tv Americas Newsroom FOX News January 23, 2023 7:00am-8:00am PST
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it blocks me from the truth is my experience. >> he needs to stop taking all drugs in order to stop thinking like a drug addict. back to you dana and bill. >> bill: thank you for bringing us that. very interesting question. thanks. >> dana: thank you. mexico's former top cop in the war against drugs now facing trial in the u.s. charged with taking millions of dollars in bribes to help the powerful sinaloa cartel. welcome to a new hour of "america's newsroom," i'm dana perino. >> bill: i'm bill hemmer. it is a monday in january. how are you feeling? >> dana: late january. getting through it. >> bill: federal prosecutors are telling us that luna gave the sinaloa cartel sensitive information to evade mexican forces attack rival cartels and move drugs safely into our country. >> criminal cartels is the new issue that is getting bad in the united states. the cartels in mexico are more violent now than ever before because they are fighting over
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control of products. they are making more money than they've ever made. >> bill: opening arguments in the cop's trial are set to begin there. hello, bryan. >> bill, good morning. luna is mexico's highest ranking government official to be criminally charged and tried in the u.s. in the early 2000s he let mexico's federal agency akin to the f.b.i. before becoming the top law enforcement official in mexico controlling the federal police force as the secretary of public security until 2012. prosecutors say the man who led mexico's war against the drug cartels was instead accepting briefcases stuffed with tens of millions of bribes from the sinaloa cartel. in exchange luna provided second ratty intel protection and helped with smuggling at least 50,000 kilos of cocaine into the u.s. over the course of the
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eight-week trial there is intrigue about embarrassing and damning revelations with high ranking u.s. and mexico officials who trusted him. he served as the right-hand of the mexican president but met with ranking u.s. officials including hillary clinton, robert mueller, john brennan and eric holder. it could serve as a damping reckoning of u.s. and mexico's relationship. >> it raises the specter at least from the u.s. perspective with whom do we share information? with whom do we actually communicate and collaborate with? who can we trust? and it's been a recurring issue now for well over 40 years. >> garcia luna faces three federal charges with smuggling cocaine and continuing a criminal enterprise. he faces up to life behind bars
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if convicted. >> bill: thank you, bryan llenas. >> dana: the justice department seizing more classified records from biden's delaware home friday. the f.b.i. searched his home this time for nearly 13 hours after criticism that agents were not there on prior visits. but president biden's attorneys were allowed to accompany d.o.j. officials. let's cover it for you. former speech writer for president bush marc thiessen standing by. aishah hosni live on capitol hill following the house probe into the classified documents. let's go to david spunt live in washington. >> this f.b.i. search happened while the president was at the white house on friday meeting with mayors across the country. we found out about it just a day later. the fact the f.b.i. searched a sitting president's private home is a massive story. something of this magnitude simply does not happen. according to the president's personal attorney bob bauer this was a voluntary search.
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no warrant. the f.b.i. was invited to come in. biden's attorney were there, too. juxtapose that with the search of donald trump's home and one big difference. that was not a voluntary search. a warrant was involved and trump's lawyers claim they were left in the dark. still while on the surface these cases may look the same in many ways, there is a glaring difference. the former president fought with the national archives and d.o.j. for months leading to the raid in august. president biden's team turned over the documents as they found them to the national archives and justice department. the problem, dana, for president biden is the public perception. the first batch of documents we've been talking about were found just about the mid-terms in november and the white house only clear and came clean to the public after cbs news broke the story more than two months later. the bottom line both presidents trump and biden are still under federal investigation. not good for either of them.
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robert hur looking into the biden documents is being brought up to speed while his staff assembles. the trump-appointed u.s. attorney in illinois still handling the cases but i'm told special counsel hur is receiving regular updates and his team takes over in a matter of days. >> dana: thank you, david spunt. >> bill: today house oversight committee chair james comer will formally request records on president biden's wilmington resident from the secret service. it said it would share a list of visitors who went there after the white house counsel's office office said no accounts had been kept. >> good morning, bill. comer said it is gone from being irresponsible to down right scary as he gets ready to take advantage of the f.b.i.'s offer to hand over some of those records. watch. >> any type of correspondence, any type of emails or documentation that would help us
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determine who actually had access to those documents and hopefully the secret service will work with us despite the fact this white house is not. >> comer said the document drama has all the makings of a cover-up and willing to hold people in contempt if they try to stone wall him. democrats are complaining about the classification process in general. >> this government has a tendency to over classify. if they're looking at a document and have to analyze and decide whether to classify, sometimes they mark it classified. >> it makes you wonder okay, were there other materials taken when other administrations left? we don't know. >> we did not hear any of that benefit of the doubt afforded to president trump when the f.b.i. raided his mar-a-lago home last summer. mark warner admits he still has not gotten a briefing on that document drama as he now seeks a threat assessment on this one.
