tv FOX Friends First FOX News April 14, 2023 1:00am-2:00am PDT
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possum queen after she removed a rogue possum from a texas bar. >> that is awesome. >> can i take a picture of you with it? >> we got a video. >> hurry. >> you're good, keep going. >> turn around. turn around. >> if only we could -- >> a fox news alert, international guard member arrested for exposing our nation's classified secrets set to appear in court today. the fbi leading jack teixeira out of his home at gunpoint in connection with one of the most serious security breaches in history. you're watching "fox and friends first," i'm todd piro. >> ashley: i'm ashley strohmier. the man was 21 years old and held highest clearance by the u.s. government.
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he shared the document on thug central. alexandria hoff has the latest. good morning. >> alexandria: classified national defense information at 21 years old, which is striking. he was part of the 102nd intelligence in cape cod. teixeira was placed into custody without incidents. >> the justice department arrested jack teixeira into alleged unauthorized removal, retention and transmission of national defense information. >> it is important to understand we do have stringent guidelines in place for safeguarding sensitive information, this was a deliberate criminal act. >> alexandria: plans were
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accelerated as he was described as the leader of a gaming group on the platform discord, he shared information with fellow users and shared more widely. it was maps and positions of ukrainian troops and china's role in aiding russia. including intelligence on adversaries and allies and top secret american and nato planning. this sounded alarm bells for the pentagon as the source was being tracked down. president biden said he was less concerned. >> are you concerned about the leak? >> i'm not concerned about the leak. i'm concerned it upon ha, but there is nothing contemporaneous of great conseque >> alexandria: mike turner says it jeopardized our relationship
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with allies. the house intelligence committee will examine why this happened and why it went unnoticed for weeks and how to prevent this happening in the future. jack teixeira will make his first appearance today in boston. >> todd: bring in former fbi special agent and former navy seal jonathan gillian. so many ways we can jump off and attack this topic. the thing that jumped out to me. we were able to catch this guy pretty quickly, the media was faster than the fbi. when the fbi wanted to get their guy, they did. why is the supreme court leaker still out there? >> isn't that a good question. any time somebody accesses government documents online, there's going to be a trail for that. it is interesting about the supreme court, i was wondering
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that myself today. let me tell you, todd, the fact this continues to happen and somebody that is not in a position which this individual is not in a position to know all the things that he had the ability to retrieve information about and the level of classification those things were under, there is a major problem here. i know in the fbi, of individuals getting in major trouble for accessing information that was just secret that had to do with a case they had worked on before and they were not working on the case anymore inform this instance, this individual was able to access information that was top secret and top secret and compartmentalized, sci, which means if you are not working in that projects, you should not
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have access to that information. somehow this continues to happen and not only was he able to access it, but to download it, take pictures of it, get it out without ever being known and then put it online, this is major national security failure clear across the board. >> ashley: biden said there is nothing of "great consequence" in this leak. is he incompetent or just not know or even care how this looks on the world stage and to our adversaries and to americans? >> jonathan: if this was multiple choice question, i would choose d, all of the above. i don't think he's competent, i don't think he cares and doesn't think beyond anything he's doing. if joe biden is not involved with it, it will not amount to a big thing, he believes he can
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stop or control all these things. i'm not sure if sources and methods were revealed and how the information was collected or to the extent and how it was collected. the fact we have this information and it was out there could lead other nations to start looking toward where the nation came from and lead to sources and methods. that is huge national security issue and for -- i get it, the president could be trying to undoplay it and make it sound like it is not a big deal. you have to live in a cave not to think this is a big national security issue. >> ashley: you know, to that point, it is not if he thinks the information put out is not that big of a deal. it is the fact he was a 21-year-old with the highest security clearance, that is so concerning. what else is floating around that we don't know about?
