration crisis perhaps taking center stage as it shows no sign of abating. the mayor of miami is with us. you have had some problems right there in miami with the migrant surge. what do you plan to do to try to get these mayors to come together to try to put pressure on the biden administration? >> well, we've seen the biden administration is florida has become a border state. miami has become a border city. we've seen the impact of that on the public school systems, homeless system and really we've seen a bipartisan call of mayors
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throughout the country sounding the alarm bell of how it is impacting their cities. my hope is that being here in washington, d.c. we can send a unified message that the administration first of all has to take this crisis seriously. has to understand the impact on our cities and has to try to create strategies more comprehensive in nature to solve the problem. >> bill: a four-day meeting in d.c. you'll talk about immigration to mental health, gun crimes, homelessness, all that stuff. but when it could ms. to immigration, new york's mayor eric adams went there a few days ago. "wall street journal," however, i'm glad he went, by the way. we applaud his presence down there. however, they write mayor adams visits el paso but fails to call out president biden. did not mention the president by name. you'll see him on friday at the end of your four-day conference. what will you tell him about it?
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>> well, i got the impression he was calling on the federal government. whether he called out the president by name or not what he was trying to say is, you know, his city is being overrun. he needs help. and that this crisis needs to be front and center in the administration's agenda not just in terms of border control and having a lawful and orderly process of immigration but coming up with a more better strategist how do we counter the regimes and pushing a tremendous amount of migrants into the united states. that's where a lot of immigration pressure is coming from. we haven't seen a strategy of that kind and something that needs to be articulated by the administration immediately. >> dana: cartels are making $13 billion a year on human smuggling. not to mention the drugs coming in as well. they are making a lot of money and they are incentivized to keep doing it.
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do you see cartel activity in miami? >> we've been very fortunate. our homicide rate went down last year. we're getting good control over the drug trade but one of the things we just met with secretary blinken. one of the things he mentioned to us they have seized so much fentanyl that it would in essence kill every single americans the amount they seized. that's only a fraction of what is getting in. what has been seized as what has actually entered the united states you can see a massive amount of these drugs are getting into the u.s. so much so they could literally wipe out our entire population. so this is a threat to american cities and one that has to be taken very seriously. >> bill: you are the head of the conference of mayors. you have a lot of responsibility. we hope you come back soon. from miami. in washington there he is. growing outrage over what police
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are calling a cartel-like execution in california. six dead including a 16-year-old and 10-month-old baby. police is a i the family was shot at a known gang house in the small town of goshen, california. the local county sheriff is blaming the border for this. >> i can tell you cartels are here. they are here for multiple reasons. selling drugs is lucrative. there is a lot of money to be made. it focuses on the money. the other is that we have a very unsecure border right now. there is a lot of back and forth when it comes to the cartels and free movement up and down the state and across the border. >> bill: so awful. police searching for two suspects offering a $10,000 reward for anyone with information. goshen, california . >> dana: john kerry may be feeling the heat speaking at the
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world economic forum in davos, switzerland. owe turned heads for parts of his speech that critics are calling hypocritical and delusional. >> it is so almost extraterrestrial to think about saving the planet. you say that to most people, most people think you are a crazy tree hugging lefty liberal do-gooder, whatever. but really that's where we are. >> dana: let's bring in dave rueben. e.t. phone home i guess? >> dana, for the record i do think john kerry is a crazy lefty hippie do-gooder whatever. he thinks that because he sits in a room with a bunch of rich people to figure out how the rest of us should live our lives, not how they will live their lives. they will have their personal chefs cooking on their gas stoves and flying proverb and
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and still using gas guzzling hummers and everything else. he thinks because he sits in a room and talks to these people about us that somehow that makes him extra terrestrial or he basically says god-like. these people are completely out of control. when i was watching the full portion of that, i kept thinking why is it that nobody that is there seems to represent america? we send a lot of americans there, john kerry i think is american. he ran for president if i'm not mistaken. he never brings up anything that is good for america. he seems to be concerned with what is good for the world economic forum which at this point is an organization that seems to want to have more power than america or any other democracy on planet earth. >> dana: you mentioned private jets. study found that out of 1040 private jets.
