tv FOX and Friends FOX News April 13, 2023 5:00am-6:00am PDT
5:00 am
just, straight up great cars. right from your phone to your driveway. go to vroom.com and pick your favorite. wooo. oh yeah, she digs it. buy your car on vroom.com vroom. get in. >> not a russian operative, not a ukrainian operative. >> steve: new information about the person who allegedly is behind that pentagon leak. >> source telling the "washington post" the leaker works on a military base. we spy on allies, that is troubling. >> senator dianne feinstein coming underfire from the liberal media calling for her immediate resignation. >> todd: after being on medical leave since early march. >> good reason not to be a
5:01 am
democrat. >> blocks a ruling restricts access to widely used abortion pill, yesterday's ruling keeps the pill on the market, the drug can no longer be shipped in the mail. >> the gulf coast is under storm warning, forcing fort lauderdale airport to shut down as they warn heavy rain and floods could be life-threatening. >> yankees. >> umpire vanover is hospitalized after being hit in the head. >> vanover was not aware he had even been hit. ♪ ♪ >> steve: i got a feeling, we got whiskey glasses on the cruise ship. look live in miami, florida from
5:02 am
the beach. currently store degrees, more rain in the forecast, scattered showers going for a day-time high on the 13th day of april of 84 degrees in miami. >> ainsley: in country music they talk about whiskey glasses, they are also talking about alcohol eyes. what is a whiskey glass? like a highball? >> brian: no, it is -- >> ainsley: like a shorter one? >> brian: a stem here and like this and have a certain -- >> steve: there is a stem on it? i think it is like a highball glass? just a glass? >> brian: i think like this. >> ainsley: show us. >> brian: i think like this. >> steve: you should know us, your family had a bar. >> brian: don't you think? no? >> ainsley: a whiskey glass. >> ainsley: that is a wine
5:03 am
glass. >> steve: or a brandy sipper. when you order whiskey at a restaurant or bar -- >> brian: a top on it? >> ainsley: ice covers the whole glass and you get a taste. >> steve: i like this. i bought the ice cube maker that makes the big round one in the pandemic when i developed taste for bullet bourbon. you ask for two fingers, three fingers, that is what you ask for. with a stem, you need two hands. >> brian: they dad used to say scotch and water, two fingers. as we got older, he had more and more water. i was serving him to be a bartender at an early age.
5:04 am
>> ainsley: is that all you learned from your dad? >> steve: get my medicine. >> brian: you watch "dallas" 2 in the afternoon, it was normal. >> ainsley: take the crystal top off the decanters, they had a whole cart of them, one marked with scotch, one vodka, they walk to the bar cart when they got home. >> brian: and people would drink at lunch. >> steve: those were the days. >> brian: imagine if all the hosts could drink at lunch. >> ainsley: the beauty of drinking at lunch. -- shock waves around the world.