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>> todd: jonathan, have you ever heard of a 21-year-old having access to this kind of information? >> no, people don't realize higher your security clearance gets, the more specialized it becomes. you don't have access to more things, you have access to particular things that are vital. just because he has highest clearance you can get doesn't mean he has access to everything. it means he shouldn't have access, it appears this individual has access across the board to intelligence information coming in for multiple programs that he should not be anywhere close to, nothing to do with the national guard. >> ashley: to this part, the leaked documents reportedly showed china agreed to provide
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weapons to russia earlier this year. so anonymous official spoke to "washington post" saying, we have not seen evidence china transferred weapons or provided assistance to russia, but remain concerned and are continuing to monitor closely. this is from a senior administration official. but how can we trust anything they say because they keep saying this is not happening. they are not telling us anything. >> jonathan: i just read that quote a few minutes ago, before i came on here doing more research. a particular part of that you left out and i got it in front of me, senior defense official agreed with the assessment, both officials spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss top secret documents. so right here we're having individuals we don't know if we can trust or not, but i tell you, they are discussing things
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they are not authorized to be discussing with the press. we have two senior individuals from the government discussing something somebody was just arrested for leaking and none of them are authorized to diz close this information. what is going on in the government, the people have to realize, whether it is fbi manufacturing information against donald trump or leaks continue to happen with people who don't have access or senior executives talking to the press about it, none of this is supposed to be happening and all of it is damaging to our national security and how our allies and our enemies see us. none of that is good for this nation and somebody who has worked in government for so many years, it's shocking to me that these things continue to happen and are happening from the lowest to the highest levels of government. >> todd: i just came up with a
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phrase to describe this situation, it is a highly nuanced mess, best way to describe it. jonathan gilliam, thank you. >> ashley: democrats tapping the lead counsel on former president trump's first impeachment to hear testimony on the investigation into da alvin bragg's motivation in the indictment of trump. >> todd: kevin corke with the latest. >> kevin: dan goldman is slamming house gop jim jordan over his planned hearing set for new york city next week, that would be his committee. here is what he had to say specifically. chairman jordan, this is a quote, is not welcome in my district for this political stunt that is a further waste for taxpayer money to support donald trump legal defense
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temperature is actually a surging crime in goldman's district that left him politically vulnerable and you can well imagine house republicans are ready to pounce. why other taet him? as we just pointed out a second ago, he was part of the trump impeachment, he supported da alvin bragg, he supported the crime bill, but for the white house, which is crazy, would have gone through and advocated for reduced incarceration in new york. republicans are also going after alvin bragg, in fact, they are introducing legislation that would revoke all of alvin bragg's federal funding in the escalating war on trump's criminal case, a case goldman has a vested interest in. here is andy biggs, this prosecutor's office has spent taxpayer dollars to subsidize
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this political indictment and demanding millions more in federal grants. it is disturbing to see district attorney bragg waste resources for political were approximates rather than addressing serious crime in his city. others wonder how bragg is even trying this case. >> when you're a prosecutor of any kind, if there is appearance of a conflicts, you get off the case. this is not appearance, it is inherent conflict. she talked about going after donald trump. >> kevin: the always smart pam bondy speaking there. goldman represents the tenth congressional, should make for interesting day, guys, back to
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you. >> todd: shocking. kevin corke. major victory for pro-life movement as governor desantis signs heartbeat rule into law. heartbeat can be detected as early as six weeks of pregnancy. florida lower chamber giving the bill a green light with 70-40 vote before that upon has, abortion activist storm the state capitol building, hurling trash upon state lawmakers from a balcony. super pact rolling out first national ad, never back down political action committee, hinting at ron desantis's run for 2024 presidential bid. desantises freedom is worth fighting for. >> you are coming after the rights of parents, i'm standing in your way. freedom is here to stay.
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>> todd: the super pact is spending 1 million to place the ad which will broadcast nationally on monday. >> ashley: president biden receiving rough welcome to ireland from the irish president's dog. watch. [barking] >> that dog. >> ashley: man, president michael higgins attempting to introduce president biden to his dog mishka was not having it. he kept on barking and growling, happening during his trip to ireland to mark the 25th anniversary of the good friday agreement. >> todd: what do you make of that? >> ashley: i always say, dogs don't lie, who am i? i'm sitting here talking. maybe he didn't like strangers. >> todd: i have nonpolitical
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take on this, i am disappointed this aired then, i want to air it with "who let the dogs out," at some point get that in. >> ashley: aaron, are you listening? major -- the killer might not have been who we thought, wait until you hear who was just taken into custody. >> todd: such an interesting development? a sad story. ai infiltrating medicine, how bots are helping doctors treat patients and how the patients feel about it. dr. marty macari will have more on this.
