tv FOX Friends First FOX News March 1, 2023 1:00am-2:00am PST
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reduce homicides and started making real progress on public safety. >> is she kidding me? tenure includes chicago's deadliest year in a quarter century, 700 homicides last year, not a reduction, highest since 1999. chicago, be happy, you have a chance to change. gutfeld next. >> todd: standoff underway in kansas city, you're watching "fox and friends first" on wednesday morning, i'm todd piro. >> ashley: i'm ashley strohmier, in for carley shimkus. the officers are alert and awake and talking from their hospital bed. the community is praying everyone else can make it home safely tonight. marianne joins us with the latest. >> marianne: good morning, all three kansas city police officers who were shot are
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expected to make a full recovery. the officers were executing a search warrant when they were met with gunfire. a standoff is still ongoing where the shooting took place. chief graves gave an update on the officers, three officers were struck, they did return fire and self-transported to the hospital and all three are in non-life-threatening condition. chief graves spoke to all the male officers in the hospital. mayor lucas tweeted a response saying we've been reminded too much in kansas city how dangerous police work can be, praying for a full recovery for our officers injured this evening and that everyone on duty gets home safely. missouri highway patrol will handle the shooting investigation since it was kansas city officers involved.
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back to you. >> ashley: thank you, lori lightfoot on her way out of the mayor's office, conceding just before 10 p.m. >> todd: brooke singman live in washington, good morning. >> brooke: lori lightfoot, first chicago mayor in 40 years to lose their re-election bid,un areoff between valis and johnson on april 4th. lori lightfoot came in third with dismal 17%, she conceded late last night. listen. >> we fought the right fight and put the city on a better path. i'm grateful we worked together to remove record number of guns off our streets, reduce hom homicide and started helping public safety. you don't win every battle, you never regret taking on the powerful and bringing in the
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light. >> brooke: the two candidates heading into the runoff are promising a brighter future for the crime-ridden city. >> we will have a safe chicago. >> no matter where you live, no matter what you look like, you deserve to have a better, stronger, safer chicago. >> brooke: chicago crime went up at rates not seen in decades under lightfoot's leadership since 2019, murder is up 59%, robberies spiked by 27%, theft by 31% and motor vehicle theft skyrocketed by 270%. first three weeks of 2023, chicago's crime rate was up 61% from the same time period just last year, putting the figure on pace to surpass 2022 total of 66,000 violent crimes. during her time in office, lori lightfoot was criticized for
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public appearances where she was seen singing and dancing and chicago reported highest murder rate in 25 years with nearly 800 homicides. >> ashley: hopefully whoever takes over will get that under control. thank you. kayleigh mcenany recounting how lightfoot put identity politics over policy during her time, watch. >> i called out chicago crime, we care about victims of crime. she responded and called me a karen. she had enough time to call out the white house secretary as karen rather than focus on crime in her city. i loved her dance moves, they were not good, sorry, karen here, you lost. >> todd: judge delaying the trial for mosbey after her defense team up and quit.
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her lead defense attorney quit last month after he was scolded for using profanity in an interview outside the courthouse. mosby is accused of facing financial hardship to withdraw $90,000 from retirement account and made down payments on two vacation homes and failing to disclose unpaid federal taxes. she faces time in prison, the trial slated to begin this november. today jurors in the double murder trial of disgraced attorney alex murdaugh set to visit the scene with paul and maggie were killed. six witnesses were called, including crime scene expert who let the attorney general point a gun at his head for a reen actment.