5:05 am
5:06 am
is not working for russia, according to a friend that post-interviewed. >> he is not a russian operative, not a ukrainian operative. anyone who claims that is categorically false. he is not interested in helping a foreign agency. >> griff: overnight, more classified documents by the times showing russia intel agency accusing russia military of obviskating in ukraine as calls for accountability grow louder. john kirby acknowledging to peter doocy there is active operation in kyiv and they are working on it. >> there is a small u.s. military presence at the embassy in conjunction with the office to help us work on
5:07 am
accountability of the office going in and out of ukraine. the united states will not have troops fighting in ukraine. >> griff: karine jean-pierre was asked overseas about the documents, but would not confirm validity, saying the doj is reviewing them. we'll see where that goes and senate will receive a briefing next week. >> steve: we would like to know more. thank you very much. griff said it perfectly, this chat room started four years ago, when this og person, sounds like a teenager at the time, now in their low 20s and the kid they talked to is under 18, they got permission to talk to him from the mother. right. it is very telling. this guy is not a whistleblower, he wasn't putting this out to make the intel community look bad, he was putting it out to 25 gamers, young men and boys in
5:08 am
the website to show off. look what i know and not enough people were paying attention to what he was typing out because rather than just show them the documents because you could wind up in prison, he would type it up. nobody paid attention, he started taking pictures of the document and nobody leaked it until one of the 25 kids in the website decided, i will take it from this discord channel to this other one, which was about youtube star by the name of wow mal. suddenly there were more people in this chat room, wait a minute and that went to one of the video games and next thing you know, in the "new york times." >> ainsley: originally this group, mostly men and boys, according to this person who spoke to the "washington post." and they said it was a refuge for them during the pandemic, they would talk, pray together,
5:09 am
swap memes, sometimes offensive jokes, idol chitchat, watched movies and just joked around. the og, he said he was very smart, worked at a military base and got his hands on this information and sometimes the documents were full of intel speech and he would interpret it. noforn meant information in this document was so sensitive it must not be shared with foreign nationals. >> brian: we spy on allies, gave sensitive war information, we have great intel when it comes to russia and the in-fighting going on there and massive casualties they are experiencing there and sense of what is going on with different arma ment and by the way, and steve, to your point, things changed after
5:10 am
people stopped responding, he started using graphs and pictures rather than typing over, that might give clues to where he is, you see gorilla glue in the background. u.s. envoy to ukraine and had many positions as ambassador of nato, said this about how the world perceives what is going on. >> we don't know who leaked the documents and why. we get information about og in a military base. who is that person and why did they do this? there is still possibility of foreign motive behind this. what the russians are trying to do, put out information that discredits ukraine and military capabilitieses. the u.s. has to establish that the goal is for ukraine to defeat russian forces quickest option, save more lives that
5:11 am
way. until we do that, we drag it out and will not take leadership steps like going to other countries and pressing them to do more. >> brian: he said it makes us look bad, you have chelsea manning, ed snowden. >> ainsley: it includes secretive intelligence information on our allies and adversaries, you have north korea, britain and israel. >> brian: egypt. >> steve: they are allies, we spy on everybody, they spy on us. if the washington post can find the kids in this group with 25 men and boys, the fbi knows who this person is. they are obviously watching -- if they haven't talked to him yet, they are just giving him opportunity to put stuff out. according to this kid in the
5:12 am
"washington post," og said, everybody, keep low, delete any info that could relate to him. obviously copies of classified documents. what is interesting, the kid who talked to the "washington post" does not blame og, the leaker, for the secrets getting out. he blames the kid who put it on the malwow server. >> ainsley: he is not upset because taxpayers have a right to know where their money is being spent, but now people are at risk. he brought home the documents from his job on military base inside a facility that prohibited cell phones and electronic devices. >> todd: according to the post, new yorkers are leaving. this time last year 14,000, now
5:13 am
