tv Americas Newsroom FOX News January 19, 2023 6:00am-7:00am PST
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>> oh, that's why people live in florida. good morning, florida. thanks for watching "fox & friends." >> you do love your country. >> run to the radio and get dressed. bye, everyone. >> bill: good morning, here we go. new developments in three major crime stories we're watching across the country. new mexico, prosecutors set to announce whether or not alec baldwin will be charged criminally in the deadly shooting on the rust movie set. from the state of washington newly unsealed court documents reveal what investigators found inside the apartment of a quadruple murder system kohberger. massachusetts, the attorney for the man charged with his wife's murder speaking out an the horrifying we learned live on
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your program yesterday. we say good morning. i'm bill hemmer in new york. >> dana: i'm dana perino and this is "america's newsroom." we look forward to finding out about rust. a day of reckoning for alec baldwin. new mexico prosecutors will announce whether charges will be filed. >> bill: the announcement will come in a written statement. there will not be a press conference. it comes about 16 months after that incident. baldwin was pointing a gun at a cinematographer when it accidentally went off and killed her. >> dana: investigators released body cam video of the deadly shooting last year. baldwin said it was a tragic accident and his conscience is clear. >> i feel someone is responsible for what happened and i can't say who that is.
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i know it's not me. honest to god if i felt i was responsible i might have killed myself if i thought i was responsible. >> bill: matt finn kicks off the coverage leading it off in los angeles for the moment of truth for alec baldwin. matt, hello. >> we expect to learn whether actor alec baldwin or anyone associated with the death of her will be charged with a crime. in october of 2021 video captured baldwin shooting and killing her on the movie set of rust. the gun shot also wounded the director. baldwin claims he was handed what he thought was a cold gun being used for movie making. hutchins left behind a husband and 9-year-old son. her family settled a wrongful death case against the producers including baldwin who described the incident as an accident. the spokesperson for the d.a. office writes the announcement will be a solemn occasion made in a manner keeping with the
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office's commitment to upholding the integrity of the judicial process and respecting the victim's family. the sheriff led a year long investigation into hutch in's death and there was a degree of neglect on the set on the outskirts of sante fe. a script superviseor filed a lawsuit alleging assault and negligence. this past november baldwin counter sued saying he wants to clear his name maintaining he was on a movie set where there shouldn't have been a remote possibility that a gun with live ammunition should exist. his lawsuit alleges some of the film's staff are responsible. arm orer and ammunition supplier and they all deny responsibility. >> bill: thank you, matt finn, nice to see you from los angeles. >> dana: we're learning more about the items seized by idaho murder suspect bryan kohberger's apartment. they reveal at least took 15 pieces of potential evidence,
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strands of hair and a pillow with reddish brown stains. laura engel has the details. what did they find? >> we're learning the new details that have been kept under wraps for weeks in the investigation into the idaho college student murders giving us a glimpse of what police were looking for and what they found. a list of those items investigators seized in the search of the defendant's apartment include eight possible hair strands, one is identified as possibly an animal hair. the victim gonzalez had a dog in the house. fabric with dark red stains and computer tower. it was made public wednesday. police took possession of several items that could prove critical in the case against kohberger. for the first time in his arrest in pennsylvania investigators describe previously undisclosed evidence they were looking for,
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including blood, dna, dark clothing, and any data compilations digital or on paper which show the victims and the home in moscow, idaho, where the four were found murdered the morning of november 13th. they allege kohberger pre-planned the ambush and studied other murders and how to avoid detection as part of his preparations. as the investigation moves forward there is also a new report that kohberger repeatedly sent direct messages or dms to one of the female victims through interest -- -- kohberger hasn't geared a plea and back in court june 26th. >> bill: more now on all of this with former f.b.i. special agent. good morning and welcome back to our program. go back to alec baldwin for a
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moment. based oh than what we think we know do you believe he will be charged? >> i don't actually. and that has nothing to do with his responsibility. i think he does carry some responsibility. like i said some responsibility. i think it was a chain of events from the armorer and first assistant director to alec and handed him the weapon. i think there is multiple people with responsibility and multiple people to point the finger at somebody else. >> dana: two questions. do you think somebody else from the movie set will be charged? and also you have some experience with movie sets and guns. what do you think happened here? >> well, i think there was very much carelessness on the part of all three of those people i just mentioned. this was a chain of responsibility from the armorer making sure the weapon is safe and everybody else that handles the weapon. there are rules that govern it and everybody has to check the
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weapon individually passing through their hands. carry it from one place to another to put it on a table. all that stuff, everybody -- if anybody carried out their individual responsibility in this case, it would have saved lives. that's why you have multiple layers of protection. this is a gross negligence case, criminal negligence is a gross negligence case. nobody is con tocontending that wanted to murder this purpose. if there is recklessness and carelessness to a certain degree we'll hold somebody criminally responsible. in this case it's not a single person and makes it difficult for the prosecutor to get one person unless you will charge all three of those people it is difficult for me and also in these kind of cases you have a sympathetic defendant because it was an accident. a tragic accident. it is a tragic accident born out of negligence. if they will charge somebody, i think you would have to me charge more than one person. it is difficult because they could all point at the other.