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>> todd: artificial intelligence is infiltrating medicine, ai co-pilot in an effort to speedup patient care and prevent burnout among professionals. 60% of americans are uncomfortable with healthcare relying on artificial intelligence in immediate care. dr. marty makary joins me now. i will level with you, i don't know how i should think. should i be happy? should i not be happy? as awe medical doctor, do you think medical ai is a good thing? >> dr. makary: there is a good reason for concern, ai has a moral hazard. when you have help, when you have a machine doing part of medical interpretation, there is concern that the doctor may be
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reliant on the ai. the ai should check and judgement and acuity. people are concerned it would be like flying a plane without a pilot and people are not interested in that. >> todd: what it can do, software allows computers to diagnose a patient, help with doctor's notes, anything they might have overlooked, i am down to two and three, the thing can do notes, that is what chat gpt does and we have human error, there will be things inevitably doctors miss. the first one, diagnose, should we trust ai to fully diagnose patients? >> dr. makary: not to fully make the diagnosis, ai could go through a doctor's note and suggest on the side of the
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screen. ai has a cool application in radiology, in looking at ultrasound results, it can suggest diagnosis as a doctor is looking at results and reading mri, and cat scans. it can read a normal chest x-ray with 100% accuracy. if it is abnormal, a doctor takes a closer look. if it is normal, ai is good at that and taking picture of skin conditions. >> todd: 60% uncomfortable, seems like a huge obstacle to acceptance. what will ultimately -- let me try again. will it ultimately become the standard because it is cheaper at the end of the day? >> dr. makary: i think physician and nurse burnout is a real problem in the united states. one reason healthcare is so
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expensive, nurses are leaving and traveling nurses cost more. if we can address the burden for physicians and nurses by assisting with some responsibilities, not the key responsibilities involving judgement and skill, you will see a real role for ai in healthcare. >> todd: can you ever envision a time when you go to the doctor and you mentioned pilot analogy earlier. you go to the doctor and don't see dr. makary, you see dr. chat bot. >> dr. makary: it may make sense that in the reading room you have ai helping doctors read films of cat scans, mris, when it comes to going under the knife, i don't think patients will tolerate going under the knife without a physician. there is therapeutic value to
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touching a patient, putting your hand on their shoulder when they are lying down. when people come to the hospital, they are scared and frightened and many times alleviating that fear is part of the therapeutic value of being a physician or nurse. >> todd: if you have watched this show over the last couple weeks, you can tell ashley and i are freaked out about ai and negative ramifications, we've been relatively positive focusing on the good and not as good. complete opposite end, how worried are you this thing could act malicious to patients, co-opted by evil forces to basically hurt patients and patient care? >> dr. makary: a lot of people say, we don't need ai, we just need i to do simple processes.
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promise of electronic health record, look, we have lost eye to eye contact, people are typing notes. it helps with billing, but not other issues of interoperatability andir shaking information. people are saying ai need to be on the sideline and the doctor still needs to be in charge of everything. >> todd: to pin you down, you are not worried ai will purposely kill us when we go in for a checkup? >> dr. makary: no, but i do worry about a less specific focused physician going in when there is ai doing a lot of work for the physician. we have to be vigilant and use ai as tool and aid not as substitute. >> todd: leave it there, dr. marty makary, thank you, appreciate it. that was somewhat comforting. robots are not going to kill us.
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>> ashley: i love the doctor, not comfortable with it. >> todd: businesses flee a crime-ridden city, talking to the owner of a restaurant who is the last remaining tenant in his remaining building. >> ashley: big weekend for football fans. >> different backgrounds, what i love about football. >> ashley: usfl kicks off, we sent abby hornacek there and she has a preview next. ♪ (dr. aaron king) if you have diabetes, getting on dexcom is the single most important thing you can do. it eliminates painful finger sticks, helps lower a1c, and it's covered by medicare. before using the dexcom g7, i was really frustrated. all of that finger pricking and my a1c was still stuck. my diabetes was out of control.
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for cox, who is accused of helping and both their former partners. daybell heard telling cox, you have already assisted us in ways that could never be paid, but you will continue to do so as you move forward in this life. vallow's best friend claims cox told her, you don't want to know what happened to jj and talley. >> ashley: someone arrested for the murder of bob lee earlier this month. >> todd: brooke singman has the latest. >> brooke: two weeks after the stabbing of tech mogul rob leap. nima momeni was arrested at his home just nine miles from where the stabbing took place.
