tv The Ingraham Angle FOX News March 3, 2023 12:00am-1:00am PST
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okay, so let'sone go to christie comedy .com. i'll see you be in florida nextk and then september. twenty second i'm at radio city music hall, but sold out. so we're adding a big surprise l that'll be on my website on monday.. >> christology .com cras h. anks to th thanks to the audience this afternoon. dave rubin, captain terry . i'm laura ingraham. this is the "ingraham angle"as from washington tonight.hingto >> the state versus richardr mud alex murdaugh murder defendant indictment foroc murder, guilty verdict.. the state of south carolina, county of collington in the court of general sessions, the july term of 2020 two .2022 the state versus richard alexander murdock, defendant indictment for murder, verdict guilty. >> now that is the moment reality set in fo alex murdaugh, the smooth talking scioaugh, thn of an eli.
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carolina family found guilty onl on all counts in the murder trial of his wife and son. a panel of 12 jurors returned a guilty verdict after fewer than three hours ofit w deliberationass. and it was so quick to quick. in fact, the judge didn't even offer him dinner. e now, according to reporters insy the room, his only living son , buster, sat in the gallery shaking his head in disbelief. but he did not appear to shed a tear. now, the trial really took thats turn after the jury saw a keyaw piece of evidence. it was a snapchat video taken by paul murdaugh at a dog minut kennels just minutes before hees and maggie were killed. lled >> listen.listen. you're going to hear three separate voices now for[is tibarbara. this is a chick now alex murdaugh maintained for
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years that he was not there. but when witnesses said he was third voice, murdaugh finally >> atted to , here's why. >> as my addiction evolved over time, i would get anyor cir situations or circumstances whercue i would get paranoid thinking and it couldold of be anything that that triggeredt it. >> once i told a lie, then i told my family at had to keep.i ha >> now the defenseve to keep isg that a lack of physical evidence would help them in their case. founto theto this day, investige not found the family ownedd rifle that they say he used norh to kill his wife, nor haveavn ud i found the shotgun used to kill his son t, paul . but the prosecution bankedatte on none of that mattering like the lie of him being at the kennels. they sold the jury on alecades o
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murdoch's decades of deceit. >> everyonf veryone e thought te close to him. everyone who thought they knewo he was who he was, he fooledal them all and he fooled maggie and paul to and they paid for it with their lives.lie don't let him fall into. that was a brilliant closenow kw as we now tonight. joining us now, mark eglash, who's a former prosecutor and criminal defense attorney , and francis hakes, former federal prosecutorrances. mark, let's start with you. b were you surprised by howe jury quickly the jury came back withc this decision?h >> >>es, because all those things y we were calling reasonable doubts were merely qs question as. a to this day,ns they might not even know the answer to those question questions.s. he does.
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ho he doew s how he was able to avoid getting blood all ove r him or if he did, how he's able to clean it up, how he was able to clean up that crime scene. those are just questions thatoue we thought might the give the jurors pause and may lead d to reasonable doubt. but they saw through it one thing that they didn't have any doubt over was his guilt so we could take away allegedly. we now know what a monster looks like. it's unbelievable. calchow cold and calculating ths guy is . it's so disturbing. >> and he's right where he needs to be now. .francey, the fact that he was really balling on the stand, i he was really conjuring up those tears of a lot of people t that you listen to .taken in by >> you're talking about itththat more taken in by that. and i really believe that he thought emotine g on the stand, it was risky, but that he could pick off one juror with his emotions. >> am i reading that correctly a you are, laura .actly wh >> that's exactly what hes what
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thought. and that's what ever e defeny dt who takes the stand is told by his defense team orfens thino on his own that all he needs he is one juror. he only haonly hs to persuade one that his tears, that his blubbering, that is sobbing were genuinely felt emotions and regret and even grief over the deaths of his wife and son.s >> and if he was that grieftrice strickenn,, his theory when then the jury would never believe that he could be so monstrouslyl evil as to kill them. a >> well, another point about the sister in law of murdaugh testifying for the prosecutione . there wasos a moment that wasthh overlooked by some that i thought was very significantt . him, >> i asked himi , i said, do you have any idea who said this? i said, we have got to find out who's who could do this. and he said that he did not know who it was, but he feltit
