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tv   FOX and Friends Saturday  FOX News  January 21, 2023 4:00am-5:00am PST

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and osteoporosis. call your doctor if worsened breathing, chest pain, mouth or tongue swelling, problems urinating, vision changes, or eye pain occur. can't afford your medication? astrazeneca may be able to help. if you have copd, ask your doctor about breztri. pete: that is lincoln philadelphia field, that is philadelphia -- lincoln financial field and that's philadelphia and the site of today's game of the eagles versus the giants. it's on fox and it'll be a good game. i'm sad my team is not there, but if your team is there, good for you. 7:30 tonight on fox.
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big game and so we have a few -- will: morning treats. pete: what's a dough doughnut? rachel: i don't know but they're good. will: look outrebounded how beay are. if you like doughnuts, that's the way to start your day. pete: i was in the green room with will, he was analyzing analytically each doughnut. will: where would you go, rachel? pete and i went in the same direction, sesame glazed here, whatever that is. pete: it's an interesting combo. rachel: i'd go with the thing with the chocolate on top. i like chocolate. will: this? rachel: too much. will: yeah, too much. rachel: right here. will: that's where we went. this is interesting. this is too dry and i don't know what's going on with the red ones but it's the same thing with the blue. rachel: know what i know -- will: have you tried the blue?
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rachel: i think it'll go in my teeth. will: thinking ahead on this one. that's smart. rachel: my girls are upstairs in my office. rachel: it's really good. it's a dough doughnut because it's more dough? maybe is that what it is? pete: more carbs. will: as a doughnut expert, 15 seconds in the micro microwave d this would be good. rachel: it needs the coffee that you didn't bring to me and pete. will: sorry about that . pete: our coffee machine is broken again. it's broken again in the green room. the morning show without a coffee machine. a viewer sent us a coffee maker. will: really good too. coffee and doughnuts. how are y'all doing? pete: he ordered dunkin' donuts and brought them for everybody. will: for everybody but didn't pour it and bring it. pete: few viewer e-mails unsolicited. this is sherry lynn. she said i have will beat with
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123,000 unread e-mails. will: there you go. rachel: doesn't have me beat. pete: doesn't have rachel beat. pete: that's insane. another e-mail and from virginia, my husband beats will, but not rachel with 73,275 unread e-mails. anne from virginia, we learn add lot more about will's phone in the break. how many voice mails do you think he has unread -- even astonished you. will: i didn't realize i had this many unread or unlistened to voice mails. i feel like voice mails are a technology of yesterday. like don't leave me a voice mail. there's 660 unheard voice mails. pete: think about that. that's a staggering, staggering number. will: well, let's not do that, i'm best at text and there's 29 of those. rachel: i tell my people all the time, if you want to reach me, text me. i say i think that it is co-related with your life. like your life, you don't have time for e-mails and stuff to
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do. clearly, pete -- pete: say i don't have a life? rachel: he's in his office clearing out his e-mails. pete: i don't have anything else to do on saturday. clear out the old inbox and get back to people. i can't get back to everybody. i don't know your code and can't check how many unread you have of everything. rachel: here, you can look. pete: 235 unread texts. if you want to reach rachel, good luck. run the gauntlet. 37 unanswered phone calls. will: if you want to reach rachel, call sean. rachel: that's a great one. that's actually good. pete: we're joking because we know you face the same thing. rachel: it's a lot of tech. it's a lot of tech. will: late last night in the news cycle we got a dump that another record was set in illegal immigration encounters, 251,000 for the month of december. buried in that as well, was this very, very concerning stat. there were so far there have been 38 people on the terror watch list that have been
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encounter sod far at the southern boarder and puts you well on pace above last year's record of 98 in 2022 obviously well above the zero we scored in 2019. to help give context to what the numbers actually mean, bring in robert al monte and former el paso retired deputy chief of the department and worked narcotics for 13 years and robert and i were together last weekend or the weekend before on the border in el paso. good morning, robert. >> good to see you. a bit warmer where you're at now. will: it's nice, temperature controlled in the studio in handout hat tan. rob -- manhattan. rob, you see the numbers and specifically the 38 people encountered on the terror watch list, what's your thoughts? >> it's alarming and downright scary. it's incredible that something like that can happen. those are the ones they know are terrorists that have come into our country. consider those they don't know. not only that, aside from these