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>> we can confirm mr. momeni and mr. lee knew each other. he was transported to san francisco county jail and booked on one charge of murder. >> the pair was seen entering the suspect's car around 2:30 a.m. that morning, they got into a confrontation just before lee was stabbed to death. camera caught lee's final moments before he died in the hospital. elon musk put out this tweet saying violent crime in san francisco horrific and if attackers are caught, they are often released immediately. is the city taking stronger action, tagging district attorney brook jenkins and decided to use the announcement of nima momeni's arrest to
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criticize musk. >> statements like mr. musk's tweet that assumed incorrect circumstances about mr. lee's death serve to misperceive. >> brooke: momeni is being held without bail and due in court later this morning for his arraignment hearing. >> ashley: thank you. businesses in portland are leaving the city and due to rising crime and homelessness. it is getting so bad an entire building is empty except for one restaurant. the co-owner is here joining us. thank you for getting up with us this morning. >> thank you for having me on the show and thank you for discussing these important
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topics about what is happening in portland and supporting small business in the area. >> ashley: i'm a huge proponent of supporting small business, cobra coffee just shut down last week, following the amazon hub leaving the business. why are you staying in? >> you know, long story short, ironically, we were the last tenants to enter the building and having high hopes cobra and amazon being our partners and now we're the only ones here. it is obvious, we have a mission and goal to stay strong, although other businesses are closing for reason and we definitely need support to stay open, right? my wife and i, we work countless hours in this business when we established it
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and we've come a long way now to give up. that is our goal, keep portland alive and be the foodie city we are well known for. >> ashley: you and your wife put your heart and soul into this business, opened since 2017. when you researched this area, what was crime like then? >> minimal. it wasn't something we thought about or it wasn't an issue whatsoever. as covid occurred, it definitely increased and became more problematic for employees, customers, fur our community and the staff. we've had to take precautionary measures, ajusted hours of operation, had to cut down on
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staff, hire additional security in the area. >> ashley: obviously nobody wants to deal with it, having to cut hours and cut back on the time you are open, how much money are you losing out on? >> more than i want to, of course. you know what i mean? so there is only so far you can go. you invest, we've invested time and money into this business, signed a long-term lease and it's more than that, right? it is increasing food cost, increase in rent, increase in staffing. there is huge aftermath we are dealing with and it's taking a long time to bounce back. >> ashley: i hate that for you, inflation for one, supply chain issues, people were shut down for covid and now this. are you worried customers will stop coming in because there is
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no other business open or do you have a good enough base where they will keep coming? >> believe it or not, this is a family business, we bring lebanese culture to the community, that is what we do best. our customers support us to this day and that is what we appreciate and we've come up and adapted with new ideas to help us stay operational. i have high hopes for the city. high hopes for our customers and we're looking to -- for things, we pray to get back to normal as soon as possible. >> ashley: i'm praying for you, being the daughter of small business owners, my mom and dad did that. i know how much time you put into it, it is your life. i hope everything will be okay for you guys and i hope the city can get crime and homelessness
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under control, i think a lot of that is putting a huge damper into everyday life in the city. thank you for your time this morning, good luck. >> thank you so much. >> ashley: of course. >> todd: usfl kicking off tomorrow, memphis showboats and the philadelphia stars. >> ashley: fox nation host abby hornacek is in memphis with a pregame preview. >> come saturday, these seats will be filled as usfl kicks off its second season. to find out more, catch up with folks ahead of kickoff. >> memphis, birmingham, four hub cities, last year the games were in birmingham, alabama. what led you to expand to four different cities. >> we wanted teams in their home
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market. on the schedule, it might have been birmingham playing an away game, but it was not away. it was challenging and we wanted to have that opportunity. >> the fact we are in memphis playing in front of the home crowd amps things up. >> it brings us together, that is what i love about football. >> when we get in the city, we want to become a party or community and we want to draw people to the stadium. >> i wanted to play football in memphis, now being in the community and doing what i love in front of those guys, makes me more happy than anything i've ever done. >> definite excitement, it makes people feel good, it's a cool town. >> i thought i saw him the other day, barbecue is out standing. >> it's become a second home, it is exciting to be taking the
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field. >> quite the feat to make season two, what do you attribute to the success? >> it comes down to the people, coaches and players, people in the league office and we leaned on each other. >> just the brotherhood of last year, building on the base of friendship and working hard at practice. >> we have a new group of newcomers. >> this league has so much talent, with that, guys sometimes leave to go to the n.f.l., that is what we saw with terpin, the m.v.p. >> we're doing a good job, we will lose 25 to 30% of the workforce and coaching staff, as well. there is a need for these leagues. >> they are real coaches, super bowl coaches, i have coached against, very innovative.