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with biden's personal attorney confirming some of the latest document seized were from his time in the senate, bill, some are asking why and how he even took away classified documents from his time as senator? a lot of questions every day. >> bill: certainly. thank you, aishah, nice to see you on the hill. >> dana: let's bring in marc thiessen and former speech writer for president bush. even biden says he has no regrets. different than president trumps and much to do about nothing. not all democrats feel this way. >> do you fear that because of that, the current president has kind of lost the high ground on this notion of classified information being where it shouldn't be? >> it diminishes the stature of any person who is in possession of it because it's not supposed to happen. whether it was the fault of a staffer or attorney makes no
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difference. >> dana: as more democrats say something similar, is that a problem for president biden? >> it is a problem and i think aishah hosni just keyed in on the big differences here. these are now -- these latest documents from his senate tenure, now he can't claim he is not personally responsible for this. when he was -- when this was starting to happen when they were finding the documents from his vice presidentsy they threw the staff under the bus as people responsible. chung didn't work for him in the u.s. senate. he was -- he left the senate in 2009. over a decade ago. he arrived in 1972. where are these documents from that were from his senate offices? what it shows, this is not a staff problem. this is a joe biden problem. he is a serial mishandler of
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classified information going back a decade or more. they say trump was personally responsible for keeping these documents and resisting the f.b.i. joe biden was personally responsible for his handling classified information going back to his senate days. you can't blame the staff for this anymore. >> bill: dick durbin was on cnn, the democratic senator from illinois. we got that, okay. the whole point is that he in all likelihood could lose the high ground when it comes to this. toward the end "wall street journal." come on back. the public can see the double standard. the white house is indulging to explain away his actions even if most of the press corps does not. that might be the case but not prevent the press corps from saying that trump is indeed different from biden. how do you see that?
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>> there are differences but there are also differences that cut away against joe biden. look, he just said when he says i have no regrets, that just shows the cavalier attitude he has towards this. the proper answer is if you really want the moral high ground is to say look, any time there are classified documents outside a secure compartmented facility something has gone wrong and i want to get to the bottom how the documents got there. i didn't know about them and i take it seriously. he says no there there. i have no regrets. that just demonstrates the cavalier attitude he has towards this. these are not just secret documents or confidential documents. they are top secret sci documents. >> dana: i cannot imagine it. i can't imagine it. they're clearly marked. >> how do you take it out? >> dana: i would never, i hate getting in trouble. i hate that. exit stage left -- i mean left. ron klain the president's chief
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of staff is going to be leaving and replaced by jeff zients who has a good reputation as a manager. an opportunity for reset when a new chief of staff comes in. do you think he would have a different approach on the documents or any other thing? you already hear rumors the left is wary of zients because he is not known as a progressive guy. maybe he is but not known for that. >> first of all ron klain presided over the worst two years of any presidency in my lifetime. think of the disasters he presided over. the worst inflation in 40 years, worst collapse in real wages in four decades, worst border crisis in american history, the worst crime wave since the 1990. the worst labor shortage in american history. this is the first major turnover since the election.