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they didn't fly that far. shortest flight of 13 miles. yeah, you could have driven that one. i want to bring up something else. you mentioned gas stoves. this issue, some on the left are saying there the right goes again making a mountain out of a mole hill. jerry baker writes this in the "wall street journal." how the gas stove in your kitchen became a symbol of freedom. it probably won't resonate with future generations the way the boston tea party does. unlikely the struggle to save our ranges from the grasp of hands to regulators will one day be celebrated as the samuel adams of the kitchen appliance age. this issue resonated with people. i think it symbolized something bigger about government. >> oh, it absolutely does. people are basically finally saying enough is enough.
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they want to come for everything. i moved to florida a year ago and where i live we're not hooked up to natural gas from the street. the first thing we did because we moved into a house with an electric stove and i love to cook is we got rid of that and put a propane tank outside and we have a gas stove. everyone that is a chef and likes to cook understands why the flame is actually important to really getting the sear you want. putting aside specifics of the cooking. there is a machine in place to take away joy out of every little thing. every little place in life that they can control you, whether it's what car you are supposed to drive or what stove you are supposed to cook on or what you watch or what you read, they want a piece of all of it. the reason i think people on the right have stepped up on this one is people are just saying enough is enough. if you don't say enough is enough they'll come for that and the next thing and come for the jacket you are wearing and the hairspray you are using and
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everything else and that's what this is really about, control more than anything else. >> dana: can't take my hairspray. if i come to florida i'm coming over for dinner. have a wonderful wednesday. >> bill: 1,000 jets. >> dana: 1040. >> bill: u.s. treasury secretary janet yellen meeting with china's finance minister and growing tensions on a wide range what they talked about. violent crime and homelessness still plaguing san francisco. city leaders considering a plan to pay african-american citizens of the city $5 million each in reparations. we'll debate it. and things are a no go because you keep seeing double, or...your bloodshot eyes have you seeing red, it might be time to discover another treatment option
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like crime and homelessness plaguing their communities. william la jeunesse is live in los angeles with details this morning. hi, william. >> these commissioners don't call reparations are distraction but response to discrimination. i asked them why should whites, asians or latinos pay for the sins of a few slave owners. >> i'm offering no apologies. this is for black residents. >> a handful of liberal cities growing support for reparations for black americans. >> it isn't charity, not a gift. it is something that is owed. it is a debt. a debt for 400 years of slavery. >> how much money and who pays is unresolved. in san francisco, some task force members want to give black residents descended from slavery or affected by the war on drugs up to $5 million each.
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>> this is not black trying to get something from white in terms of begging and borrowing. >> they group says reparations address a racial wealth gap perpetrated by city policy. >> locally this is not about slavery at all but discrimination, housing, other forms of discrimination around labor and jobs. >> a massive distraction from the failure of democrats who ran the town for over 50 years. >> owed only to descendants of blacks in the country before 1900 to level the play field. >> the white male benefit on the backs of not only african-american women, other minorities. >> how reparations are paid are up to lawmakers and governor newsom. how much? won't be cheap. housing discrimination alone could total $5 hundred billion. >> california reparations will be the boilerplate. they will take our blueprint and
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start with that to determine what national reparations will be. >> this debate is just beginning and be a lot more contentious when the reports come out in july and get the sticker shock. 65% of americans oppose cash reparations, 65% of blacks support it. only 18% of whites. back to you. >> dana: thank you for the report. >> bill: he laid it out well. the heart of it now geraldo rivera and civil rights attorney leo terrell. where does the money come from, what's the right number? leo, you will be the first in line to sue. i take it you are against it. >> 100% against it. i would be the first attorney to file a lawsuit against it. why? because no one alive, bill, is responsible for the sins of slavery. california was a free state. the law is unconstitutional, illegal and violates the protection law and giving money to people based on skin color.