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known encounters, we've got to keep in mind the got aways. those are the ones that have been spotted by border sir eyes or -- surveillance eyes or equipment that got away. we don't know anything about them or where they're at. there's no doubt that the record number of myograns coming into the country -- migrants coming into the country will have an impact of crime in the border area and throughout the united states and talking about terrorists, i don't have to tell you what type they are. pete: those are terrorists that are really bad because they got caught and they would have the means to get through without being caught. a between if we may get your response from the border patrol chief raul ortiz saying a medicalmexican national arrester entering the u.s. illegally repeatedly was re-pateuated to mexico -- re-pate rendition of o
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mexico for warrants. is that a good sign that the border chief is reporting on one person. what's going on here? >> it's incredible and i know the case he's talking about. these are cartel members that are involved in mass murders and it's progress but it's a good thing they captured him. pete: but it's one. >> yeah, one, you're absolutely right. one. there's so many more of them that they know are terrorists and then there's so many more -- a larger number in my opinion that we don't even know who they are. will: robert, really quickly, we were sitting together on the border and told me, look, over there you are being watched. cartel over the river.
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did you see the story out of california where there was an entire family executed and people are saying it's very much a sei sicario-style cartel kill. how much have you seen and how much is it increasing that type of cartel violence, which traditionally has been something on the other side of the border beginning to show up in america? >> yeah, you're absolutely right. i train law enforcement officers throughout the united states on the mexican cartel and during my training, i talk about several cases involving mexican cartel hits, murders throughout the united states. one involved mexican cartel beheading a 13-year-old girl in alabama a few years ago. this is nothing new and has been going on for awhile. this family that was massacred in california, there's no doubt in my mind the cartel/gang hit. the reason i say gangs is because you have a lot of street gangs in the united states that are working directly with the mexican cartels and moving drugs, moving people, and also
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carrying out these cartel hits. rachel: yeah, robert, i've been talking a lot since the biden administration opened our boarders that we're destabilizing mexico and empowering the cartels and they're becoming as powerful if not more powerful than the government. they control 40% of mexico's territory and of course this will spill over here but it's making the lives of mexicans even worse than it was before. i wanted to -- and our government is making a calculation that their immigration policies, the policies that are being pushed by the ngos matters more than terrorists coming in and cartels taking control of mexico. let me move onto one other topic, robert, because i think this is really important, all of us are saying we need more border patrol agents and so many are de-moralized and here's a quote from the vice president of the border council and he said we're losing a lot of people
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including those with prior military service and have active security clearances and they're failing a cbp polygraph. it doesn't make any sense. what is going on there? what are you making of that and who are they weeding out of our border patrol? and why? >> well, you know, that tells me there's something wrong with the polygraph system and wrong with the process with what they're doing, how they're implementing the polygraph. i would take a look at polygraph company, examiner because there's too many, way too many people that are failing the polygraph. i saw in one of the fox stories where a former border patrol agent who left the agency to take care of family decided to come back and she failed the polygraph and ironically she's a background investigator doing background investigation on new hires for border patrol so what's going on here? what's wrong with that picture? incredible. rachel: i guess the question is