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like whoever did it had thoughto about it forut a really long time. >> i just didn't know what thatt meant. that meant. mark, that was an odd moment. you say someone else did it. what's your theory? someone who thought abou fort it for a long tim te, like like he had thought about it for a long time, apparently. >> so disturbing any and he and jujust you know, he didn't plant on okay, if not him, then who ? anyone of us.e anyse sense to ay okay, if it wa one of us . okay, if it wasn't you, thenin d someone else came in and didel? this knowing they'd be inyour the kennel using your weapons,,x alex , and then somehow gettings away undetecteomd, that never made sense. so at best he was hoping, aha, there's reasonable doubts in this thing because i planned itw with two guns to see how clever i was of a trial lawyer.tria i know about the system and they just didn't buy it as it relates to him. ths knew it was him.going to sit three hours says we're just going to sit back here, make
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sure it's unanimous and come on back real quick and send sen a message. >> nowt , there was another linr franci from murdoch's testimonym that really caught my attention. >> watch. >> intion.i'm sorry to max tamp. i would never intentionally do anything to hurt either one of them. >> the word intent really usehe. there. i don't know if he was hoping to get off on some manslaughter, you know, inn on t a lower instruction on thahat. >> but that was odd. it really was. i would call that leaking. i would call tha t unintentionaluninte leaking on his part where he says something that he doesn't quite mean in the stress of the moment. that is revelatory. to the rest of us , although i still think that was a lie because mark just made a great point. he did use two different weapo nsweapons. and to me, there was only onee e reason to do that.as
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and that is to make it look s like there were two separate killers sos. tated. so that means it was premeditated. he planned it in advance. puse those two weapons, fired multiple shots into the bodiesih of his wife and son with two different weapons as some sortdp of plan to putut the crimeon on someone else and make himself look innocent. mark, just really quickly, if he hadn't taken that gamblebh in taking the stand, murdaugh, in your mind, would it have changed the outcome at all? angeno, he had to .l. he was buried after the statee. rested their case. this was the hail mary .he n heee needed to go there and try to convince them. i don't think itit would would e made a difference. he was buried.he ain wh hey had to explain why he lied about not being there on the scene, which the jurors just could never get past. no, none of us could.why would o you know, why would you lie about that if you were snow-white innocent framed like the mona lisa? >> come on . yeah, the on the liar, but not a murder defense.
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that that didn't work. all right, mark and franci, we are going thank you so much. we're going to hav te more froom the groundh caroli in south carn just a bit.he but now the democracy offenders ,that's the focus of tonight's angle. e blow aren't the blowhards inrty wa the democrat party want americnf to believe that they're the true saviors of democracy? >> democra they'll take almost y opportunity to evangelizen pe on that topic.opha >> and people doubt thate on the elections are on the level thath is the beginning of the end of this wonderful democracy. democracy starts flying outsomeo the window and some other form of autocracyth for comes in when conspiracy theories likee the big lie are allowebid to grw . well, we grow. all saw what couo happen on january 6th. lame, lame, lame, checky.blame,e but how are democrats respecting democracy? is that flies out the windowprop when their president tries to usurp congress? cois spending power with billios and billions of student loan
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forgiveness?ou of course, the supreme court'srt going to strike that dowhe suprt like they struck down as unconstitutional vaccine mandate fois r large private companies. nice try, joe ., now, if the biden team cared about preserving democracy, the system, they wouldn't be pulling, they this nonsense.s and they're also spitting on our democratic systemo spittn they repeatedly fail to hold the fbi accountable. >> fto hold when the public sej how the doj targetsts lib conservatives and then lets liberals skateer. shatter >> well, faith in our rule ofe law shattered. let's let's take a look at the hardened criminals that your justice department sent these armed agents to go terrorize on that morning. here they are. here they are.y are at mat mass . here's the seven children with mr. houk and his wife. he has. offered to turn himself in. ted this is who you go to terrorize. >> the politicization ofrre. the department n of is a problem.you ca
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and you can n tell your department not a chance in . we're going to be reauthorizing that thing without some major, u major reforms. >> as the department ot somef je brought even a single cases. under this statute. >> so, yes, no question the jobunited of the united states marshalse --is to defend the lives.he >> the answer is no. garland was thoroughly unconvincing and so much for the concept of fitness for office. now, any democratically elected officialany offi who cares about the process at a minimum mustimm be physically and mentallyof doi capable etimes complicated and even details ev. are conflicting >> yet no one on earth believest that joe bidenha is callingn the shots in either foreign oror domestic policy. mee man has trouble remembering the names of his own cabinetem members. d le >> his own supreme court justices are world leaders. i want to thank that fellowthan down under. thanfellowk you very much, val.