staggering 10,824 -- >> ainsley: in the first quarter. >> brian: just the ones that decided to go to florida. >> steve: decided, i'm not going to drive with my new york drivers license anymore, i will get a florida drivers license, they do that to get the homestead exemption. >> ainsley: 50% plus one day in florida? >> steve: if you move down there, you are a resident. homestuead has to do with property taxes and they can't jack your rate up like a home. swapped licenses out, but a new sienna poll said 27% of new yorkers will leave new york within the next five years. one out of four will leave in the next five years and 31% said
5:14 am
when i retire from new york, i will get the hell out of here. >> brian: why? job killing, crime, high taxes and soaring energy cost. here is a little from the panel that joined us, republicans, democrats. >> i was a covid refugee, i left in 2020, i moved to florida, my quality of life is better in every way in florida. there is less commute, weather is better, things are slightly cheaper. >> people are voting with their feet, the old cliche is true, they are going with tax dollars and businesses are leaving. >> people are leaving because of high taxes, high crime and this belief elected leaders do not have an interest in making things better. when you have district attorneys like alvin bragg in manhattan, who won't prosecute felonies,
5:15 am
people don't feel safe and say where are my tax dollars going? it is not to make me feel safe and not making my commute better, that is why people leave. >> brian: the fact we need a rat czar show things have gotten bad in new york. $155,000 to find rats. >> steve: and they had somebody in charge of pest control, it is redundant. people who do not want new yorkers to move to florida is people in florida. >> ainsley: they like jacking up prices of houses. >> steve: then it is unaffordable for people in florida. there is exodus from the biggest city in new york to some place else. >> ainsley: second is miami and broward county is third. >> brian: all five winter pro
5:16 am
teams have made the playoffs. stick around for the next six to eight weeks. >> steve: the beauty of television, watch on tv from florida. >> steve: 8:15 now, here in the east and you have got news about a tornado watch. >> ashley: i do. a lot going on down south. tornado watch issued for much of the florida panhandle and parts of alabama and georgia. the watch is in effect until 2:00 p.m. eastern. the gulf coast is under flash flood warning with a strong storm system expected to batter florida with more tropical downpours. fort lauderdale airport closed after getting a foot of rain yesterday. travelers were stranded for six hours. schools in broward remain closed today. follow this powerful storm system by downloading the fox weather app to your connected devices. federal appeals court blocks a
5:17 am
ruling restricting access to the abortion pill. yesterday's warning keeps the pill on the market, but the drug can no longer be shipped to people in the mail. federal drug suspended fda approval of the bill over concerns about the drug's safety. dianne feinstein, democratic senator asked to be replaced on the committee, she faces calls to resign due to her health. dianne feinstein missed 60 of the 82 votes this year. her absence prompting fellow democrats to call on her to step down. ro khanna says it is time for dianne feinstein to step down and put it ahead of loyalty, it is obvious she can no longer fulfill her duties. in >> ashley: umpire larry vanover hospitalized after being hit by
5:18 am
a ball in the yankees and guardians game yesterday. >> the ball hits the umpire. >> oh, no. >> ashley: the league umpire told reporters that vanover was not even aware he had been struck and underwent tests after the game. he was just in the zone. >> steve: how do you miss that? >> ashley: i would have been aware. >> brian: he did throw aaron boone out of the game in the first inning. they ended up winning the game. >> ainsley: how is he doing right now? >> steve: he was released? no word. okay. say a prayer for him. >> ainsley: absolutely. >> steve: new hampshire joining list of states aiming to block joe biden's woke esg investing rule. >> ainsley: governor chris sununu says initiative puts
5:19 am
america's retirement savings at risk in the name of climate change. he is next. ahhhh... with flonase, allergies don't have to be scary. spray flonase sensimist daily for non-drowsy, long lasting relief in a scent-free, gentle mist. (psst psst) flonase. all good. how do we decide what hotel to book? fear not, i got you. choice hotels has a hotel for every type of stay. like a comfort with the kiddos. spacious! that's what they all say. stay twice and get a $50 gift card when you book direct at choicehotels.com. liberty mutual customizes your car insurance so you only pay for what you need. with the money we saved, we tried electric unicycles. i think i've got it! doggy-paddle! only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪
5:21 am
as a business owner, your bottom line is always top of mind. so start saving by switching to the mobile service designed for small business: comcast business mobile. flexible data plans mean you can get unlimited data or pay by the gig. all on the most reliable 5g network, with no line activation fees or term contracts...