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is it that the polygraph system is faulty or something's wrong with it or is this intentional that they're trying to recruit people who aren't as qualified as your friend you talked about? >> you know, yeah, those are the questions that need to be asked. i would like to look at the questions, what are the questions. somebody needs to look at the questions that are being asked and is every applicant being asked the same question? it doesn't make any sense and the courts don't recognize the results of a polygraph past the el paso police department. they were having issues with it too and they just got rid of it -- well not just rid of it but several years ago. pete: robert amonte, thank you for breaking it down for us. rachel: appreciate t robert. >> have a great weekend. pete: they do polygraphs for people wanting to join the cvp but not staffers of the supreme court over who leaked the
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document. we had 120 interviews with 120 employees and nobody said they did it so we don't know. rachel: the justices have to sign they didn't have the same scrutiny that the other staffers did and one of the justices is definitely a possibility. will: before we move on from that, the supreme court leak that can't be found, chief justice john robert is clearly under under the delusion that the way to protect the court is keeping information from the public. it's very clear the chief juice tis' primary goal -- look, make it's a noble goal but it's protect the institution of the supreme court and its integrity. i think that's why he splits the middle on certain decisions. i don't think he's following what his mind and his judicial philosophy would lead him. he's going i need to do this so it's not seen as too political and what he doesn't suns is the lack of transparency is going to
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undermine the supreme court. rachel: look at vatican. the vatican had the same mentality, let's -- we don't want anyone to see the scandal because it might somehow undermine people''s faith. the lack of transparency is undermining people's faith and that's happening at the supreme court as well. pete: the coverup is worse than the crime. speaking of crime and potential crime families, talk about the bidens. joe biden is named in a 2017 e-mail we know of discussing a plan to loop him in on a deal selling american liquefied natural gas to who? to china. it is -- we're learning -- as you know, joe biden repeatedly said i never talked to hunter about my business dealings, ever, never about his business dealings. here is an e-mail from the louisiana based lawyer named robert fennett to jim and hunter biden in october 2017 and the daily mail obtained it.
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i've requested him, gas executive, to be available for a call from joe biden and hunter biden on monday morning to discuss the purchase of the 5 million tons of gas. sounds like business. he's named yet he denies it. when will he answer questions? rachel: it's interesting because joe biden is trying to limit your access to natural gas but he's wanting to sell it to china and of course china wants this to happen. we're sitting on the greatest amount of natural gas in the world. we're walking on top of it. he doesn't want us to have it in our own homes, but he wants to make a buck selling to china. pete: it's crazy. will: sean hannity cover it had last night and had this to say. >> joe was a career politician gearing up for a political run and flat out lied to all of you in the audience and at home about never having once spoken to his son hunter about foreign business partners and this will
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likely be joe biden's undoing. not the top secret classified documents that we have now found in four separate locations. so think about it, why on earth were the bidens raking in moms of dollars in this case from china on a liquefied natural gas deal? our number one geopolitical foe? china wasn't buying gas but paying for access. will: i think sean is right. i think this could be it. pete: i could agree. this could be the undoing. will: he said i've never been involved, to your point as well, pete. now we know you are. here's an e-mail if confirmed by the daily mail that connects and all of a sudden now, this kind of stuff is showing up on cnn. pete: yeah. will: i'm not telling you they're blowing it wall to wall, but we've all been talking about this, we've done off the walls about this for -- it's over -- years.
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pete: all they have to do is connect a few dots. it's easy journalism if they wanted to do it. it's been done there. it's out there. it's already squand louis and he's already -- squand lo scandalous and he's denied it and looking at press briefings, they're connecting it. rachel: it's a political problem and national security problem for this country because that means our president is compromised. a man with these kinds of deal withs our geopolitical enemy cannot be looking out for our interest. a man with these these kinds of secrets has to by nature appease the chinese because the chinese probably know more than the daily mail knows, more than we're seeing right here. this is a man who is compromised, a man who has sold out our country and by the way, i remember during the mar-a-lago raid the word treason coming up. this is treasonous stuff. l i just want to say as we will be will: what is the reputation of joe biden?