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>> bill: we'll get an answer less than two hours from now. another topic now. kohberger, the state of washington said you have to make the items that were taken from kohberger's apartment public. apparently they went to his office now and found nothing relevant to the case. at his apartment they got this. a nitrate tight black glove which you think is critical. possible hair strands and animal hair strands. two cuttings from uncased pillow of reddish brown stain. mattress covers with multiple stains. fire tv stick and computer tower, dust container from a vacuum and various receipts. why would someone have a black glove like this? >> a night rite glove is a black surgical glove. some people are allergic to latex. you would find it in a medical
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supply store. for painters to cover hands when they are painting. very rare that you have -- i have nurses in my family that don't have those type of gloves in their home. if you worked in a laboratory or if you were like i said industrial painter you might have. the fact there is only one of them is crucial, too. if the other one was found or a similar one was found at the crime scene, then you have a match. there are two basic categories of evidence that you see in the list. pre-planning, that's why they take his computer and look for receipts and then there is the actual event itself, did he carry things from the crime scene back to his apartment? there is touch dna and you can pick up hair and fiber and transfer it to another place. those are the two categories of evidence that you see listed in that warrant return. >> bill: okay. bobby, thanks. great to have you back on our program. we'll see what happens from this
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now. thank you. a quick programming note. judge janine will speak to the rust shooting prosecutor and the interview later on the five tonight. join the cast of others today at 5:00 eastern time. >> dana: the characters. the lawyer for accused massachusetts wife killer brian walshe vowing to fight the charges. prosecutors walshe killed and dismembered his wife ana. in my experience where as here the prosecution leaked so-called evidence to the press before they provide it to me their case isn't that strong. i intend to win this case in court not in the media, which has already tried and convicted mr. walshe. good luck with that. >> bill: we listened in on court yesterday when they read off the google searches the state believes they found on his computer. this is brutal to listen to.
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how many different specific areas that he was looking for, how to destroy and remove a human body. how you do it. so that's what the state has evidence yesterday. >> dana: and dna evidence as well. no body. >> bill: one of the friends of ana walshe we're getting to know who this woman was, mother of three. for the rest of her life pamela was talking about it, a friend of hers. >> ana is a very powerful and successful business woman and positive soul. i can almost guarantee you she looked at him and was trying to help him or see the good in him. there are partners that come into the mix that you try to help and they are fighting their own demons but you try to be there as much as you can. unfortunately sometimes it turns out in a negative light. >> bill: a story getting a lot of attention and will continue moving through the case in court. >> dana: i was going to say
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monday. it is thursday. don't worry, thursday. >> bill: search for answers in the classified document scandal. will the white house ever come clean and stop stonewalling reporters? we say that because there is frustration within the white house press corps. tom cotton standing by for that. >> if you could drive a car in the air you would get to the top of the blue line in five minutes. all the greenhouse gas pollution would be below you. that's what is boiling the oceans. >> dana: former vice presidential al gore unplugged. >> bill: crickets for the superintendent in virginia until now. >> nationwide, how many high schools has this happened to? >> i do know anecdotally there
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>> bill: now from atlanta protestors in that city calling for a night of rage against w enforcement tomorrow. this after a police involved shooting that killed one man, injured a state trooper. the warning comes from twitter account scenes from the atlanta forest. georgia authorities responding to that threat. >> acts such as arson, physical attacks on members of our community, focused intimidation of citizens, the use of explosives and setting booby-traps that have the potential of causing great bodily harm or could possibly maim are not protests but
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criminal acts that destabilize communities and endanger citizens. >> bill: it happened as officers tried to clear an encampment. the protests against the so-called cop city have been going on for months and we'll watch that in atlanta. >> so many of our questions have been referred to the d.o.j. and to the white house counsel's office. you can understand we're in information blackout. would you invite a d.o.j. official to take our questions here? >> no, you would have to go to the department of justice. this is a legal matter that is currently happening at the department of justice. >> dana: frustration mounting with the white house as reporters accuse the administration of an information blackout. press secretary karine jean-pierre referring questions to the justice department and white house counsel more than 20 times during yesterday's briefing. let's bring in arkansas senator tom cotton. an interesting trick as a press
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secretary to refer people to the counsel's office. they never take a press call. they always refer it back to the press office. the reporters know what they'll get. senator, the poll came out and americans say 60% to 22 that biden acted inappropriately in the way he handled those documents. do you think we'll ever get to the bottom of it? >> dana, those 60% plus americans are correct. point out the hypocrisy in joe biden and his team's response saying it is a legal matter. go talk to the department of justice. the department of justice is not supposed to talk to the media. someone being investigated can talk to the media. nothing to stop joe biden from explaining how the documents got into his home, garage, office, why they weren't secured, and so forth. of course, he had no problem talking about donald trump's classified documents last summer. he saddled up his high horse and rode it hard then.