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i want to thank the the former general. i keep calling himf generalmy. my m ty the guy who runs that outfit over there. >> those are the words o john ketanji, ketanji, john jackson, people say to youy ,happy birthday, darling. [ippy birthday. ndto you. >> the man doesn't even knowan where he is on any given day. and we're supposed to believee d that he's directing our ukraine communit. >> welcome at kingswood community center. y actually , that's the one down i used to work as a joke, you [aow, where we were anyway. >>pp mr president . here in the values reflected in the aa and an h p, i ii.
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okay, there's actually nothing to laugh about>> laura. the old chap just isn't all there in 2020. the press hated trump so much that they were willing to play den, who is ande absentee candidate. now, ultimately, the countryulte elected a hologram and as a result, now pivotal decisions affecting our nation's future na ofeing made by kind a combo of bureaucrats, technocrats or technoc obama ho for whom no one voted.whe sovo this is how i see the days unfolding for biden inhouse. the chiee house. tee chief off of staff, jeff zients, tells biden what typedeh of weaponsat the generals want's for ukraine. and biden nods. , okay >>, i am one hundred tanks. okay, give him a bunch. susan rice pushes some executive order on new equity standards across the government. and biden mutters, yeah, sure, why not? but jill usually orders my food with msg.
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no msg. yazji msg. geno'she the difference nowen contrast biden with trump. t yo u know, the staff brought proposals to him. he consideredered them. nts of he brought in opposing pointsas of view. he was the ova thel office oof,e much all day.rent v >>oi he had the different voice, argue in front of him.anted op he wanted opposing points of view. then he made decisions . he was a hands on leader. no one thinks biden is hands on hands. maybe now the voters know the truth. they were hoodwinked. the results of a new survey is terrible news for joe . nearly seven in ten registered anters now say he's too old for another term. and more democratsotnd more de 48 percent then disagree.ree. 34% with that view. s. >> yikes. so the people get shafte d in democracy. remember, they're protecting it. it seems like a jokeecting whens have a figurehead president . and speaking of charadesid, whae
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about the people of california who voted to reelect dianne feinstein? almost five years ago? she turns 90 in june and has been in poorr health for a long time. this descriptionthis d from the. times about her condition wasn a in 2018. n, it wa as feinstein campaigned, it was clear she had lost more thanw s. a few steps. speaking to kinga large gatherit of democratic activists,o the s a month before the election, the senator seemed heavilyened y scripted and controlleda by staff and leaned on othersts to answer questions during a limited give and take. half. think about that.hat sound familiar to you guys?d and now feinstein is ine the hospital, missing eleven votes this week alone. al missibecause she has a case f the shingles, which you probably know causes pro agonizi nerve pain. it's terrible fo is r her and ie corrosive to democracy. the 40 million californiansdesev deserve an activee capa senator capable of answeringblhl
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real questions. it should make all of us both sad and mad. the poor peoplethe east of western pennsylvania who area exposed to the east palestine train derailment fallout? nobody's doing fallout anythingp us , said patty barbara, who lives in darlington, pennsylvania. penn on one mile from the spill site. pennsylvania is being left outei . so who'sn fighting fothr them n the senate? senatet john fetterman. he's in the hospital forseeabl the foreseeable future for clinical politic depression, meg pennsylvania has only one functioning senator . now, what a warped view of democracy that is . the press, the staten' democratic party, amphetaminesse wife jazelle all knew the guyd o was a mess and they didn't. care. they pushed him to run anyway. so now the people of his state terrified of this toxic spill, a need their senator present b and he can't be there.e of course, though, the reason
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biden doesn't want to travelisrl to the derailment site a is because we don't want to se e our president attached to a teleprompter at a time like this. we want at a conversation from a a man who understands soluissues man w and is clear at the solutions. well, that ain't in biden's wheelhouse. >> i'll never be the people i spoke with . every official>>: i have ohio dr republican on a continuous basis. , democras in pennsylvania. i laid out a bit in there. what i think the answers are,ar and i will be honest. >> yeah, no rush. why why bother reassuring the people there? peopr month pass.ha now, the only thing that our defenders of democracy carei about is making sure they win24. in 2020 four . >>s and if it means blockingthy and tackling again for biden, they'll doo it. will you have the election, sir? when i announced who end upende
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doing more damage to the nation's faith and democracy, the maup doingn who destroyedmor our energy independence wrecked our economacy?y and bungled the withdrawal from afghanistan, or those rioterssti who stormed the capitol building hint the answer rhymets with biden, and that's the angle. joining me now is charlie hurt,. washingtonining me times opinio, and fox news contributor charlie, this is wild, right? they're obsessed with january six narrative. we're defending democracaryy 6t againsemocracyt a trump stirs and they're going to usurp the next election. and meanwhile,g to at every tur, biden's doing stuff that's unconstitutional. tuff that illegal or completelyf his depth. >> now, it's truly extraordinary. when yuou tu know, when yo think about all these supposed democracy cowboys, they like to attack people on the right who talk about, you know, who ask questions about the election or according to them. so mistrus t in our elections.