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rachel: sleazy? will: before this? pete: liar. will: down the middle meaning typical washington politician, been there for decades and generations. i bring that up because he's not alone. this kind of stuff, the take away for me on this is this kind of stuff, the biden family -- say this is joe biden's undoing, you haven't fixed the problem. there's a problem in washington dc of access selling and you want to talk about compromise, it's not one family or individual. there's a big problem in washington dc of people not working for the american interest that have other interests in mind. rachel: i think that's a fair point. pete: a lot of easy money. will: very powerful adversary with a lot of money. rachel: and china's whole strategy is elite capture. so hunter biden was the perfect target. i mean, this is person with a drug problem, he had ex-wives and trimmers to pay off and -- strippers to pay off and money grubbing hungry and parents that needed him to dot work for them.
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ii'm very concerned there's direct policies that enriched the chinese, empowered the chinese over our interest and have actually hurt american workers. pete: for sure. will: i'm concerned that joe biden is typical. that's my concern. pete: that's a really interesting take away and new york post is saying what's in the box, remember from the movie seven? what's in the box. it's from the hunter biden laptop and labeled important docs and photos inside the wilmington, delaware, home. i have a folder in my house called important docs. i thought everybody does. will: i probably have a bunch with stuff. pete: birth certificates and passports. will: based on rachel and i's digital boxes, our garage looks
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like joes. rachel: except you don't have a midlife crisis corvette. will: headlines starting in los angeles, the man who struck a mom and baby, remember this, in a hit and run in la county about a year ago. the perp is dead. the 17-year-old involved in this incident was gunned down in palm dale this week walking home. the mother who was nearly killed in the 2021 hit and run say the teen who got a light sentence should have been behind bars instead of out on the streets and tells fox news digital "the universe delivered the justice we weren't given in court but a harsher punishment he'd have been dealt in the court of law". if george gascon would have done his job, this kid would have been alive and in jail. more than 37 million wireless customers and the second largest carrier said the bad actor got
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people's names, e-mails and billing addresses and thankfully the customer's social security numbers, credit card and passwords remain secure. we are heart broken our colleague has died of a heart attack. he was the senior vice president of news and politics and has been a leader for decades. al started working in 1996 before the official launch. he's been a crucial leader in our coverage for every major news event in every election night. allen recently led a discussion about the midterms as a company town hall. he was a happy warrior who always had a smile on his face. our sincere condolences and heart-felt prayers out to allen's family. he's survived by his loving wife, rachel, who was his high school sweetheart, 17-year-old ben and 13-year-old daughter olivia. the fox news team will really miss him. alan was 47 years old. pete: he was a great producer.
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producer's producer. alan komissaroff, rest in peace.
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rachel: a 14-year-old experienced extreme reactions after the covid vaccine and placed iplaced in a wheelchair o years later she's got vision problems, poor neck control and waist-down numbness and needs a feeding tub. her mother is joining us now. thank you, stephanie, i wanted to follow up since we last spoke on the story and glad you can join us now. i'm sad to hear she's not recovered. since then, has anyone from pfizer or the federal government reached out to you to see what is going on with maddie and why she's not recovered from this trial vaccine? >> no, they have not. rachel: how does that make you feel that you gave your children over to a trial and this happened and no one has taken responsibility? >> angry.
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it feels like it's not real. this is not how i thought a trial was run. we've never been in a trial before i feel like we're living in a horror movie to be honest with you. i don't know how else to describe it. rachel: it's fascinating because you'd think pfizer would want to know what happened to the children in the trial and the federal government continues to recommend the vaccine for children and even babies. what are your thoughts on that? >> they should not be recommending this for children or babies. there's no benefit to it. there's only bad things that are going to happen and there's more and more kids that this is happening to in worse yet, they're dying. it's not stopping. rachel: i think perhaps the cruelest thing that happened is after pfizer and the federal government and our health officials ignored what happened to your child and it is serious what happened to her, very
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serious, you tried to join a facebook group, a community of other vax-injured people and they took down the group. they won't even let you get support from other people who are experiencing -- why do you think that was censored, that those groups were taken down from social media and why does the government and pfizer want to make you feel isolated? >> so there are several groups that were taken down. you basically had to talk in code. i think they wanted to take them down because they don't want the truth out and the numbers were just growing so, i mean, the amount of people in those groups is insane. rachel: yeah. >> yeah, they don't want the truth to be out. rachel: do you feel like -- do you feel like the truth is gets out? you have senator ron j johnson o has been a hero to the vax-injured community. do you feel like with the new change in leadership in the u.s.