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this is scandal management and hypocrisy. the second point i would make and probably more important for most americans is the double standard here at play from the department of justice. when they found out that donald trump might have had classified information at mar-a-lago they sent an f.b.i. team to raid that site. with joe biden they allowed his own partisan lawyers to search his home and search his office. this is kind of like you see in other cases in which law enforcement has been weaponized on behalf of partisan friends. last summer you had f.b.i. raids at the homes of pro-life activists for grave crime of singing hymns in front of abortion clinics. crisis pregnancy centers have been vandalized and firebombed and no arrests in those cases. more troubling is the unfair and uneven enforcement of the law. >> dana: your military experience makes you think about that as well. the justice department said yesterday they are not -- they haven't told the white house not
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to comment on this. to your point the white house could clear it up. the president says the lawyers won't let him look at the documents. you would imagine as president he would want to do that. let me ask you about ukraine and russia. a big meeting tomorrow with all of ukraine and the supporters of ukraine. "the new york times" has this headline the u.s. warms to helping ukraine target crimea. the biden administration is considering the argument that kiev needs the power to strike at the ukrainian been ins la anonceed by russia in 2014. what do you know about the biden administration at this point? >> we should have given ukraine this kind of intelligence and weapons systems they need to strike russian military sites going back more than a year. it's another example going back more than a year the biden administration's decisions have made the war bloodier and longer than it should have been and perhaps tempted vladimir putin to invade in the first place.
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a long series of instances going back before the war started which ukraine asked for certain kinds of weapons system or intelligence to defend their own territory. president biden refused to give it to them. are you shall yeah -- russia invaded and biden then provided those exact kinds of weapons and intelligence systems months later. the war bloodier and more protracted. the biden administration is reluctant to provide intelligence to strike sites in crimea and not supplying the long range weapons systems that ukraine needs to strike the basis where russia is launching the missile attacks. it is a series of half measures making the war longer than it has to be. >> dana: a quick question. did you see the german defense minister has said they won't supply tanks unless the u.s. supply tanks?
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what partners do that to each other in the lead-up to a meeting tomorrow? >> it is just the german chancellor handling his domestic -- i hope the biden administration agrees we can provide tanks. germany's tanks are better suited for ukraine's army and supply and logistic systems but confident given the weapon systems we've provided to ukraine we could also support u.s. abram made tanks going to ukraine as well even if those german leopard tanks will go in in higher numbers from germany and other nations like poland and finland and other countries willing to supply them if germany will give the green light. >> dana: senator, thank you. have a good day. >> the whole world is crossing the border. these are the people that want to get caught. there are a lot of people that don't want to get caught. where are they going and who is
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supporting them and that's what's scary? >> bill: big questions about cartels. vice president harris goes to arizona today. she is not going to visit the border where cartels are taking advantage of our lax policies to expand their reach deep into our country. what exactly is she doing? stay tuned for an answer today. could beethoven and mozart help in the cause to keep homeless from their stores? ♪
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security. >> dana: border officials losing hope in the biden administration as the president's own border czar harris travels to arizona today but instead of addressing the migrant crisis she will be over 100 miles away from the border to promote taxpayer funded green energy. jonathan lines is the supervisor for yuma county that saw a 300% surge in migrant encounters. as we come on the air with you right behind you what's happening there? >> we've had a single crosser. probably the 550th crosser this morning. this individual fell into the water and had to be attended to. it goes to the point we talked about before, first responders having to come out to the border instead of focusing on the people of yuma, arizona. it goes to what we talked about with the hospital, more than 23 million unreimbursed expenses and clearly as was mentioned before, the priority of this administration is not the people
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of the united states and the residents here but the prioritization of the people coming across the border. it is frustrating and we've been talking about it for a very long time. i saw in your report earlier one of the local farmers was talking about the fence sections that have been completed ever since the trump presidency and yet they still lay on the ground rusting away. >> there is a lot to explain in the picture behind you. i see tents set up for processing. i see a wall. you are seeing several hundred come across that border every day. how do they come across the border if the wall is behind you? >> so 200 yards to my right, the wall ends where we have a reservation that begins and that is an area where we do not have any type of wall. we have the legacy barriers which prohibit our vehicles and tractors from being stolen and taken into mexico.