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murdaugh's former law -- >> i have had extreme anger because of what he did to my law firm, my partners, my clients, his clients, our clients, what he did to his family, you are dead wrong if you think i come in here and told this jury something because of money when we were talking about two people brutally murdered, you're headed in the wrong direction. >> todd: court is expecteds to resume at 11 a.m. today. fbi director christopher wray said he believe covid originated in a chinese lab. >> ashley: just hours ahead of the select committee on china prime time hearing. lucas tomlinson has details. good morning, lucas. >> lucas: good morning, guys, director providing first public confirmation on the coronavirus origin from china. >> the fbi has for quite
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sometime now, assessed that the origin of the pandemic are most likely a potential lab incident in wuhan. i should add, our work related to this continues and there is not a lot of details i can share that aren't classified. >> lucas: china foreign ministry responded, certain parties should stop rehashing the narrative and stop smearing china and politicizing origin tracing. here is congressman jim bankes. >> do you think the wuhan lab was involved in bioweapon research? >> well, i think we know for certain that the chinese military is involved in research into coronaviruses. this is an area there is great deal of information that has yet to come out that will show there
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was enormous amount of interest. >> lucas: one human rights activist offered the following. >> since the 1990s, u.s. companies have enriched themselves by exploiting cheap labor in china and have in the process also enriched the ccp. >> big tech, hollywood sports leagues, all say the right things in america, but are silent in china, bending the knee to the ccp. >> lucas: here is h.r. mcmaster. >> it is not going to be good from the view of xi jinping and our own election, which we tend to be fractuous during election, he may perceive weakness. if we think of deterrence as capability times will, capabilities are not where they should be and capacity and their perception, which i don't think
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is right, but the party perception makes it a dangerous period. >> lucas: christopher wray says the number of investigations involving china increased in recent years. >> todd: lucas, thank you, let's bring in jonathan gilliam. great to have you. heard that hearing information testimony, are you confident this hearing will be the start of real, tangible major steps to combat what is america's number one adversary in the ccp? >> jonathan: no, i don't think it will make a big difference and i tell you why. that sound bite you played from mcmaster when he's talking about their perception of us could be a problem, he needs to realize the old saying when i was in fbi, perception is reality is absolutely true and as we know,
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nothing new is going to be found in a committee hearing about china. i find it very interesting when people who supposedly have all this experience, including the republican representative gallagher in charge of the committee, who was a marine in the intelligence unit in the marine corps that these people have higher degrees and higher understanding about china have to have a committee to try to figure out what is going on when i can ask almost any american what china is doing and they know already. these committees are a lot of talk and the very fact that their purpose or one of the basis of this is bipartisanship, if democrats wanted to do something about china, they have had over six years of slamming trump and concentrating solely on trump, they could have put a
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little concentration on china and things probably would have changed, but they didn't do that, i don't think bipartisan is the name of the game on this issue. >> ashley: it doesn't sound like you think they are going to do much, if you were in charge of trying to reel china in, what would you do? >> i'd be having meetings behind closed doors with real experts, talking about people who work for the cia, men and women who work for the fbi. the fbi is a bad oura about them right now, i know plenty people who work in counter intelligence aspect against china and they know down to the minute detail what china is doing. they need to stop having conversations in public and start looking for solutions behind the scenes. if things are classified, as mcmaster talked about, go behind
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closed doors and start looking for solution with operationally minded people, not just people who know about china, that doesn't seem to fix anything in washington, d.c. >> todd: talk is cheap, we need action, the chinese are acting and we're sitting on our hands. house oversight committee says treasure department obstructing their probe. chairman james comer calling on top treasury official to testify, saying, "given the amount of time since our initial request and treasury failure to provide expected timeframe, the committee believes treasury may be delaying production to hinder and operate in bad faith. comer has been talking about, get documents from treasury, no documents, is this stone walling a sign the documents are bad look for the biden family?
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>> jonathan: anybody in executive position in washington, d.c. in any of the agencies, favors the democrats and this is a real problem and this is another example of this long-standing issue where people at the top of these agencies that would crush you and i if they saw we had certain amount of suspicious activity or thought we were doing something illegal, they would come after us in a millisecond. people at the top are so political, they refuse to go forward and look at the bidens. like we were talking about china, talk is cheap. we could take unt hadar biden, joe biden, and give to any prosecutor and they could have finished this within the first two months of this calendar year. it just comes down to the fact
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that washington, d.c. does not move forward, they just talk so that people can get re-elected and that's it. >> ashley: merreck garland will appear today -- what do you think will come out of this, do you think it is going to be rough for him? >> this is the third thing, i don't think anything will come out of this, again, here is where i do believe that congressmen can get together and make a difference. they have to stand together, republicans have to stand together and stand against the left, who democrats will come in and try to push back on this. the republicans have to do the same thing the democrats did for the past six years. they have to play hard ball and push forward and show the
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american people how incompetent this attorney general is and how criminal he is. if they don't do that, together as a group, you will see sound bites from individual congressmen. they have to come together and work as a team to go after ruthless criminal elements in our government. >> todd: you said any local sheriff department would have handled the hunter biden case in two months, i'm still waiting for the special counsel and no hunter biden special counsel appointed by garland. supreme court could sink joe biden's $400 billion student loan hand out, here is how randi weingarten feels about it. >> that is not right, that is not fair and that is what we're fighting when we say cancel student debt. >> todd: i have rough time reading signals, is she angry?