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congress with republicans in charge, do you feel like there might be more interest in what happened to your daughter and others like her? >> definitely i do. i don't think it's going to happen overnight still. i don't want to be -- i think it's getting better and the dam is starting to be -- we're starting to break the dam but we have a ways to go. twitter also has helped because you aren't -- you can say what -- you can speak the truth there so i think that's also helped a lot. there are more and more politicians that are realizing what's going on. and i feel like the media also is starting to speak about it more, the ones that weren't in the past. rachel: yeah. well, my heart goes out to you. we're praying for you, and we're praying for maddie, and we hope that she gets the help that she
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needs to heal. i want to congratulate you for figfighting and continuing to ft for your daughter and other people's children. you're a brave, courageous woman. >> thank you very much. rachel: all right, coming up, michigan parents are outraged after a school board member declares whiteness is evil. the fallout from the disgusting social media posts, next.
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pete: a michigan school board member under fire over racially charged tweets. keisha hamilton tweeting this, whiteness is so evil and manipulates and says i want to apologize for my dishonest and trauma including practices that thinks you should applaud for being honest about the ability to manipulate and be dishonest. parents from the school district
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responding, listen. >> these posts made to incite and divide with no explanation of her supposed intention. >> board has an affirmative duty to call out keisha for the stunningly unprofessional behavior right here, right now tonight. pete: we're joined by the manager editor of michigan capital confidential james david dickson. james, thank you for being here kesha tweeted the last thing to worry about is an animal though it's a real threat but more danger is any whites on the trail and whites calling white people stupid, evil. what do you make of this kind of rhetoric? >> well, first of all, good morning. thank you for having me. it's unfortunate to have this kind of talk, especially in an education setting. a school district, a school building needs to be a house for all people. it's tough to see how someone could see these remarks and really continue to feel welcome.
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pete: james, is it not racist? >> i don't know about racist. clearly kesha hamilton is going through things. clearly she has issues to work through. what i would tell her and tell anyone woke person is who do you love? we've seen her write plenty about who she doesn't like and who she's afraid of. but who do you love? who are you there to represent? could you talk more about those people because those people need better from you, ms. l hamilton. pete: she gave us a statement when asked and she said whiteness defined as white racial identity, which refers to the way that white people, their customs, culture, and beliefs operate is the standard by which all other groups are compared. if you're obsessing over race and then calling people names because of their race, is that not by definition racism and why is is there a double standard
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here? >> i think my bigger problem is if you're one of those kids in jackson who sees this; right, one of the black kids in jackson, there's about 30% black kids in that district, if you'rd talking about whiteness, you're not talking about winning. you're not talking about opportunity. i think about 50 years ago in 1971, the klan blew up ten buses that were meant to bring integration to the pontiac school district. blew them up. 50 years later we're talking about mean tweets so we've come a long way and that's actually a good thing. pete: it's a really important point, we have come a long way and seem to be getting in our own way by continuing to obsess over our differences instead of what makes us human beings. james david dickson, thank you for your time. appreciate it. >> thank you. pete: you got it. coming up, alex baldwin charged with -- alec baldwin charged for involuntary manslaughter for the fatal shooting of cinematographer helena houston.