5:22 am
5:23 am
>> brian: pushing profit, not politics is mess fraj from new hampshire governor chris sununu, he is against states investing on esg, comes as republican governors are fighting the biden -- calling it threat to retirement savings. joining us is chris sununu. as a governor, what can you do? >> look, no greater responsibility than managing other people's dollars, pensions and retirements, we need to make sure they get the best financial
5:24 am
opportunity when they decide to retire. the idea we are going to promote esg, which can get lower return, that is substantial, over 40 years, could be hundreds of thousands of dollars, that differential is real. put that nonsense aside. you want to do it with your own private finances, that is fine, nothing matters more here than return. >> brian: how much are we talking about and how much power does the governor have to decide where pension money goes to earn? >> so governors typically have little power in saying we want you to invest dollars here and there. there should be firewalls there, shouldn't be up to the governor to decide. we can create reporting requirement, make sure the state
5:25 am
treasurer is part of the executive branch and make sure it is not happening. we can request information and create transparency around where dollars are going and why. the opportunity for a governor is to be communication back to state employees and back to the public that we are doing everything we can to get the best return and not caving to woke esg stuff, folks want to do it with their own dollars, we have responsibility and nothing is more important than getting best return for state employees for retirement. >> brian: your party, unlike the other party, having no problem with new hampshire. what has to happen on the political landscape for you to decide if you are going to run for president or not? a recent poll has you third in new hampshire, a state you had a ton of success as governor in. >> sure, poll numbers really
5:26 am
don't matter now, even in the early debates probably until october or november, when things solidify up, especially in new hampshire and in iowa. i think i would tell you, more people will get on the debate stage than i thought a couple months ago. you could have eight, 10, a dozen debate stage. it will be a bigger field than i thought. i want to get in the race if i can have a voice. i want independents, young people on the team, if we don't have them on the team, we can't win in november of 2024. i want to do the best for the party to make sure branding and messaging brings more folks on board to not have repeat of 2022, that would be horrible. >> brian: you wouldn't get in unless you can win and you
5:27 am
haven't decided if you can win yet or have you? >> i will only get in, i think for all the potential candidates, right? the race won't tighten until early fall or winter. we got to expand our message and brand. >> brian: the president opened up a huge lead on desantis and everybody else is single digits. tim scott and governor nikki haley in the race, you still think president trump can't win? >> in november of 2024, i do not believe he can win, could he get the nomination? of course. can he win in a general election? no, we want the most conservative candidate that can
5:28 am
win. thank you for your service, did a good job, move on. bring something else and something new to the table. >> brian: always a lot of energy and a big smile. governor chris sununu, thank you, appreciate it. ahead, new bill in california, mother of a murdered police officer whose son's killer is currently on death row, that story is next. e, it's making me think of doing other things i've been putting off. officer whose son's killer is currently on death row, that story is next. inspire. learn more and view important safety information at inspiresleep.com. king's hawaiian sliders are ready. great - i invited a few more friends. ♪ thanks, mom. i am groot. nothing brings the galaxy together like king's hawaiian. see guardians of the galaxy: vol 3. in theaters may 5th. asking the right question can greatly impact your future. - are, are you qualified to do this? - what? - especially when it comes to your finances.
5:29 am
- are you a certified financial planner™? - i'm a cfp® professional. - cfp® professionals are committed to acting in your best interest. that's why it's gotta be a cfp®. bath remodelling was revolutionized in this garage in 1984, when three brothers created the iconic bath fitter tub-over-tub process. a breakthrough then, the industry standard now, for beautiful baths without the mess, stress or high cost. a better way from bath fitter means precise measurement, the highest quality acrylic, perfect preparation and watertight installation
5:30 am
5:31 am
5:32 am
>> ashley: starting with a fox news alert, president biden touching on the massive classified document leak during his visit to dublin just moments ago. take a listen. >> president biden: full-blown investigation going on with the intelligence community and justice sdppt they are getting close and i don't have an answer. >> are you concerned about the leak? >> we got to move. >> i am not concerned about the leak, i'm concerned it happened, but there is nothing contemporaneous i am aware of that is of consequence. >> ashley: scrambling to id the leaker. gun control protest getting his job back, voting 7-0 to reinstate justin pearson.