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this election was a couple months ago. if there had been a red wave not only would people be trying to push biden aside he would be cleaning up his white house to demonstrate he is changing course. instead it is basically he has asked what will you do differently? he says nothing. he will change his chief of staff. there should be a huge shake-up in the white house. they narrowly averted disaster. the only reason they didn't have a disaster voters rejected the republicans not endorsed the democrats. >> dana: good to see you, marc. >> bill: he hasn't been a u.s. senator since january of 2009. 14 years ago. i've never looked as a classified document. why did you react that way? >> you heard some members say they over classify things. you might get a thing. i read about this in the "new york times." that's one thing. if it's a document that's top secret sci something
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compartmentalized information it comes with a document with a big cover sheet top secret, f.b.i. and it is not like oops, i put it in my bag by accident and when you get a secret -- also you sign your name to promise that you will never do anything inappropriate with these documents. that you will keep them secret and take care of these documents. it is pretty irresponsible. i can't imagine doing it because i hate getting in trouble. the idea i might get in trouble would make me not do it. >> bill: i know that. >> dana: i guess biden doesn't feel the same way. >> bill: the trial of the century. the member of a prominent legal family going back three generations charged with killing his wife and son, jury selection gets underway today. >> dana: a night of violence in atlanta. anti-police demonstrators set
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- the past few years have been a challenge for our physical and mental health. - join kate and me as we get personal about our own journeys and how the conversation around mental health has changed. - watch our conversation on peacock. >> dana: a double murder trial is rocking south carolina. you probably heard about this. disbarred turn alex murdaugh is accused of killing his wife and son after stealing money from his law firm and clients. jonathan serrie is covering the case. jury selection is underway. a lot of interest in this trial. >> the judge decided to allow a live audio feed but no cameras during the initial and perhaps painstaking phase of the trial jury selection. the court trying to find impartial jurors within this
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very small close knit community where the murdaugh family was a household name playing a prominent role in the legal system of that community for multiple generations. the case began in june of 2021 when alex murdaugh called 911 to report he discovered the bodies of his wife and 22-year-old son paul who had been fatally shot on the family's 1700 acre estate in south carolina down in the low country. the prosecution suggested alec murdaugh committed the murders to gain sympathy and distract from allegations he pocketed $8 1/2 million in settlement money intended for clients. murdaugh's law license was suspended in september of that year after state agents accused him of hiring a hit man in a failed attempt to orchestrate his own death so his surviving son could collect a $10 million life insurance policy and opened a criminal investigation into
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2018 death of a family housekeeper who tripped and fell on the front steps of the murdaugh family home. his attorneys said we're prepared to challenge the state's allegations and demonstrate the weaknesses in the state's case before a jury. alec looks forward to the opportunity to clear his name of these charges so the attorney general can begin looking for the actual killer or killers of alec's beloved wife and son. prosecutors are not seeking a death sentence. so if convicted murdaugh could face life in prison without the possibility of parole. >> dana: we'll be watching. thank you. >> bill: nancy grace has been on the story from the beginning and the host of crime stories on fox nation. good morning to you. there are so many very interesting details about the family, three generations in and out of this courtroom 50 miles west of charleston. they run so deep that the accused grandfather had a portrait of himself hanging in
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the courtroom. they had to take it off the wall. he was top prosecutor for 46 years. jury selection begins now. the local newspaper says the alex murdaugh's trial first challenge finding 12 jurors with open minds. nancy, to you on day one. how do you see it? >> well, they aren't seeking the death penalty. two dead bodies. two dead bodies and no death penalty being sought. this is all gravy even if he is convicted. 30 years if he gets life behind bars. that said, typically you can strike a jury with about 100 jurors that gives you 20 for the state to strike, 20 for the defense to strike, 12 jurors and a couple alternates. they are bringing in 900 jurors.
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so i believe out of 900 people they will be able to find 12 and 2 alternatives that will say truthfully i've heard about the case but i will make my decision based on what i hear in this courtroom. i think that's going to happen. the whole thing about let's find the real killer, sorry, o.j. simpson used that one. they need to let that go. >> bill: the story that i saw this morning concludes with this line, nancy. another question remains will murdaugh testify in his own defense? is it too soon to answer that? >> no. it's not too soon. the answer is no. right now this jury is only going to hear about the two murders. once he gets up on the stand, the gate is open to bring in so much more evidence against him. trust me, he cannot control himself. he is uncontrollable. no lawyer in her right mind will
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put an uncontrollable client on the stand. the judge will make sure that it's put on the record he chooses not to take the stand. it would be a disaster. it would be a bomb in the courtroom if he takes the stand because he can't be controlled. >> bill: not to make this more confusing but we've spoken about this trial before over the past year. there is a case four years ago that involved his son, right? he had a boating accident where a 19-year-old girl suffered injuries so devastating that she died from them. and i don't know if that case was ever settled or whether or not a settlement agreement had been reached but i think as of today, that's still an open question. early on some were suggesting that there was a connection between the boating accident and what is happening today. do you think there is, or is there evidence to conclude that yes indeed they are separate matters or that there is a
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connection? >> both. they are separate matters but teen girl, i went on the water where his son was driving like a maniac drunk as a skunk, mallory goes flying over hits cement pilings. took three days to find her body. they had a lawsuit against the murdaughs. as a result of that all of alex murdaugh's sneaky dealings became exposed and his wife maggie found out about them. when maggie and paul died it cleared the air on any potential discovery being brought up to maggie as part of her divorce proceeding. so i think that it could be argued with a straight face that the beach incident and ending the lawsuit could have been a motive. >> bill: so many layers and cameras in the courtroom.