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but does the charge fit the crime? chip wave holding us with home building tips, you can do it yourself or at least try, that's coming up. ♪
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>> we definitely believe he pulled the trigger, the fbi lab
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report confirms that and definitely the trigger was pulled. >> mr. baldwin had a duty at the base level to never hold a gun and point at a person while pulling the trigger and had a duty as actor and producer on the set to have the bullets checked or check them himself to make sure they weren't live. will: actor alec baldwin facing involuntary manslaughter because he pulled the trigger. does this then fit the crime, charge of involuntary manslaughter and ask former prosecutor and assistant attorney and fox news cricketer andy mccarthy and new york based trial and attorney rebecca woodland. good morning to both of you. andy, do you think this is a fair charge? >> no, i don't think the criminal justice system is for tragic accidents and one of the
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biggest problem in the country is progressive prosecutors throughout america who won't prosecute actual willful criminals. here instead they're using the criminal justice system to go after somebody who even if you think this was terrible behavior, was not purr powsful and not an -- purposesful and not an intentional killing and nobody alleges that, not even the state. this is what the civil justice system is for. will: and there, andy, he'd be held to some standard of negligence, gross negligence and liable to be sued by the victim's family. >> he was. he settled the case in october. will: rebecca, coming to the criminal sides of this, involuntary manslaughter, what are your thoughts? >> i believe he was properly charged and there's a statute, a criminal statute in new mexico that is involuntary manslaughter which is criminal expenditure. i believe his conduct arose to
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criminal negligence, he knew or should have known his conduct was wreckless. he was on the set -- reckless. he was on the set as an actor and executive producer. it was his responsibility to make sure that the set was safe and that's why we have these laws. there are criminal procedures in place to prevent people from doing this or to create a safe workplace if you don't, look at what happens. someone died. an accident was an accident. this was more than an accident. this was disregard for human climate will: so, andy, i want to talk about the standard for a moment. this is often the issue when it comes to legal questions and rebecca brings up criminal negligence, okay. i got to be honest, in the beginning, andy, i was a little more on your side of it. i don't think he meant to hurt anybody and i'm a gun owner and understand safe gun practices, but i would have assumed on a set i sort of outsource a lot of that. i outsource to the armor, outsource these things and play pretend. it's not the real world, i'm an
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actor. from what i've been informed, it's not true. he had protocols, he understand the protocols and should have had training. it's a different world and he recklessly disregarded all of those protocols, those standard for an actor on that set. >> yeah, these are differences in degree. i think there's definitely negligence here. recklessness as a criminal law concept we're generally speaking about depraved mindset so talking about somebody that shoots a gun wantonly in a crowd and not waring what happens. that's not what happened here i don't think. there were terrible mistakes here and that's why there was a mega judgment in the case and didn't get the exact amount and there was no liability here. he did ask right before, moments before this killing happened whether the gun was hot or not. he was told that it was a cold gun. it's not like he didn't check,
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it's tragic but i think, yes, there are statutes but lots of statutes that actually direct themselves at the behavior of people who woefully violate the law and can't get prosecutors in this country to use them to go after actual criminals but here is a situation where nobody is claiming that the guy was trying to kill this woman. he subjected judgment and i don't think this is what the criminal law is for. >> there was no intent in the statute and didn't need intent and he's not being charged for murder but involuntary man sleuther and not been charged yet and -- manslaughter but we hear he'll be charged narrow angle a recklessness on the set. >> i don't know it rises to the level of criminal recklessness but i guess that's why they'll have a trial. will: what a fascinating conversation. andy mccarthy, rebecca rosen, appreciate the nature of the
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disagreement expugning this from both sides. as i had these conversations with andy many times and comments a reasonable person standard when put into that situation. reckless or depraved and all of these things that satisfy the standard. thank you, both, for enlightening us this morning so much. >> thank you. will: andy is on the big saturday and sunday show they knowing. check that out. all right, rachel, over to you. rachel: all right, this is now to your headline, today marks one year since the murders of two young nypd officers. a gunman ambushed jason and wilson one block from the precinct in harlem after tragedy that thousands of officers gathered for their funerals and rookie officer that shot and killed the gunman remembering his fallen bro brothers and sayg jason and will did that day is the core of them. they had palms out to serve and officers are out there every day doing the same thing, going to jobs just like that.