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and meanwhile, they install in the white house somebody we poit have no idea, as you point out, from day to day, who's makingy f any. and then, of course, with theur, situation with john fetterman, which is probably the most glaring example there is .is you know, this is a guy who hade a nearly fatal stroke before the democratic primary in pennsylvania. but democrat. s and with fulla real knowledge of many people iniz the media, realize that or determined that fetterman was their shot at beating a republican and flipping that seat to the democrat party. and they tooy ank a guy who was essentially brain dead and ran him through a campaign. and of course, now he's in a hospital, incapable, completely incapable of representing the people of pennsylvania at a time whe nesenta a sorely needed representation. and not only that, wtie get worw today that john fetterman is is
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introducing legislation to congress who'n tos making the decisions? is john fetterman making these decisions? des from tfrom the hospital roo? who's making these decisions?, these peoplethat h, they hateoy democracy. they will do anythingy. to destroy democracy. and the firs d t way we should have known that's their view of democracy is they began attackiny is they begag us for u questions about the last t the election. think now, bidenat is looking, i think at this point, given the crime rate and and so forth, everythie that's happening that's verserning americans for hisri own kind of sister souljahs the moment. here's karine jean-pierre today.current ge today. >> and it does not support the d.c. council. the changes that they that they put forward over the mayor's objections. so he wanted to make sure that, again, we're keepingies sa communitiefes safe and this is what he believes the d.c. community deserves. dthey deserve to feel like as g they are going to be t safe whio she's unhappy about thatnd decision. but senator linsey graham sey graham
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observed, if you have any doubt that president biden is going to run again, i think his decisionn, i thi to not veto this resolution is the best indication yet. naturally, that democrats in the house, charlie, had tame reaction and anonymous house democrat told the hill. lies so a lot of us who our allies voted no in order to supportwe a what the white house wanted.re and now we're being hung outout to dryto. , acti the lawmaker continued effingng amateur hour heads should roll over at the white house over this. >> charlie, maybe there's a bit of a democrat crackup coming ini . and if there is , this is the first glimmer of light between biden and the leftists in congress because joe biden has given the far left wing of histy party everything they have everh asked for.at and what's sg o surprising about this veto today or his signing this bill under the d.c. law is that this is the administrati administration that has done everything they could to encourage crime, to sow
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disunity among racial groups in. this country. they've let criminalthey have lf jail. they've encouraged rioting. they've gotten rioters out r of jail. they've done everythinthgey o they can to undermine law and orderderr in this country. and then suddenly they theye, change their tune. hmm. something is going on now. s great to see you you tonight. much. >> and this is a fox news alert. the town of walterboro, south carolina, is breathing a sigh of relief tonight afteef r quick deliberation from that jury in the murder case, brought back a guilty verdictgu. >> now we're going to take you live to the ground with how o the scene unfolded. outside the courthouse tonight. plus, whatal comes next for all, those detail ws to go to fox multimedia reporter austin westfall. austin, what can you tell us tonight? >> so, laura , basically because this verdict came in at such a late hour, the judgee is is opting to hold off on sentencing until tomorrow morning. but we did hear fromo.
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the prosecution just moments ago. take a look. they sai d that they could not comment on sentencing because it's still pending now after a m speaking with some folks around town , there's a major sigh of relief tonight ihtn the smallof community of walterboro, south carolina. the murdaugh famil uth caroy is a big deal around here. in fact, alex , grandfather'sdft thrtraither' used to be hanging on the wall of the courtroom. the judge had ite removed befoe trial. e tr lead prosecutor creighton waters explained what this conviction means to the don community. >> justice was done today. famioesn't matter who your family is . it doesn't matter how much money you have or people thinkve you have.. it doesn't matter what youinen think. how prominent you are. if you do wrong, if you break the law, if you murder, the justice will be done in south carolina. >>south and now the murdaugh has been convicted . the minimum sentence is goingha to be gettine g is 30 years in, maison. the max will be life in prison. court starting tomorrow at 9:30
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eastern time. that's when sentencing will begin. eatime.laura and austin, what ae expecting to hear fromxp e team?ens >> so the defense team did walkm out court today. fox got a quick comment froms. them. they were brief with their words. they sai said thatd that they're obviously disappointed in today's results. but we expect to hear frombut wo hear f precisely an hour after the sentencing happens tomorrow morning. >> all right, austin, thank you so much. now,: thank democrats are in a precarious position because they can't sell the american public on any of their policiesp working. and weolicies. know they're not. so they have to push this idea of scarcity is going to actually be good for you. and what they're seeing as they try to argue that is guess what? the losses are piling up.inflat inflation has shown noio signs e abating despite the white house talking points. the senate controllee talkind, s democrats included, just killed biden's. s.g. investment rule and ad the stunning rebuke.