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we'll be watching. nancy, thanks. talk to you later in the week. thanks. dana. >> dana: there was an anti-police protest turning into a riot in atlanta. we'll take you inside the chaos. and a democrat-run city moving to allow so-called safe injection sites for drug users. is that a good idea? we'll ask a recover addict who now helps others overcome addiction. >> dad: it's okay. pull over. >> tech: he wouldn't take his car just anywhere... ♪ pop rock music ♪ >> tech: ...so he brought it to safelite. we replaced the windshield and recalibrated their car's advanced safety system, so features like automatic emergency braking will work properly. >> tech: alright, all finished. >> dad: wow, that's great. thanks. >> tech: stay safe with safelite. schedule now. >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪
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>> bill: there was what was considered a night of rage in the city of atlanta over the weekend. boiled over to chaos and rioting. protestors angry at the shooting death of an activist after confrontation with police. they marched in the streets and burned cop cars. steve harrigan has the fallout today. where is it going next? >> bill, the cleanup still underway. several banks and other buildings had windows smashed with rocks and hammers. one police car set on fire. some activist in a small group
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wearing bandanas, ski masks as well as hoodies and thorn bent on violence. it had nothing to do with the first amendment simply people trying to wreak destruction in downtown atlanta. >> it doesn't take a rocket scientist or attorney to tell you that breaking windows and setting fires is not a protest. it's terrorism and they will be charged accordingly and find this police department is committed to stop that activity. >> the trouble all started last week just outside atlanta a wooded area where construction of a police training center is underway. several groups including defend the forest have set up camps trierg to block that construction. during a police raid one activist was shot and killed after police say he shot and wounded a georgia state trooper. as it stands now 13 people have been arrested and all charged with domestic terrorism. almost all of them in their 20s, none from the state of georgia.
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back to you. >> bill: steve harrigan. see where it goes next. >> dana: cross-country to san francisco. that city is moving closer to allow than so-called safe injection sites for drug users. the mayor is working to overturn a law that blocks nonprofits from setting them off. thomas wolf is a recovery advocate and tom, good to have you this morning. want the play this video from your twitter feed. call for number one. watch here. >> over there you have, you know, 10, 12 drug dealers, organized drug dealers working in shifts. they all sell fentanyl and meth. those are the primary drugs they sell. they make anywhere from $5 hundred to $1500 a day out here. >> dana: what are you showing everybody there? >> i'm showing them the open drug scene that exists in san francisco and all over san francisco. right now we have 500 organized cartel fueled drug dealers selling drugs openly on our
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streets 24/7. they sell meth, fentanyl. crack cocaine off the backs of the homeless out there struggling with addiction and a lot of drive-up customers that come from as far away as santa rosa. >> london breed said overdose prevention sites can be part of a strategy to save lives and address open air drug use in our community. do you think that is not accurate based on your experience. why? >> well, because, look, what we're doing with these safe consumption sites or supervised sites is addiction maintenance. why? we don't have the other comprehensive strategies she talks about in place. san francisco has 37 detox beds in the entire city of san francisco with 25,000 drug users in the city. we only have 500 drug treatment
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beds in all of san francisco. when she talks about comprehensive services, what are those services? at this point we skip over 25 steps in this whole care plan for people that are struggling with addiction. straight to palliative care. that's what the consumption sites are. you create a space for someone to go inside and use drugs and somebody to stand there and watch over them with narcan to revive them should they overdose. that is not the road to recovery. that is not part of the recovery part if you don't have the other pieces in place. >> dana: i became addicted to oxy after surgery and led to heroin. you were homeless and in the tender loin district. do you think doctors were in a position whether they were oversubscribing or not. your inability to get the
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prescription from the doctor that i imagine pushed you to heroin. do you think there should be something on that side of the policy angle that we should be looking at? >> well, you know, there has been a lot of restrictions been put in place since the initial addiction crisis of over prescribing oxy to people on the street. now it's harder to get those drugs from doctors. but really our goal has to be recovery. how to get people off of those drugs. that should be the goal, recovery from addiction is the answer. >> dana: how long did it take you to recover? >> well, i'm still in recovery and always be in recovery. but i had to go to jail for three months because i was doing stuff out on the street that got me arrested and from there i went to a six month residential treatment program and put me on the road to recovery. a total of nine months to lay that foundation and then since then i have been actively in recovery and i go to meetings