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prosecutors say disgraced theranos founder elizabeth holmes attempted to flee the country. she booked a one way ticket to mexico before her conviction but ended up canceling the trip. holmes, who is pregnant, was found guilty last year for defrauding investors in her failed blood testing startup company and was sentenced to more than 11 years and set to report in prison in april. it's girl scout cookie season and the nation's very first scuba troupe is selling cookie -- troop is selling cookies under water and set up a stand in austin and have favorites like samoas, tag al alongs and treffoils. when it comes to the popular cookie in the home state, it's no contest, it's all about thin mints. it's a clean sweep. pete: not my home state anymore. switch the photographic.
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rachel: i don't like this. pete: i'll take both. rachel: samoas are my favorite. will: i think tennessee might be different. it might not be thin mints. pete: we'll have to check it. how do you sell cookies under water? that sounds ridiculous? put them in zip lock bags and sell them? rachel: holding a sign. pete: they said their stand is underwater, rachel. you read it in the headlines. will: do you put thin mints in the freezer? pete: i t have thin mints in my fridge in my office. you can eat some right now. rachel: there's other things in his fridge. will: take it away, rick. rick: limiting your customer base by a lot if people have to go under water to get there. as someone with a business, don't want to limit your customer base. >> you like water. rick: true, very, very good point. temperatures waking up this morning, southern part of the
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country looking pretty good and nobody dealing with incredibly cold air out there and that's really good news. two little trouble spots of weather for us today. one of them is down across parts of the south, we've got scattered showers. we're going to see this throughout the day today and we also have the snow across parts of kansas and that'll be maybe 3 to 8 inches by the time this is done and watch the storm path here and saw storms similar a couple days ago to the north and this one to the south of it and by tomorrow, guys, it's towards the mid atlantic and parts of northeast with rain and interior snow. back to you. rachel: thank you, rick. up next, chip wade has been chipping away at his beautiful new home and shows us how far he's come. there he is. pete: he has a beautiful home and we'll show it to you. rachel: that's right. ♪
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pete: over the past year, chip wade has been build ago beautiful home in the north georgia mountains. rachel: using do it yourself methods that he learned along the way. it's gorgeous. will: and chip is here to show us how. chip. >> yes, good morning. we're here at pinhoody, pete and some of my favorite projects are the cellular pcv town and grove
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board and no maintenance or bugs ever and super easy to install and has wood grain veneer on top and called turner oak and i have it on the upstairs hallway and on the exterior and great on porch ceiling ands comes in all the different colors and profiles and find out more under the canvas tab versa tex.com don't use shims because they can shrink and mess up expensive countertops. easy level cabinet levelers have cool little blocks you can install in ten minutes and adjust them super, super easily and look at this. these come up and down after the cabinets install and revolutionizes the precision of easy dash level.com next up, large format tiles are no tore yously did i have -- t notoriouy
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difficult to install and monster clips and one piece system. slide it under, boom boom. super flush prolevel results and on the shelf at lowes and very inexpensive and have cool floating shelves and up to two times more capacity of linear shelves on the 3d visualizer and upgrade your house, garage, all those things. all right, last up. take off those foam covers to winterize your hose bibs. the hidra kit come withs a cool insert and water pressure holds it closed normally to turn it on and just do that to turn it off. simply pull it off and it'll self-drain, self-winter stormize and look how beautiful this looks. nice and beautiful. we've got all this up for you
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guys on wade works creative.com and of course we're about to finish up this house. lots of great tips on pinhoti peak as well. pete: i wrote down levrac. i need that. good stuff. rachel: thank you, chip. pete: we've got a big show ahead, we're only at half-time. join us for the third and fourto quarter. see you there. ♪
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>> good morning, everybody. it's 8:00 eastern time and that's chattanooga, tennessee. when you see that, pete, do you feel like, that's home? pete: i do now. that's really home and winters are mild and it was 60s and i was working in my yard yesterday. rachel: yo

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