5:33 am
representative justin jones was also kicked out and jones was reinstated earlier this week. over to steve. >> steve: thank you, ashley. new senate bill in california could let some of the worst violent criminals walk free in an effort to empty the state prisons, too many people in the prison. phillys loya mother of roy lassitter, she says lawmakers have chipped away at public safety. she joins us from california. good morning to you. >> good morning. thank you for allowing me the opportunity to speak for victims. >> steve: absolutely, you are your son's advocate and his voice. explain how your son, who was a marine police officer was
5:34 am
murdered. >> my son was responded to two men who just robbed a bank and a grocery store and he was fatally shot in a foot pursuit. >> steve: police figured out who did that, right? >> oh, yes, the main perpetrator, the one on death row, he kept shooting at the other officers until he ran out of bullets, then surrendered and the second was caught by another agency. >> steve: this happened after 1980's, your son's murderer would not be impacted, but you know people whose children's murderers could be sprung with senate bill 94? >> absolutely, there are 127 death row inmates that would be eligible for release under this
5:35 am
proposed legislation and our justice system has been systematically eroded in the last at least 15 years and with more and more sentence modifications, letting people out early. if the left radicals could have their way, there would be no prison at all, the prison doors would be open. this proposal, legislation, would let dangerous killers out on the streets and i think many of them would kill again. if i could give you a perfect example of one, take juan cox killed four people, the pro football player kermit alexander's family were slaug slaughtered, his mother, his nephew, his niece, and his sister, cox could be released.
5:36 am
in 2004, cox stabbed another inmate and he has been apprehended trying to escape, these are the kind of people would could be released. it is a travesty. >> steve: there ought to be a bright red line, if you kill somebody, you will go away forever, but now they are saying, you know what, jails are overcrowded, he's been in prison for a long time, they have paid their debt, let them go. >> i think the california citizens need to look at themselves in the mirror, their mercy for murderers, they are making further victims of family members that have lost someone to death row killers or killers sentenced to life without parole. they are robbing us of justice now. they are the ones that are
5:37 am
showing cruelty to us. we are being further victimized by the legislature that pushes this proposal. >> steve: yeah. >> it's not right, it is wrong, it's ludicrous, we have a spiralling crime rate in california right now. >> steve: no kidding. i know, we'll keep an eye on senate bill 94 out in california. thank you for joining us today and telling your son's story. >> thank you, i appreciate it. good day. >> steve: all right, good day, thank you. infuriating, right? coming up, fallout over pentagon document leaks continue as we learn the leaker reportedly worked at a military base. former special forces operator tim kennedy will join us for what this means for our nation's security coming up next. at red ln g start right here on our family's cotton farm in north alabama. the heartland of america.
5:38 am
we rely on hard work and honest manufacturing to deliver high quality, heirloom inspired bedding, bath towels and more, all made in the usa. experience the farm to home difference for yourself. go to red land cotton dot com and receive 15% off your order with code fox news. at adp, we use data-driven insights to design hr solutions to help you engage and retain top performers today, so you can have more success tomorrow. ♪ one thing leads to another, yeah, yeah ♪ subway keeps upping their game with the subway series. an all-star menu of delicious subs. there's the philly, the monster, the boss. if i hadn't seen it in person,
5:39 am
i wouldn't have believed it. eating is believing steph. the subway series. try subway's tastiest menu upgrade yet. i'm jonathan lawson here to tell you about life insurance through the colonial penn program. if you're age 50 to 85, and looking to buy life insurance on a fixed budget, remember the three ps. what are the three ps? the three ps of life insurance on a fixed budget are price, price, and price. a price you can afford, a price that can't increase, and a price that fits your budget. i'm 54, what's my price? you can get coverage for $9.95 a month. i'm 65 and take medications. what's my price? also $9.95 a month. i just turned 80, what's my price? $9.95 a month for you too. if you're age 50 to 85, call now about the #1 most popular whole life insurance plan available through the colonial penn program.
5:40 am
it has an affordable rate starting at $9.95 a month. no medical exam, no health questions. your acceptance is guaranteed. and this plan has a guaranteed lifetime rate lock so your rate can never go up for any reason. so call now for free information and you'll also get this free beneficiary planner. and it's yours free just for calling. so call now for free information. - i'm fernando, i live outside of boston. i've been with consumer cellular for five years. consumer cellular gives you all the same features that these big companies give you.
5:41 am
what you get for the cost is remarkable. why would you pay more money?! - [announcer] why would you pay more when you can get unlimited talk & text with a flexible data plan starting at just $20 a month. - i think they should raise their prices! (laughs) - [announcer] sorry fernando! our prices are staying low. so switch today and save! call or go online. realtor.com (in a whisper) can we even afford this house? maybe jacob can finally get a job. the house whisperer! this house says use realtor.com to see homes in your budget. you're staying in school, jacob! realtor.com. to each their home.