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that's the only security we have there. plus the individuals on the ground. one of the things that was shared with me last week from some of the people inside homeland security is while we're talking about a budget crisis and a debt ceiling today, the tilt-ups have cost more than $8 hundred million dollars to the american public. the vice president is prioritizing green energy today not talking about the debt ceiling and yet we have this ongoing expense here on the southwest border that is not addressed and not discussed. >> dana: she will only be a few hundred miles away. i don't understand. >> 150 miles roughly. >> dana: you want to solve problems and serve the people. you have a huge problem. can you reiterate something? your local hospital in yuma, arizona have $23 million in unpaid bills because of the migrant crisis? how do you make up the shortfall. who gives you the money? >> you know, we don't. it is a local community-owned
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hospital. it is not a corporate giant. they can't absorb these expenses. i had the opportunity to take over multiple representatives from the federal government, multiple legislators to be able to hear that discussion. not one democrat has been willing to sit down and talk until last week and she is no longer a democrat. kyrsten sinema was here and we reiterated that fact. more than 23 million. you know, the administration is nowhere to be found addressing the needs of the local communities across the border. >> bill: the numbers are staggering and we can go through them again but we do it every day for two years. you are up against it. i appreciate your time today. >> dana: thank you so much. >> we appreciate your emphasis on this and continuing to talk about it. >> stay in contact with you and your office. the farmers know this as well as anybody. instead of the people living along that border.
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a quick sample what they say is the problem and they point the finger at cartels. >> you have all these cartels that basically run this border. traveling people and drugs across. it is big money and people. anywhere from $8 thousand a person up to $40,000 a person. >> these people come across are still indebted to the cartel. not everybody is able to pay and they come as servants and live below the system. >> bill: the vice president will be in arizona west of phoenix for a power transmission line launch that they hope one day will help carry energy and electricity from california to arizona in the big stretch. >> dana: if you are out there you might as well do other things. also happening today democratic mayor from new york eric adams is in washington and meet with the council of may ores meeting. he writes the governors of those
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states say they can't handle the flow of migrants and maintain local services for existing residents. new york is also at a breaking point but that is where similarity between the governors of texas and florida and the people of new york end. in a crisis new yorkers don't ship their problems off. that's very unfair to the governors. over 3 million people in the last two years and 50,000 or 60,000, those border states are doing their part, believe me. >> bill: he pointed a finger at the federal government and fema and rightfully so and he could have suggested the white house is not doing what they are supposed to do, enforce our laws. we talk about these numbers all the time. a lot of times in eagle pass, texas. this is yuma just this area where jonathan was joining us from. >> dana: tiny u.s. population. >> bill: it's almost 50,000. that covers two months for
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fiscal year 23. that's october and november of this year. the flow has not stopped. if anything in certain places you could argue it has only gotten greater. that's what they're dealing with in arizona and the vice president won't see that today. 7/11 stores taking a classical approach to the homeless crisis as store owners are picking up the mess and customers harassed. a big problem in l.a. that's where we find kelly o'grady live outside a 7/11. what's the grand idea, kelly? >> hi, good morning to you, bill. i'm in a 7/11 in silver lake. an area particularly impacted by the homelessness crisis. you can't hear it now because the owner just turned the music down. she doesn't want to wake up the neighborhood as 6:00 a.m. but they are playing classical music to deter those they don't want hanging around. a consequence of a larger problem plaguing the county.