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it is a democratic ploy to keep blacks part of the democratic party. it is happening in a blue democratic system. there is no sense of discrimination in california and they claim it is racism. it doesn't make sense. >> bill: other cities considering it st. louis, say it paul, minnesota and others. geraldo you see it becoming reality, pay-outs? >> i hope not, bill. i've been campaigning against it for many years. it is a terrible idea. the last thing people who are in poverty need is more reasons not to work. $5 million is a preposterous amount. my family, my mom's relatives immigrated from ukraine back in the early 1900s. my dad and his family in puerto rico are actually considerable
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percentage aboriginal. they were here native americans long before african-american slavery. why should they be involved in this? latinos generally, half of the country or at least a third of the united states used to belong to mexico. will reparations be paid to them? how many people will be subjected to -- san francisco, california was not a slave state. it was a free state when it was admitted to the union. >> bill: all fair questions. on the other side of the country, you are both lawyers, and the mayor of washington, d.c. vetoed this new crime bill and city council overrode the veto yesterday. what does it do? how does the justice system change in washington, d.c.? here is a few examples. the crime bill will reduce maximum sentences. gets rid of nearly every mandatory minimum sentence and
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allows for jury trials in almost all misdemeanor matters. reduces penalties for burglary, carjacking and robbery and felony with a gun drops. leo, we have seen what cashless bail can do to big american cities. what does this do to our nation's capital, do you think? >> it would be a criminal holiday in washington, d.c. bill, this network has shown crime, violence in democratic cities but 12-1 vote the city council in washington, d.c. is trying to increase crime in washington, d.c. they are trying to eliminate mandatory minimum sentences which basically means hey, if you commit ooh crime you get away with it. the only resource, bill, this legislation goes up to congress and they have the final say so. it does not take place until 2025. why are we basically giving
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criminals an added advantage of committing a crime and not paying a price? it is ridiculous in this time where democratic cities are basically violent cities. >> bill: 30 seconds, geraldo. what happens in washington? >> the terrible thing, bill, it is happening already. go to union station, once the pride of our nation's capitol and now it is part of it is a toilet. there are over 200 murders in the nation's capital in the last two years. carjackings are way up. the people committing the carjacking are young men. young men committing these violent crimes, putting people at risk, homicide is on the rise. this is the last time -- this is absolutely an absurd time to think about abolition of mandatory minimum sentences, for example. leniency will not make the city safer. it will make it more dangerous.
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>> bill: thank you both. cleveland and los angeles, thank you fellows. >> dana: weight loss trend going viral on tiktok and taking lifesaving medicine away from patients. we'll explain next.
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♪ every search you make ♪ ♪ every click you take ♪ ♪ i'll be watching you ♪ - [narrator] the internet doesn't have to be so creepy, the duckduckgo app, lets you search and browse pria blocking most trackers all forf your search history is never tracked, so it can't be shared. and when you leave search, duckduckgo helps keep companies from watching you as you brows. join tens of millions of people making the easy switch by downloading the app today. duckduckgo, privacy simplified. >> dana: the u.s. and china agreeing to ease tensions and
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improve communication, treasury secretary janet yellen spoke with her chinese counterpart in switzerland and we have dennis wilder to talk about that. this is a meeting -- after covid nobody has been having a lot of meetings. this one is happening. what do you think was said and what should be done here? >> well, dana, good to see you. i think what we're really seeing here is the start of a chinese charm offensive with the united states because they are so concerned about their domestic situation. chinese economy last year grew at the worst rate in 47 years. youth unemployment is 20% in china. the demographics are changing in china. china actually lost about a million people this year in terms of growth of the chinese population. and so xi after the disastrous
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covid policies, he is looking to find more foreign investment. he wants american companies to come back to china. foreign direct investment in china has fallen off and worried about the policies and the new house committee that will start investigating china. so he has got a lot of concerns about where america is going on china and wants desperately to right the ship, if you will of u.s./china relations. >> dana: let's listen here. >> i believe the latest numbers that came from the ccp about gdp growth were around 3% when their target was 5.5. if you exclude covid 2020 those are the lowest numbers since 1976. the second thing is xi just had a biggest yu turn of his political career by relaxing 0 covid. it should tell us the ccp is in