5:42 am
>> president biden: there is a full-blown investigation going on with the intelligence community justice department. they are getting close, i don't have an answer. >> it is time to go, we got to move. >> i'm not concerned about this, i'm concerned it happened, but nothing contemporaneous i'm aware of that is of great consequence. >> steve: president remaining relatively tight lipped discussing the classified documents moments ago in dublin, ireland. >> ainsley: new report claims the leaker worked on a military base. >> brian: tim, do you think the president should be concerned about the leak because there is nothing contemporaneous there. isn't there more to it than just it's been released >> in the military, loose lips
5:43 am
sink ships. you go to pee in the urinal and you learn about op-sec. it is never appropriate to leak information and finding out the leaker and making sure we maintain security is paramount, but information in the document is compelling information, as well. >> steve: exactly right. we've seen parts of it, probably more circulating somewhere in the web. the more we're learning and these are anecdotes from a kid, a minor who knows this person, referred to as i don't go in the "washington post." there is code of conduct in this discord room. the guy was essentially lecturing the kids about what was going on, but nobody could talk about what was going on
5:44 am
outside their circle of friends. one person broke the code, but he was just trying to show off our biggest secrets, somebody was saying, look what i know. >> yeah, it's not healthy. bravado in any form or fashion is dangerous, especially with national security information, trying to impress friends using classified information. >> steve: impress kids. >> it is silly and dangerous, it is tragic. >> ainsley: what strikes me, it seems like the documents were easy to obtain. he said he worked at a military base, maybe a contractor, he indicated according to this article, og indicated he brought home the documents from his job on a military base and spent some of his day in a facility that prohibited cell phones and
5:45 am
electronic devices. how easy to obtain our biggest secrets? >> you know, biggest secrets, we have varying degrees of how much information people have access to. we definitely keep, operate in silos by design, especially in conflict areas where it is rapidly changing at embassies, where we have key special operations personnel that are there in joint ertelevision -- interagency. you put your cell phone in a locker and you are able to enter the room, you can't bring devices, smart watches in there. walking out of there, you know, you can't walk in with hard drives and walk out with laptops.
5:46 am
people that have access are controlled, that person had to have access to the room to get out. >> brian: were you surprised to find out special ops were working in and around the embassy on the ground in ukraine? >> i wasn't surprised at all, we sent 30 or 40 billion of equipment to ukraine. special forces, green berets are the ones best suited for conflict areas like this, complex and nuanced. having guys in the embassy to be accountable with money and where it is going is paramount and nobody better suited than the green beret. >> brian: too bad somebody else released that information. thank you. >> ainsley: check in with janice dean for the forecast. janice. >> janice: beautiful today in new york city, close to 90s, way
5:47 am
above average. across great lakes, way above average temperatures and cold front will move through and bring potential for mountain snow for northern plains, look at potential record highs for north platt, new york, washington, that is today, pretty impressive, over the weekend things will calm down, we had incredible flooding for south florida in the last 12 hours, 25 inches of rainfall in and around fort lauderdale, flash flood watch in effect and tornado warned storm for the panhandle of florida, that polygon. we have tornado watch there and potential for strong storms, including isolated tornados from south florida to alabama and georgia. foxweather.com, has you up to date with the latest weather details. over to you. >> steve: janice, yesterday we were talking about how florida
5:48 am
needs water andin ra, they are getting some, could live without the tornado. >> janice: too much, yep. >> steve: coming up, one georgia girl living up to the girl scout promise by helping those sworn to protect it that is coming up next. the next show stars that man, bill hemmer. >> bill: big mystery, michael is up first out of the gate don't miss that, san francisco is a mess and the mayor has someone to blame and not who you think. major pressure on democratic senator to step aside and tim scott tells us why he's likely in it to try and win it. join dana and me top of the hour, 12 minutes away.