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>> todd: the shocking murder of a homeless man caught on tape in st. louis. the suspect calmly loads a weapon and shoots the man at point-blank range. the two were in a fight moments before. the suspect facing first-degree murder charges. there have been 25 murders in the city in 2023, spark ing cris to -- missouri senator josh hawley tweeting kim gardener must go, prosecute the criminals. homeland security holding the first border on the fentanyl crisis. >> it is the broken illegal immigration system, if people
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have a legal opportunity to come to this country, they do not choose the option. >> disconnected from reality, going on about broken immigration, we are the most generous, compassionate wealthy nation in the world for immigration, our border is wide open and out of control and americans are dying because of it. >> todd: that is congressman clay higgins. michigan mother breaking down as she tells lawmakers about the day her two sons died from an accidental fentanyl overdose. >> law enforcement made it clear this fentanyl came from mexico. i didn't know what fentanyl was, i didn't know what narcan was. i didn't know my boys were taking anything that could kill them, they didn't think they were either. the government knew.
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the government has known for years and years and you talk about children being taken away from their parents. my children were taken away from me. this should not be politicized, this was not an overdose, this was murder. this is war, act like it, do something. >> todd: just last year over 50 million fentanyl pills were seized at our southern border. >> ashley: gosh, that was so hard to hear. noncitizens might soon be able to cast ballots in washington, d.c. local officials in the nation's capital passing a bill to allow illegal immigrants to vote. two immigrants who became citizen in 2021 and host of restitch america podcast and mike diaz, father of four, living in the state of
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california. thank you both for being with us this morning. you waited 18 years to become a legal citizen of the u.s., when you hear stories like this, how does it make you feel? >> i think the most important thing, the question i ask myself, why are we devaluing american citizenship? what does it mean to be american anymore? is there anything that differentiates the american citizen from anybody who comes into this country? that is the question i'm asking and wondering who is pushing this. i've been here more than 18 years and i've never seen a concerted effort on the part of illegal immigrants to push for this kind of right. is there a nefarious purpose for this, i don't understand why democrats are pushing this so much. >> ashley: mike, i want to follow-up on what he just said,
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you are retired firefighter, immigrated to the u.s., when you hear him say he doesn't see concerted effort from immigrants to push voting rights from them, where do you think it is coming from? is it the left thinking if we let them in, it is a vote for us? >> absolutely, i live in california, i get it and see it everyday and it is changing more and more every year, more and more left in california. it is. that is what they do. i was an elected official in my community and i've seen the efforts the left has pushed to try to change how we vote and how we change our communities. so it should anger all of us. for me, when i became a citizen, i did it the legal way, like many have, so that i could become a productive citizen and to be able to vote and i've
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taken voting extremely seriously. i've missed very few only because i was on fires or something like that. it is interesting how when you are given something, you don't respect it the same way as when you earn it. that is what really angers me. you have folks that come in and like l.a. just now was forced to remove 1.2 million ileligible voters off the voter roll and that gentlemen is correct, it is nefarious action by those in power and it's clear to me anyways. >> ashley: you said it so perfectly, you earned it, it means so much more than if you are given it. alma, i want to read this and want your response. house oversight committee james comer says this should go
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without saying only americans should have the power to influence local policy and guide their hard-earned taxpayer dollars to important initiatives. alma, there has to be other ways that noncitizens can participate without voting. >> definitely. there's so many different ways as an immigrant or noncitizen you can participate in the political conversation, of course, in my case, i did a lot before i became a citizen. i posted things online and volunteered where i needed to, you can join an advocacy group, support a campaign, if you are legal residents, you can donate and you can participate to make your voices heard without taking the right to vote. it is important that if we start giving the right to vote to noncitizens, basically we're disenfranchising american citizens and i think we're also
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legalizing foreign interference in elections. if you can come here and 30 days later be able to vote without allegiance to this country, what are we going to get? this is not just happening in d.c., other jurisdictions are looking at this. where does this end? the goal is to transform this country fundamentally. >> ashley: mike, one more question for you -- >> can i say real quick, he's got such a great points, how many international students do we have in the united states? do the math. over 1 million here in the united states at any given time and huge chunk by far overshadows every other group, chinese. i'm not saying chinese that have come here illegally are bad, those people are not our
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friends. i'm trying to be delicate about that, are they saying that folks that are here that don't care for the united states should be able to vote and change the law of the land? i don't think so. >> ashley: you mention the chinese and not being our friend, with this law, the staff at chinese embassy could vote. i think that is concerning to a lot of people. i got to leave it there, almaand mike, thank you for being with us and good for you doing things the legal way. you have the freedom to do whatever you want in america. and i'm so glad to have both of you on this morning. thank you so much. >> thank you. >> god bless. >> ashley: you, too, group of pro-life doctors expected to be part of a medical conference they have been attending for 15 years and then this happened.