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a precarious position. >> dana: we know china's population has begun to shrink dramatically sooner than forecast. does a shrinking china make it more dangerous? >> well, it certainly is a china that feels more vulnerable. the chinese have had tremendous growth in the last 40 years and they thought they were on the rise and we were on the decline. now they are going to be worried about whether or not they've reached some sort of peak in their economic performance. so i do think that that kind of vulnerability for xi jinping makes him more worried about the situation, for example, with taiwan. we have to keep our defenses strong. we have to keep the deterrents strong, the meeting with the japanese last week was extremely important here in washington because the japanese are seeing the china threat and they are moving to really bolster their defense capabilities in very
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meaningful ways. >> dana: they have stepped up on that front. dennis wilder. we'll stay in touch. this is a big, big story. thank you so much. >> bill: really interesting stuff there. 3:00 this afternoon is when we'll get a white house briefing. this one could be contentious. we just learned that the d.o.j. was, in fact, on the scene at the president's home in wilmington, delaware. officials there to receive classified documents. the story is evolving by the minute and bring you the latest as we get it and continue next. we are america's fastest growing conservative movement. right now, the world economic forum and global elites are planning the great reset. their sinister plan to destroy our economy and redefine your freedoms. that's why i want to send you my exclusive book, the american response to the great reset for a gift of any amount.
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the elites at davos getting an earful from critics. who likes the fly private? hypocrisy on full display? "the faulkner focus" is at the top of the hour. >> bill: new details on the idaho murder suspect bryan kohberger saying he repeatedly sent direct message to one of the female victims on instagram and she did not respond. bring in paul morrow, nice to see you. you've been to idaho a couple of times. what do you make of this story if he was trying to each out to her and communicate in some way? >> i find it unsurprising. we spoke about it there was a good chance he would show up on social media and as you look at. when you consider the fact the police have already confirmed that he stalked them in the real world at least 12 drive-bys near the house it is not very
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surprising he would have done the same thing online. i would have been surprised if he had not done something like that. assuming this reporting is true, i think that it tracks likely with what we've seen of his behavior. >> bill: if that's the case he would feel some level of rejection from her, i would expect. >> right. we don't know he was contemplating the murders when he did that. so if the argument is well, how could he be so transparent, the police would pick that up. we don't know what his plan was and the timeline. there are a number of ways the police could have gotten this. legal process served on meta , the parent company of instagram but also possible they got into his phone. they would have taken his phone i'm sure with search warrants in the pennsylvania location when they did the raid and one of the reasons you do a no-knock raid to insure he doesn't destroy evidence. these days actually while phone access can be very difficult with the facial recognition, the law on that is still developing.
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but with a search warrant it is easier than it had been when it came down to passwords and things like that. they got when is phone and instagram identification and a simple search warrant to see if he turns up. they look for the phone. >> bill: or hers. >> dana: a huge amount of interest in this story. this information comes out and then they think now we'll know. we have to wait until june until it all fully comes out? >> well beyond that. one of the things we spoke about this last time on the show is that this was supposed to be just an administrative hearing very quick. probable cause hearing, a sort of confirmation of the fact that probable cause was achieved. low level administrative thing. a six-month continuance for this hearing is unusual. remember, this doesn't start the trial. now you will start to have an arraignment. he hasn't pled yet. that's another appearance. then all the discovery. fighting over the evidence, there will almost certainly be a
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motion to change venue, right? then you will have to pick a jury, then the trial. >> dana: could he plead guilty before that at any point? >> he could, of course. >> dana: do you expect that? >> i was leaning that way except for the families want the death penalty. they may go all the way on this. >> dana: thank you for being here. harris faulkner will take it from here. here she is. >> harris: the drip, drip is so loud. president biden's classified document scandal is unfolding if front of us. we learn more about who was in the room or the garage at some point, i would imagine, while the searches were going down. the president's attorneys, of course, we knew. justice department officials now we know. however, no f.b.i. agents were allowed in unlike during the raid of former president trump's home, mar-a-lago

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