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l.a. declared a state of emergency with over 69,000 homeless people at the beginning of 2022. it has grown at this point. california is now responsible for 30% of the nation's homeless population. beyond the challenges that poses to residents, retailers and particularly convenience stores like i met today are struggling with that issue with many saying police department and city officials aren't responding. one is responding now. forced to get creative. >> establish a situation where it is welcoming to the customer and not all that welcoming for anybody looking to loiter. you have seen these things over the years. playing music. >> 7/11's have employed the classical music tactic. some people complain about the volume. one owner in texas shares he has to do it for the safety of his patrons. >> my customers are scared to
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come here because there are people constantly hanging out in the parking lot. soliciting for money. >> 7/11 is not the only bast to use sound. a walgreens if reno is playing classical music. years ago retailers would use as a months quito sound to drive away young people. the takeaway. this is just a band-aid solution the retailers are having to do because of the larger issue that currently there are no solutions if los angeles. back to you. >> bill: amazing video. i don't know if you saw that. he will need a bigger sweatshirt. we'll see how the classical sounds pan out in l.a. thank you. >> that's what's boiling the orb oceans, creating atmospheric rivers and rain bombs and sucking the moisture out of the land.
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>> dana: al gore back on the world stage and unleashing on climate change. did it register with his audience? a totally different speech going viral. warning about the danger of wokeness is resonating all around the world. >> i want to talk to those of you who are woke and who are open to rational argument. a small minority, i accept. because one of the ten either of wokeness is that your feelings matter more than the truth. tenets. tenets. well, this safe driver saved money -how do you feel? -um, good? he's better than good. he got rewarded for driving safe and driving less. sorry, barb, just to confirm, this is the feel-good news of the week? this is what we found. -yay, snapshot! life... doesn't stop for diabetes.
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>> the only thing that wokeness has to offer in exchange is to brainwash bright young minds like you to believe that you are victims, to believe that you have no agency, to believe that what you must do to improve the world is to complain, is to protest. we know that the way to improve the world is to work, is to create. it is to build. >> bill: that speech there on anti-wokeness bringing down the house at the oxford union. he extended those thoughts last night with tucker. >> this ideology is anti-human. and the narrative goes something like this. we are evil, particularly
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westerners, especially straight white men like you but actually all of us are evil and we must be punished. i think we've got to believe that young people are persuadeable and make rational argument to them and that's the way to deal with many of these problems. we have to challenge young people to step up and be better. >> bill: the author of a book apocalypse never. good morning. he is arguing you have to fight back with your own logic and your own reasoning because when you are young you think you have it all figured out. what do you think of his argument? >> it's a brilliant speech and i've been following his work for a long time. he is absolutely correct. we're in a crisis of civilization that's driven by victimhood ideology, which has been rebranded wokeness. it was supposed to be about being sensitive. sometimes as we know things become the opposite and wokeism,
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victim ideology has been become very bull he oohing. people are being bullied and physically harm because of who they were or what they believe. so to see him speaking up and getting a positive reception shows we've reached peak wokeness and hopefully looking at the beginning of the end. >> bill: the whole scene in oxford was classic down to the bow tie. al gore was in europe, davos, he had a lot to say about the woes of the world. listen to this clip. >> if you can drive a car straight up in the air at interstate highway speed you would get to the top of the blue line in five minutes. all the greenhouse gas pollution is below you. what's what's boiling the oceans, melting the ice and causing the waves of climate refugees. look at the xenophobia and political authoritarian trends that have come from a few million refugees. what about a billion? we would lose our capacity for
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self-governance on this world. >> bill: if you listen to his comments it is quite clear that every woe in the world he blames on climate change. it all comes back to that, michael. >> if you are trying to convince people that davos is not a cult, then i think the last thing you should do is put up a screaming al gore to blame every weather pattern on climate change. there is no science for much of what he is saying there. we've seen greenhouse gas emissions flat over the last decade thanks to the transition from coal to natural gas. he never talks about u.s. carbon emissions declined more than any other country in the world thanks to natural gas or his investment fund manages davos' money. they are a secret organization and revealed it earlier this week in a piece we pointed out that davos is wrapped in a cult
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and enigma. they are pro-scarcity anti-human people engaged in quite authoritarian exercise to try to control the global energy economy. how we produce food. all of the conspiracy theories they claim turned out to be true. they do want people to move from meat to eating bugs and want us all to live a poor, low energy life. >> bill: he was preaching to the choir in davos. the fusion energy breakthrough in california. sometimes they'll look back at solar panels and windmills and say how primitive that was. nice to see you in california. thank you for getting up. michael. thank you. >> dana: tensions boiling over in michigan after a school board
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member tweeted about race saying whiteness is so evil it manipulates. i won't apologize for that and think you should applaud it for being honest about its ability to manipulate and be dishonest. garrett tenney live in chicago with more. >> good morning to you. the board member is not apologizing and tells us people who are upset about her tweet saying whiteness is evil are in denial of systemic racism. a number of parents blasted her for her post which they described as hateful racist and disgusting while demanding her resignation. >> the person with such contempt and hatred for other races has no place in public life and no place on a school board. one must be expected to set the highest standard of personal conduct for the community that entrusts its children into its care. >> other folks came out to
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support hamilton and argued the term whiteness doesn't refer to white people but to systemic racism. asked to respond to her critics she tells fox news this. what i hope those who don't understand or are in denial of the realities of systemic racism, whiteness, white supremacy is be brave enough to attempt an understanding of the experiences of people of color. despite the outrage and calls for her resignation the superintendent tells us the district doesn't take any position on hamilton's tweets and never entertained the idea of taking any action against her. >> dana: thank you in chicago for us this morning. >> well planned out, tactical, executed quickly. >> what took place is much like what we've seen in the past by an execution from the cartel. >> bill: a family of six massacreed in a gang-style execution and shot in the head.