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and do what i need to do to stay clean and sober. >> dana: it is great to have you as we kick off this week with a little bit of hope and an interesting perspective on this issue. please stay in touch with us. good to have you. >> thank you. >> bill: the struggle was real for him. >> dana: he did it. >> bill: that's right. inspiration, well done. 23 minutes now before the hour. coming up here did anonymous chinese donors funnel millions of dollars to the university of pennsylvania and the penn biden center. the school is saying it did not happen. only four teams left in the nfl playoffs. this scene on sunday damar hamlin in a league of his own. how he completed his miracle on sunday in buffalo. ♪
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>> bill: check it out. fox business begins today, a whole new lineup. former education secretary devase says the biden administration is ignoring huge donations by china to a penn biden center in washington, d.c. gillian turner is live in the d.c. bureau to follow it today. good morning. >> conservative watchdog group the national legal and policy center is reporting that once the biden center was established by the university of pennsylvania, foreign donations skyrocketed including from china. listen. >> we filed a complaint with the department of education because universities are supposed to
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disclose any gift over $250,000. the education department didn't do anything about it. >> former education secretary betsy devase says the trump administration created new rules that made universities be transparent and report all foreign gifts. take a listen. >> there has been no teeth in that law. once the biden administration came into office this disbanded that program and are no longer making those kinds of requirements for schools to disclose where their foreign contributions, foreign investments are coming from. >> new oversight chairman james comer says china connections are especially worrisome to him. >> when you look at all the things our investigation is covering with respect to the influence peddling. there is a lot of connections with the ccp directly to both hunter biden, his uncle jim and
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joe biden. >> former speaker newt gingrich told fox news u penn is not the only school that regulators should be looking at when it comes. >> the university of delaware has kept everything totally secret and had a state judge condemn them for their secrecy. we have no idea where the money comes from. in terms of looking for documents, there are 1,850 boxes and several hundred electronic documents that biden transferred to the university of delaware. >> we've reached out to the department of education and they tell us, bill, they have made no changes to the reporting requirements for universities when it comes to foreign donations and they insist they are continuing to follow all the applicable laws. >> bill: more to come. >> dana: the crowd in buffalo erupting yesterday as the return of bill's player damar hamlin three weeks after his cardiac arrest on the field.
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we have hamlin back in the stadium cheering on his team in a playoff rematch against the cincinnati bengals, right, bill? great moment. it wasn't enough to get the bills to the championship round. clay travis joins us now. apparently i've been saying bengals instead of bengals. to my ear i can't hear a difference. i will give it more effort. >> this is the star turn of dana does sports. fox has the super bowl. toss it out there, i know bill is a big bengals fan. i think they should put you maybe down there on the sideline to make sure what's going on during the super bowl. a lot of reporting jobs. a big move. >> bill: i think you are on to something. the commercial talk we have sitting here today. the bengals went after the deficiencies in buffalo's defensive line and secondary and offensive line as well. dana and i were talking you have
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four teams still alive. eagles and 49ers. both teams are very good. you have bengals and chiefs. what are the weaknesses? both teams are very good. >> look, patrick mahomes is going to be in his fifth straight afc championship game. he is only 27 years old. it is freakish. joe burrow, i'm sure you saw the video before the game started, bill where he throws a pass in warm-ups and spins around and doesn't see whether it will be caught. it is a perfect throw. i think what is occurring certainly on the afc side of the board here is we've got so much young talent at the quarterback position. josh allen and the bills didn't have a good game but he will be in the mix. we'll see what ends up happening with lamarr jackson. you have a lot of talent in l.a. when you look at justin herbert.
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i probably leave somebody else. on the nfc side you have the story of brock purdy, the last draft pick third string when the season began for the 49ers and stacked the 49ers at every other position. then hertz has come out of nowhere for the eagles. before the season fans said we'll give him an addition. he will come up second overall behind patrick mahomes. the final four will be great. fox has the super bowl out in glendale, arizona outside of phoenix. i expect to see dana perino on the sideline for the greatest dana does sports in the history of sports. >> dana: i don't know. i wouldn't want to -- fine, i'll do it, fine. but i really appreciate the fact the eagles fans filing oared out the way to get around the loophole for the tailgating. they said you can't tailgate until a certain time of day.