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>> i was planning to be in this hotel at the exhibit booth, which we booked last year. after traveling to the area we were informed our exhibit booth had been cancelled. >> ashley: we're asking one doctor that was banned, what is going on. >> todd: confused there. have you ever seen anything like this? group of fishermen found themselves in the middle of a feeding frenzy, show you the rest of that, shark week, don't go anywhere. ♪
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>> ashley: this is the fifth close call involving a commercial airliner this year. >> todd: we got to get this straightened out. a fiery train collision in greece, searching for survivors after a passenger train hit a freight train heading in the opposite direction. this is near the city of larissa. the passenger train was carrying 350 people. the cause of the crash is unclear, the death toll is expected to arise. bill johnson calling for president biden to visit ohio. i have a message for president biden, it is past time to make the trip to east palestine. transportation secretary pete buttigieg says the president
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stopping by would have disruptive effect on the clean-up process and eric holcomb, releasing a statement, materials should go to nearest facility, not move to indiana, i want to know what precaution will be taken in the transport and disposition of the material. >> ashley: pro-life doctors say they were banned from attending an education conference over their stance on abortion despite inclusivity. this year's theme is building bridges and creating connection in medical education. >> todd: william lyles, pro-life ob/gyns, joins us now. so much for building bridges. >> yeah, the bridge got taken
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down. i trained under creog, i am also member of pro-life obstetrician and gynecologists and we have 7000 members and we take a stand to defend the right of our patients which are often denied because our patients were not born in the united states yet. we treat the babies in the womb as patients, we are doing blood transfusions to save their lives. cleveland clinic last year did open heart surgery on a baby 27 weeks gestation. the baby had a tumor on the heart, mom received an epidural and she was comfortable and the physician made incision in her abdomen and womb and had access to the baby. they brought out the baby's right arm and left arm to get
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access to the chest, but before they make the incision, a pediatric anesthesiologist gave iv fluids, when the baby was stable, the physician made an incision in the baby's chest, removed the tumor and the baby's heart started to beat immediately and closed the baby's chest and placed the baby's hand back in the uterus, closed the uterus and the skin and at 37 weeks they delivered that baby by c-section and the baby is doing well. we treat the preborn as patients and patients have rights. >> ashley: my jaw dropped hearing that story, incredible to hear that and so good to know there are doctors like you. it is well known you are a pro-life doctor and this group
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considers themselves to be inclusive, but they are leaving you out. how will you respond to this? >> we will stand up for patient rights, we are doing spina bifida surgery and injecting medication into the fluid to correct babies with abnormal heart rates. we stand up for the preborn, they are patients, we will stand and defend their rights, a person is a person, no matter how small and look at future of medicine. we want access to expose next generation of physicians on how to treat the preborn as patients. they are taught a latin term first of all, do no harm and then taught a patient is a person and entitled to respect
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and bodily integrity, open heart surgery, spina bifida surgery, these babies are patients and if they are a patient, they are a person. the declaration of independence, endowed with certain unalienable rights and among them is life, liberty and pursuit of happiness. >> todd: dr. lile, why were you banned this year and to the extent you were banned, isn't that antithesis of science, figuring out issues. >> you need debate and exchange of ideas to have innovation and innovation is important in medicine. i want to work in a field of medicine where we follow the
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science, not scientists, but the science. our organization is having an impact on the incoming training residents because they are visual learners and when they see we are doing open heart surgery, spina bifida surgery, they go, those are patients. i think we are banned because we are being effective. >> todd: whether covid or abortion, far left wants to stifle debate and that is bad. dr. william lile, thank you. new york city -- trying to make a living, pummelled and beaten on the job over $15. her attacker still on the loose this, mo, tell you what the terrified victim is saying. >> ashley: remember when biden promised this. >> president biden: rebuild the backbone of america, middle class and unite the country. we've been sent here to finish the job, in my view.