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and the supreme court,su as as t said earlier, is likely to give him a huge loss over that student loan gambit. wegamut. so who's he going to c? well, the ghostbusters garland are strengthening the norm to protect the departments independence and integrity. we are securing convictions forg a wide e range of criminal r conduct related to the january 6th attack. jatack on on the capitol. >> now, what does that mean? just one day after garland made those comments at the department of justice said of jrr president trump cane held be held liable in court for actions of others at the january six usdavi capitol riots. >> joining me now is david schoen, former trump impeachment lawyer. muctherh wrongith th e with this, starting with the fact that these people don't want actually the voters to decide trump's fate. they want to short circuit that and try to tie him up in court. but how legally possible or
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believable is this theory? s thisright. well, you know, you're deadd rit right on . on, d a couple of years ago, we can't trust the voters. so they use these extraes measures to get at president trump. >> this is another cas te. it's focused just on special rules for president trump. r enit's an unworkable. what the justice department said in their brief is that a president should not have absolute immunity if he engages in speecabh, that's likely cause in to cause in context imminent violence and then producesit g violence. it goes against the case law.oew nixon versus fitzgerald. nineteen eighty two case president has absolute immunity. that case doesn't answer the questionpresident has is no we know is thiw s president is different because of the multifaceted job.t president must be able to speamk emphatically on issues of public concern and speeches. what t i'll give you anhe example. in this case, what they say is people who were hurt in the january 6th events should b be able to sue president trump foe e presidr inciting the viol. he's the president oft the united states speaking on a
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matter of publicof the concern. let me give you an analog very quickly. there's a coalition agains there's t racism that vehemently against racism that hears about a rally nearby.they invite presid they invite president biden to speak to it and he saysen to them, racism is a scourge of our nation. wh must stamp it out wherever it appearser. can you believe the ku kluxrall? are down the road having a rally?ople from his grou the people from his group believe they beat up the ku klux. canup sue president biden because he should have known this group felt strongly about racism and might react violently. >> we want the ku klux suing president biden, biden for leadership against racism. that i an analog to what the justice department's position is today. >> well, what about the civil liability of this failure of government agencies to put the proper procedures and manpower in place when we now know from that that review of all the evidence? they had plenty of warning that something might go awry here, should they were throwing flash
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bombs into the crowd and doing all sorts of so like, is there a civil liability there? they were warned that there could be things happening. >> so maybe that civil liability that could be i mean,a the limitation on these bivins actions against federal agencies. bul but here if you t here, if,s a specific danger to prepare against and you don't take proper precautions and people are hurt, there's a potential theory there. >> and state analog would be , you know, nineteen eighty three action. there's potentiaa potentiall. i mean, if you're going to start stretching the legal understanding like a piece of silly putty, then you better watch out where it ends upout reachingwh. that's what the court said. here is the president ison different. this relies on separation ofatio powers, concepts we're justn of we ag these concepts down for the go get trump laws that we come up with . we can't do that.th the first amendment's. two important separation of t powers is too important. off y wantim to take them off the off the campaign trail.l that's their goal.. they don't want them. they don't want to actually have to face them with the voters.