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>> what are you most excited about? >> trying to win a championship, that is our goal and everybody else and trying to bring a championship to the city of memphis. >> do you think you will? >> i think we will. >> do you think you will? >> fans have to come see. >> tradition on fox, we like to see if quarterbacks can catch the ball. that's right. hike. whoo! yes. >> todd: stick around, abbey will join us from simmons bank. ask her about that throw, second year in a row she's hit a receiver in stride. we fast-forward the clip, if you get the ball there, it doesn't matter, freaking perfect throw. >> ashley: she's an athlete, athletes can pick up on anything. todd is jealous. >> todd: i am.
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boycott after controversial campaign dylan mulvaney goes horribly wrong and top execs at anheuser-busch might not have known about the bad business decision before it went public. hear what is happening inside the company. >> ashley: next guest says he helped make corporations woke and he regrets it. hear from him next.
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>> todd: bud light marketing executive getting roasted for claiming the dylan mulvaney partnership was meant to evolve and elevate the brand and top execs say they were blinded by the partnership saying they did not be about the dealings with mulvaney. some low-level marketing manager must have thought it was no big deal. the beer giant takes 5 billion bath over the ordeal. one activist profiting from the downfall coming out with conservative dad's ultraright. >> we are getting hit in the face left and right by the woke.
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last place we want it is in our beer. >> todd: a rival to bud light, 100% woke-free american beer. and if that is not good enough for you, if you're looking for another favorite beer, two veterans turn brewery owners will tell us about their patriotic alternative. looking forward to that. and log cabin -- says he helped make corporations woke. he hopes it will turn quickly and get out of this mess. >> ashley: the author of that op ed joins us now. why do you think you are responsible for this? >> i will say partially responsible, one person of any at time gay advocates were working with major corporations and senior executives, leaning
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on them to weigh in in support of same-sex marriage, in support of legislation to make it illegal to fire someone because of sexual orientation. looking back 10 years ago and what transpired, if gay issues were not the flash point, inflection point that made ceos comfortable with idea of weighing in on contentious social issues, it was prime accelerant. companies started changing logos to celebrate gay pride in june and there was precedent set that led corporations to weigh in on abortion to black lives matters to voting rights bill. in "wall street journal" i have a way to get us out of this quagmire. >> todd: why did it metastasize
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into what we see today? look at the numbers, the american people supported what you were going into the corporations to do. 10 years later, the majority of the people do not support the insanity we are seeing. but why? why did it happen so quickly? >> there was precedent that was set convincing major corporations to weigh in on same-sex marriage, lgbtq legislation and the ceos felt embolden and thought the public was on their side and public would react to same-sex marriage, two things further left than that, the litany of the progresives, from abortion to defund the police, etcetera. there is insulation among ceos,
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63% do not want ceos weighing in on contentious cultural issues, ceos believe it is their obligation to do so, major disconnect from ceos and consumers they market to. >> ashley: prime example of that is bud light. when you see the pushback and money loss that happened in a week. this was posted april 2, it is the 14th now, when you see the pushback on them, it is not looking good for them. how can they come back from that? >> i'm more interested to see the pushback, the work i'm doing now as head of new tolerance campaign around the country to pushback and bring them to place of neutrality. we have seen bud light's stock fall so quickly, bud light has not posted on social media in almost 14 days, shows bud light
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has had their heels cooled on this issue and it shows the same grassroots pressure that got us into this cultural quagmire can get us out. >> todd: you don't think it is too late to reverse course and strike a balance between respecting fellow humans. this is insanity on the other. >> it is not just a matter of respecting one another, it is important to mention that ceos should focus on bottom line, bringing the greatest return to shareholders on their investments. look, if you want to get involved in politics, fine, run for office. if you want to run a company, focus on the bottom line, that is the message more and more ceos are waking up to, more americans are getting the message to them. >> todd: it is not common for somebody to say i messed up,
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