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>> ashley: the supreme court is appearing skeptical of president biden $400 billion student debt bailout plan. justices questioning whether the education department has legal authority to discharge federal student loan debt. president of the second largest teachers union, randi weingarten, was highlian mated in defense of the biden administration plan. listen to this. >> this pisses me off, during the pandemic we understood small business was hurting and we had them and it didn't go to the supreme court to challenge it. business was hurting and it didn't go to the supreme court. when it is about our students, they challenge it? >> ashley: whoa. randi weingarten comparing the
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student loan debt to businesses struggling during the pandemic. and lawmakers want to give homeless people $1000 to spend without restriction. the bill working through the deep blue state would provide 12 monthly payments of $1000 to individuals experiencing homelessness or risk of homelessness or earn below 60% of the area median income. recipients can spend on whatever they want. backers insist they would use it for housing, critics say it could be spent on drugs. >> todd: president biden making this promise during the state of the union, watch. >> president biden: to restore the soul of this nation, rebuild
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america's middle class and unite the country. we've been sent to finish the job, in my view, the middle class has been hollowed out for a long time. >> todd: alaskan workers want biden to approve massive oil project that would create thousands of jobs in the state, this after the state legislature passed a resolution to support the project. alaska state senator donny olson join us. great to have you here. you have buy-in from stake holders in the region, local governments, tribes and unions, how important is this project to the state of alaska? >> thanks, good morning. i think with that unanimous consent and the buy-in you have from people underlies how important it is.
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oil and gas represents the backbone of america. if the president is talking about supporting the backbone of this country, it starts with the states. the willow project, could represent anywhere near $10 million over the life to the local community and the state government. it is critical. >> todd: donny, here is what joe biden said recently talking about his green agenda. listen. >> president biden: this is going to have a major impact on the environment, what we're doing, specifically reducing carbon in the air as we begin to move 500,000 charging stations around the country and will take millions of barrels of oil off the road. >> todd: he wants to take oil off the road, you're a democrat, the president a democrat, are you confident you are going to get the most important member of your party to sign on to this
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project? >> that is what we're down here for, make sure the governor of state of alaska and the president of the united states of america is able to go ahead and see the need we have up there in the north, responsible development of petroleum products we produce during this time of worldwide economic, as well as energy needs and that is what we're down here for to try and convince the president that we as native people, we as democrats, are very much in favor of what is going on with this willow project because it is so important for not just the state of alaska, individuals that work there and also for the united states of america. >> todd: 100%. >> to stabilize what we have going on with the ukrainian situation happening. >> todd: it is important to the entire country, not just joe biden, many of your fellow democrats on the left want to eliminate fossil fuel.
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what is your message to them? >> our message to them, we may be able to eliminate fossil fuel, this is not the time to start it. things are too unstable right now, we need to continue on with what has proven itself in the past with oil reserve and we know there is stable government we can not have some type of shortage or some type of pipeline problem that will be happening, this is time to go ahead with this project we've been working with congressional delegation, including another democrat to go ahead with this project. >> todd: still awaiting word from joe biden. how can joe biden claim to support the middle class and potentially kill the project? seems like the two don't go hand in hand. >> you are right, it doesn't. the local impact opportunity that you have to help both donny and i represent district that has majority of diesel fuel
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generating and home heating off diesel fuel, majority of our communities, so as we look to affect the pocketbook of our constituents locally, just making it more affordable to flip the lights on in your home and heat your home, that is what this project represents. there has been local buy-in from the beginning and that is part of the process, you marry local input with industry operators and that is one thing alaska is good at taking into consideration the impact it may have and working to mitigate them in the operation plant. if we talk about supporting indigenous people of alaska and small communities that are most impacted by whatever is going on, this is one way to do it. >> todd: we wish you luck, donny and josiah, good luck in d.c. >> ashley: take a look at this
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incredible video taken off the coast of louisiana. what was originally supposed to be fishing expedition for yellow-fin tuna becomes scene of sharks in a feeding frenzy. the fishermen said hundreds surrounded the boat. his first thought was a tuna boil, term they use when fish make the water look like it is boiling. the crew said they got soaked. my husband would have been in heaven. he goes yellowfin fishing all the time, we've caught sharks, of course, we release them. >> todd: he can take my place on that boat. >> ashley: looks like fun to me. a news alert. >> todd: we will bring you the latest on this breaking story when we come back.
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