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>> david , thank you. t now, as wehe vot you. await thef tens of thousands of hours ofo m previously unreleased video from january six , therehe is another stunning cover up regardinstunningg the committee. now, they had one hundred boxes of record records which weret left abandoned.ab and it's unclear if the six defendants had access to them. w we're only learning about this because it was mentioned co in a continuancentinuanc motionm one of those defendants. now, this comes as a jaw rasmussen poll finds 80% of americans think the january nu6 tapes six tapes should all be released and sixty .yt agenent think it's likel that undercover government agents helped provoke it. joinintshelpedg us now is julie, senior writer at american greatness and author of january six how democrats use the capitol protests to launch a war on terror against the political right. >> julie, let's start with these boxes of records. say there's been a massive uptick inr the the discovery for
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the defendants cases. what are you talkingdefend about there? o there was a motion filed by joe mcbride, one of attorneys the defense attorneys representing a jan six defendant, justice ng the january 6 week, and he said that there was a huge trove of discovery that was just uploaded in the past month or so that the departments of justice has withheld fromticr defense attorneys now for two years. laura , this is in additioa,n to what we're finding out about tens of thousands of hours of surveillance video that we didn't know existed, that the department and capitol police have withheld from the public and also from defense attorneys. and now you'll remembeu rwill r the promise of the january 6th committee that they were going to produce all of this evidenc eic about what happened.. they were goin g to make itan public. and here you have over one hundred boxes with materials inside abandoned by this committee, not madee public. pus is why you see the one thing that the american people seem to agree on right now
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is they want more they want more evidence about what happened on january six . they want all the videos made public. ery stro they suspect very strongly, agentfully so, that federal agents were deeply involved in the events of that afternoon. and that's not suspicion. it's not a conspiracy.s not a theory. we know this because it'sit coming out in trials. it's coming out in evidence. governme and government witnesses who have testified aboutntnumeri numerous informants run into the so-called militia groups months before january 6th. peo laura , people are starting to wake up to the fact that what they think they saw happen that dayd that is not the full t . and the more that the government department ofrtmo justice, capitol police and house democrats and the media by theice, caphouse de wa ev conceal importantto exculpatory evidence about the true eventid abouts of janu. the more that the american wiople are startinartingg to ask more questions. rom
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and you will see laura from chri answersre's to bret bear this week and merrick garland yesterday. ckthey are not prone to telling the american people the truth about anythingth. >> >> well, julie, this l is such n important issue because it's i going to be used in 2020n 2024 a four against republicans that it all needs to come out.urnali and we actually need reastl journalists to start beinguing journalists again and not not actually arguing against the release of thision. information. i've never seen anything like journalists saying, no, don't dt give us any information. julie, thank you g.ly, than now booted judge's menti, a activist, democrat mayor of college park, maryland , was arrested today on fifty six counts of child. >> the report in moments for him at gunpoint on being a public servant, stopping
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one of many things expect the unexpected. that was not a smart move on your end, sir. what are you going to do about . come on , man. we got to go. don't do it. for you. honestly, was it not mine? because i was peacocking a little bit. sorry about that. what are you going to do? am i getting through to you at all? for you? h the colonial for you? h the colonial >> p boys, bad boys. >> i'm jonathan lawson here to tell you about life insurance through the colonial pen program. pen program. if you'r
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correspondent kevin corke has all the shocking details tonight. kevin . >> no real surprise, laura . forty seven year oldorte r: 4patrick wion is a regular gt over at the white house and hefs is the first openly gay manay to serve as mayor of college park, maryland . >> but tonight, he is facing multiple charges, felony charges, in fact, includinheg i40 counts of possession of o child sexual exploitation material and 16 felony counts of distribution of child. exple the democrat activist who has p branded himself as something oof a role model for lgbtq youth and reportedly has even beenn bn mentored by transportation secretary pete budha . sma judge, who youll obviously will recall was also a small colleg e town mayor. well, police were tipped off by the national center for missing and exploited children about a quick sociald media pocount with child on it and the ensuing investigatiornn led to the former mayor and he. is now out a search of his home yielding multiple cell phones, a a storage device, a tabletge
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and a computer. now, amazingly, laura , the city of collegehat he actually issued a statement noting that he'd been on the job since 201 hhe 5 and withsince the council since 2007.20actualy and then they actually thanked him for his many years of dedicated service. now,th charging documents show that wyant admitted to police at the kik account under investigation, did belong to him and thaunt did t he had d and had possessed child. meanwhile,d posses sources tellx news tonight that more charges are expected in this case. ecte cand now the city will have to have a special election to replace the outgoing mayor, g laura kevin, thanking him for his dedicated service. israel, thanunrealk you so much. now, another thing that might be weighing on biden is his l family's legal exposure during yesterday's senate hearing. egbiden's hatchet man at the department of justice, merrick garland, swore he's going to remain hands offit on the investigation, promised igto leave a matter of hunter tu
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biden in the hands o.sf the u.s. attorney for the district of delaware who was appointed in the previous administration, pledged not to interfere with us. attorney in delaware has beee n advised that he has full authority to make those kind of referrals that you're talking about or to bring cases inare tk other jurisdictions if he feels it's necessary. >> but former fbi assistantangle director and frequent angas chris swecker, he's not buying itwalker i, that garland knows t he's supposed to do. >> he's the surrogate for for the administration. it's just a winkmini and ast no. i don't you know, he can pledge that he won't interfere all herr wants, but there is no reasonhes why the u.s. attorney in rney in delaware should be sittl on this case for well over a year. >> what is taking so long?joinin joining meg now is kentucky congressman james colmer, chair of the house oversight committee. mr hou oveight. chairman, do yot there's something fishy goings on with this elongated timelinee
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? there's something very fishy. there's no better example off a two tier system of justice in america than what we seeof happening with hunter biden. i mean, he's owed two million dollars in o back taxes for yeas and years, yet nothing was dones about it. he has charges. he. has probably more bank violations than any american that i've ever seen, that i come from a pretty decent banking background. this guy, ifbackgr you look at y steven miller released today with the documents that heumentt obtained through a four year request, you could make a very easy argument that hunter biden was an unregistered foreign agent. that's a very serious crime. i mean, and the list goes on and on . money laundering a and even worse. but yet nothing has been donyetn and we haven't even heard a peep from this delaware u.s.er attorney . it's vere u.s.y odd everyone inc america is keeping up with this case, yet merrick garlanda c continues to act like, well, he doesn't know anything about it. he's staying out of itaying ou.