5:49 am
lowe's knows the first step to motivation is inspiration. so, we've got new everything. new flooring, new paint, new patio sets, new pillows. i can keep going if you want me to. you got this. and we got you. a third kid. what if she likes playing golf? it's expensive. we're outlawing golf. wait. can i still play? since we work with emower, we don't have to worry about planning for a third kid. you can still play golf... sometimes. take control of your financial future to empower what's next. why are 93% of sleep number sleepers very satisfied with their bed? maybe it's because you can adjust your comfort and firmness on either side... your sleep number setting, to help relieve pressure points and keep you both comfortable all night. save up to $1000 on our most popular sleep number 360 smart bed when you add an adjustable base. ends monday
5:52 am
5:53 am
from the police foundation. good morning to all of you. good morning. sasofia, i'll start with you. how did you get this idea? >> we can't hear you. >> ainsley: you can't hear us? we will try to fix that. sergeant, how are you going to use this for the canine? >> we have 10 dog teams in the department, the money will come in handy for these guys. these dogs are amazing, they find bad guys and protect citizens of the community. tell us how you met sofia and how this came to be. >> i'm sorry, say that again. >> sofia, can you hear me now? >> yes.
5:54 am
sofia, great, wonderful. how did you come up with this idea? >> i just love supporting the community and i just love helping pets out. >> ainsley: that is wonderful, mom, i understands she raised money for pet oxygen kits for fire fire stations. wonderful young lady. did she come up with the ideas? what was your role? >> i'm here to support her, as well as the rest of the family. she's come up with these ideas, not just as a girl scout, she's a juliet, not part of a troop, she is independent. we work togethers, her and i primarily, we have her dad and her sister who is a girl scout, trying to rally around her and support whatever she is envisioning to make this. >> ainsley: you are inspiring all of us and so is your mom,
5:55 am
all of us watching that are moms need to do things like this, getting them away from tv and helping others. you were sewing bandanas, how did you learn to sew? >> i had one friend help me learn how to fix everything. and then i just kind of got used to it. >> ainsley: did you set up outside your school or community? how did you raise all this money? >> it was a safety day at our local regional mall, the timing was perfect and i called them up and they said absolutely. we set up a booth and we had some of them were purchased because they fell in love with the stuffed animal or sponsored them. these are some of the ones being sponsored and will be donated to
5:56 am
fire department in the area to give to kids that have lost everything during a fire. >> ainsley: wow, sergeant, thank you for your service. sofia, i know they appreciate it. there is nitro, one of the dogs you have helped. god bless you. thank you. >> thank you for having us. >> ainsley: sofia, i can't wait to see what god does in your life. you're a wonderful person. all right, more "fox and fri friends". identical twins bethany and stephanie both struggled with cpap for their sleep apnea. but stephanie got inspire, an implanted device that works inside the body. there's no reason to keep struggling. inspire. learn more and view important safety information
5:57 am
5:58 am
5:59 am
if lawn care were easy, everyone would do it... as well as trugreen does it. trugreen's online tools help ensure your custom treatment works to deliver a greener, healthier lawn - guaranteed. it's time to trust your experts at trugreen. go online today! densify from crest pro-health. like bones, your teeth lose density over time. but, crest has you covered. crest densify actively rebuilds tooth density to extend the life of teeth. the #1 toothpaste brand in america. crest.
6:00 am
♪ >> yep, they'll be doing a happy dance on the jersey shore. going for a daytime high there of 88 degrees. wow. >> almost 90 in new york city today. >> i'll be indoors doing the radio. >> we'll listen. >> there is a full blown investigation going on as you know with the intelligence community and justice department and they are getting close. i don't have an answer. >> how concerned are you about the leak? >> we have to move. >> i'm not concerned about the leak -- i'm concerned that it happened. >> bill: that was moments ago in dublin, ireland. president biden's first reaction to what might be the biggest intel leak in decades. a new report out today on masking the man behind it. where he worked, who he talked to leaving us to
131 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on