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they said okay, fine. we'll buy tickets to the lacrosse game so that they could get in there because the lot opened earlier. that's serious commitment right there. >> look, the whole tailgate scene for people who are big time tailgaters, particularly college football more than the nfl. a lot of people would rather win the tailgate than the game. that's crazy to think about. reminds me back in the date ole miss football said we may not win the game but never lost a party. the festivities in buffalo and philadelphia and i think frankly they were potentially if the bills had won that game going to play the afc championship game in atlanta in a neutral site because they didn't finish the again balls/bill games. now kansas city gets to host the championship game again. you are a cincinnati sports fan. it took a long time for the bengals to be as good as they
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are and you toss in kansas city couldn't win anything and they get patrick mahomes and five straight afc championship games they host. a lot of fun on sunday. >> bill: great to see you. talk later in the week and see where we are then. >> dana: thanks for the career coaching. >> keep working, dana, you've got this. >> bill: the feds seizing assets worth more than $7 hundred mill from the crypto kid accused of stealing billions from his customers. where that case is right now coming up. the rate on credit cards is now over 22%. if you want to save hundreds of dollars every month, pay off the balances on your high-rate cards with a lower rate va home loan from newday usa and get the financial peace of mind every veteran deserves. no one takes care of veterans like newday usa.
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>> harris: what a name. president biden is a serial document hoarder. that's what the house intelligence chairman is saying about the commander-in-chief after the f.b.i. found yet more classified materials at biden's house. even democrats are finding it whatrd to defend him. mind bending new numbers on the president's illegal immigration crisis. one official saying his city along the border is beginning to
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collapse. alec baldwin's wife using her fake spanish accent really making people angry again. house republican whip tom emmer in "focus" for the first time. jason chaffetz and jason rantz. >> dana: disgraced crypto boss sam bankman-fried is defending himself on twitter and authorities seized assets and money. >> sam bankman-fried has never been known for keeping a low profile. the nearly $7 hundred million seized since the beginning of the year. just a few weeks' time. this it comes as he awaits an october criminal trial facing eight counts of fraud. he shared months ago he only had $1 hundred thousand left in his bank accounts. the assets came from a number of banks but majority came from robin hood shares purchased
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using stolen customer funds. early last year bankman-fried revealed he had bought roughly $648 million worth of shares a 7.6% stake in the investment app. the shares are valued now roughly around $530 million. the shares of particular interest. they were supposed to back a $680 million loan from ftx sister company to the exchange block buy that they defaulted on. he claims he is innocent and accusing management about a fake narrative. he tweeted this. ftx u.s. is solvent as it always has been. the new ceo fired back. that would mean covering losses at the u.s. exchange through funds belonging to other customers. he told the "wall street journal" this is the problem he thinks everything is one big honey pot. for now the search for more customer funds continues. ftx lawyers say they've
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recovered over 5 billion in assets. every week they continue to find new wallets and hiding places. hopefully more will come out soon. back to you. >> dana: thank you for keeping us updated oh than that. >> bill: he is still tweeting? what's up with that? we'll take a moment as colleagues and friends to talk about a dear colleague and friend of ours and dana we share a lot of tough moments up here. we don't really know what happens when the news breaks and we bring it to viewers the best way we can. but this is talking about our friend and colleague allen is tough. very difficult for all of us. he was 47. he passed away on friday afternoon. he was our senior vice president of news and politics and he leaves behind an awesome wife, rachel and two beautiful children who are now teenagers. for allen, it was his intellect, it was his wicked sense of humor, it was his irreverent as
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necessary view on the world. he loved his neighbors in new jersey and worked so hard for us. he loved the knicks and the jets and he grew up in brooklyn near sheepshead bay. if you worked at fox news allen touched your life. he was a part of everything we do here. we were together 14 years and to his wife and his mother and two children, you now have a new angel looking out for you in heaven above. so rest in gentle peace, my friend. we love you. >> dana: yesterday at the funeral service, the gathering was standing room only and it was very interesting just to see when you reflect on a life how many people he touched. his career accomplishments are obvious and here we all are. a lot more to come on that as we continue in his legacy.
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his friends and family were out in droves and what's interesting is that a lot of people were speechless. it came as a shock. he will be greatly missed. a gofundme page we encourage everybody to consider donating for the education of his children. we'll make sure that's available to everybody here. he brought you a lot if you watched fox news over the years. rest in peace, allen. >> harris: we begin with this fox news alert with the feds considering the search of president biden's second home in delaware at this hour. he may begin to rethink those words he said in defiance last week, no regrets? our president is personally lawyered up to his teeth and this didn't help. the f.b.i. conducted a sweep of his wilmington, delaware home
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