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i don't think anybody believes that now. >> and of course, mr. chairman, the new york times is backing the doj, his handling of the probe by about hunter biden saying that joe biden should clearly call for his son to cooperate, but not with the republican circus on the hill, but with the justice department nhat would let hunter bide the s stand on his own and allowminisa the administration to focus on issues that matter mostpeople to the american people.. so, congressman, clearly they're worried that you all might actually uncover something and frankly, just state what'st state on the recn a persuasive manner not to . >> the media will cover it, but we will look at how the mainstream has changede just in the last six weeks, just since we've taken over,be i've become chairman ofouse the house oversight committee. jordan's become chairman, overy committee.of the media has gone from all of this was just a witch hunt. it was russian disinformationto to now. okay, yeah, there's probably some wrongdoing there, but we
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don't need to put the biden family through all this with the republican circus. we need to let the merrick garland do the right thing. mero the right thing we trust merrick garland and he'll he'll do the right thing. soth the media's a complete 180 on this already. everyone realize s the evidencewhat is out there. they what they has really scared of, laura , is the fact that just this week we'vewe spoken with four people that thb were involved in the bidenid family influence peddlinge schemes. they're coming forward now. they're starting peey are c to cooperate.r atto our attorneys are workinrng with their attorneys. so we're making progress inves with this investigation now. >> well, jusaura: jut the way te they treated president trump at mar-a-lago with the way they held back the information d of the search, of the finding of these classified documentsbi at the biden residence iren of l the slow roll of all that information,l i mean, just that tells us what this fbis poli and justice department is all about. this is political bias ingrained in our legal system now. >> and they're supposeo d to bet
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the defenders of democracy, really. you know?, and you look at what general counsel for the national archives admitted in a transcribed interviewd wa with us was that he wasn't allowed to post things on the national archives website about the biden mishandling classifiedts and documents. h and he wasn't allowed to respond to me because hoe doj or the white house, one he wouldn't admit, but iustn was one of the two blocked him, but he could do whatever he wanted on the trump mishandling of classified documents. another example of a two tieocrs system of justice run by merrick garland. >> nowle, the lawyer, one ofad l the lead lawyers, top defense lawyer, quit biden's legal team. what does that say abouts ca the state of this case? >> it says a lot. you know, i want to hope that that lawyer saw so much evidence of someonuce that was abusing his power, abusing his family's name at his fam the exf american national security. and he walked away or it w could
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be because the new lawyer on the team, abbe lowell, tha is doing some things that i think are getting realt in cle to crossing the line. so, you know, either way, this is a sign of disarray inn the bidecan camp. and i think you're going to seen more spin coming out ofd the white house and more calls or either a special counsel for some way merrick garlandy a to come in and save the dably and block us from biden our oversight. well, biden better d beo a lottertf th more of that blowharatd if he's going to pay those bills. congressman, thank you. congright. alcohol free food, evene food pickleball, courts. we're not describing a new. private club. these are the perks. some companies are offering to get the snowflake employees to come back into the officedayw just two days a week.bu but ift if you can believe it, t gets even more ridiculous than that. i have all the details . . >> charlie cook to respond next . looks like you've been sleeping
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>> if you can believe it, it's e been three years since the pandemic was declared. so why wer e only 50 percent of americans back at the office? well, maybe a better question. why are employees for years now having to bribe remote workers to return for only a couple ofrn days a week? fore da a week? a piece from "the new york now, a piece from the new york times today saying at orchard, , a real estate company, employees were greeted on a recent wednesday with a rumble
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of a bar cart rolling pasthile their desks while offering beverages from an ice bucketipa filled with six point ipas. mudflows sauvignon blanc.rk but even perks like that aren'te enough for some wine. amazon told corporate employeesc to come back just a few daysk ew each week while the corporation was met with petitionsth from 20 something year old entitled one led brats. one executive assistant at amazon said, i prefer to worsaik from home.ce s i have that choice stripped from me basetrme basedd, purely speculative observations does not sit right with me. joining me now is charlie kirk, founder of durney, brought us a charlie. this is so sad. it's so shocking. it is kin yet i guess it's kind ofd predictable. given what the government did in paying people not to work. oh, it's totally predictable. you know, some people say a working from home is just goodik watching you working from home is lik ae watching a fireplace on youtube. you coul you d hear it. you could see it.