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the county sheriff is chasing the case. we'll talk about it in a moment. breaking in us from the border. a migrant hit and killed crossing a busy road shortly after entering the country. griff jenkins live in eagle pass, texas has that story and more now. griff. >> bill, good morning. tragedy striking before dawn, a migrant killed on the road. we have the scene coming up next. rteeeec works hard at hour one and twice as hard when you take it again the next day. so betty can be the barcode beat conductor. ♪ go betty! let's be more than our allergies! zeize the day. zyrtec. let's get started. bill, where's your mask? i really tried sleeping with it, everybody. now i sleep with inspire. inspire? no mask? no hose? just sleep. learn more, and view important safety information at inspiresleep.com (cecily) what's up, einstein? (einstein) my network has gone kaput! (cecily) you tried to save a buck on it? (einstein) not so smart. (cecily) well, there is a smarter way to save.
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helping them achieve financial freedom. we're providing greater access to investing, with low-cost options to help maximize savings. from the plains to the coasts, we help americans invest for their future. and help communities thrive. >> bill: we've got a big new show coming your way i want to talk about it now. the big money show debuts on monday on fox business. today the hosts are at a diner in long island talking about issues that affect your wallet as prices jumped 6 1/2% in december compared to a year ago. they are all at the laurel diner on long beach, new york. hello, guys. tell us about the show and tell us what you are hearing from folks there. >> good to see you guys.
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we're at a diner. we're dressed up like this because i was supposed to buy breakfast. i forgot my wallet so we're washing dishes here. in between we're talking to patrons about how they are doing right now. are they as optimistic as the president says they should be going into 2023? taylor, it is an interesting message. we're supposed to be getting relief. not a lot of people are feeling it. >> jerry is joining us now. how are you feeling about things? >> i would like to say we're optimistic for a new year but we're not. my wife and i are very concerned. prices aren't dropping especially in supermarkets as i keep hearing. and we're at an age where we like to think about retirement in a few years. unless things level off we have to continue to work, which i don't think is fair after all of these years of what we're doing. the other thing we have a lot of items we get delivered to our house from the local supermarkets. most get half the items every week. the shelves are still empty.
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if they say supply chains are being better we don't see it here. >> pricing and what you are finding out there. we were able to speak to the diner owner and told us in 2021 he implemented 25 percent increases. he sees it coming down in washington but not his reality. >> bill: we are looking forward to hearing from the three of you and folks like those gentlemen at the diner come monday. good luck, we're watching. want to let viewers know on monday at 1:00 eastern on the fox business network brian, taylor and jackie will bring the issues relevant to the consumer live to you. what is for breakfast out there? what did you guys have? >> it's all about eggs been fact for me. you should have seen taylor. she took down a plate of
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pancakes like it was nobody's business. she was hungry for everything here. >> dana: you guys will need the sustenance. >> i will have to own that one. >> dana: the three of you are bright lights and look forward to seeing your new show starting monday at 1:00 on fox business. have a great weekend. >> thank you. >> dana: fox news alert top of the hour. three big stories topping the news. we're less than an hour away from finding out whether alec baldwin or any of the three possible co-defendants will be charged in the fatal shooting on the set of his movie rust in new mexico. the secret service now says it is ready to provide the names of people who visited president biden's home in wilmington, delaware if asked by congress after saying there were no visitor logs. the biden administration failing to reach its goal for -- after draining 220 million barrels last year to bring down gas prices. we have more on all those storie
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