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there's no warmth. you can't you're not like that one on one . interaction. and look, i'm a traditionalist because a turning point, usa, we do havena some peoplelist. hase. to work remote. we have some people in the field. but i am adamant iamn person office work is better for you.s it's better for you to have a a commute, better for you to have to dress up to be around other people. it's better for you to get hou e of the house . i think that most young people don't even know what they're missing in some sense. g in some becausbecause so manye younger workers actually had their entry into the workforceob as remote work and they haveo wi to bribe them to go in.. >> maybe they need different employees. s someth but i do think it says something about the fragility of this younger workforce, thato they need some sort of luxurrty five star resort camp in their corporate environment to get them back to work.st. i remain i'm a traditionalist. i think that people shoulde. be in an office. >> i think it's better for the company and better for the employees. theye thos ee aren't essential workers. they should look for other works that's important to the employer. one now, even though no one asked.sk tiktok is charlie who work from home. they're kind of showing us what their daily schedulesh looks lie
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. >> check it out.day of my riveting day of my life workingi from. i did the dishes because my kitchen was a mess.e i hadid some extra time,sh. so d i made breakfast and then i ate that from my desk when i caught up on email and made a snack at that from my desk and then gotnf some steps in and of course, co a diet coke breabrk in the middy of the day also at my lunchen cp and then caught up on more steps while finishing my tasks s . >> charlie, they're essentially doing nothing all day. >> nothing, if any. if anyone was torn on banning tiktok. i mean, it's just look at thatan video. you've got your stepson, of course, you had mentioned the diet coke, not a regularha . i mean, at this point, tick-tock is is infecting the youth of america.an yod then, ind th fact,en we're w incentivizing young high schoolersteads to instead go fia themselves narcissistically to try to make millions of tie dollars, sort of actually gk into the workforce to do something meaningful. >> not the only reasonfo , but one of several, i think tiktokin needs to be banned ik n america. >> oh, charlie, i think>> lau the office is good because you're with people.
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es go tope an office, especially in a city, you're actually giving life to the city. i don't know what the liberalsls are going to do in these cities. n these citiesare starting to die. i mean, they're beloved citiessn are dying because nobody's going to work. so what happens then? i think they haven't thought that through. charlie, it's always great alwrn to thank you sino much for joining us tonight. >> all right. up next, dr.t, dr. jill gives ae peek into how she cares for joe . what does thatpeek int mean? get >> well, the last bite, we'll tell you next. every day, millions today, we're producing renewable diesel that can be used in existing diesel tanks. and we're committed to increasing our renewable fuels production. because as we work toward a lower carbon future, it's only human to keep moving forward.
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>> laura: know we all know who holds the keys to joe's 2024 plans, dr. jill. >> i know you said you were not the president's advisor.us yoe u are his, but you have a lt of influence. t hewhat areas do you offer advice on? >> well, certainly might tell him stories ofgs t things i have seen w and things that people wg and where they are challenges are.
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it is not like i'm way in. it is like let me tell you what i saw or what i heard where what people are saying to me. >> laura: some free advice from joe, if you try to dispel he is to to old to run maybe dot start by saying i hope by m stories. greg gutfeld takes it all from here. ♪ ♪ >> todd: breaking right now, disgraced attorney and now convicted murderer alex murdaugh awaiting his fate. we are ours from the sentencing hearing later this morning is after the jury finds him guilty of killing his own wife and son. you are watching "fox & friends first." i'm todd piro. >> ashley: i'm ashley strohmier and for carley shimkus. waiting years for and it took the jury less than three years to deliver it. >> they came back as quickly as they did in a case where they heard 28
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