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tv   Americas Newsroom  FOX News  April 14, 2023 7:00am-8:00am PDT

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sure that we are all in this together, not just new york or alabama, not just iowa. we are all in it together. >> just last month senator proposed a bill to ban foreign adversaries from buying farmland across the entire country. that also has bipartisan support. he is calling on senate majority leader chuck schumer to bring it before the senate for debate. >> dana: a sign of things to come. nate foye, thank you. fox news alert. suspected leaker of highly classified military intelligence documents shared online is now in custody and due in court this hour in boston facing serious federal charges for a breach becoming an embarrassment for the biden administration. i'm dana perino. good morning. >> bill: i'm bill hemmer. the suspect a low level air national guardsman arrested by federal agents at his home in
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southern massachusetts. he is 21, jack teixeira, assigned to the otis air national guard base on cape cod. >> dana: the classified documents began circulating on social media earlier this year. key intelligence on ukraine, china's role in aiding russia. sensitive intelligence on u.s. adversaries and allies and detailed secrets about pentagon and nato plans. former director of national intelligence john ratcliffe earlier calling it a black eye for the biden administration. >> this is bad from every angle. the fact that a 21-year-old kid -- let's face it living with his mother -- has just had a profound impact on world events and diplomatic relations in addition to the damage, the strain to relations with our allies and the propaganda win for our adversaries are the questions about the biden administration. talked about the fact they
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aren't taking this as seriously as they need to. >> bill: mark esper joins us in a moment. the news and reporting from lucas tomlinson who begins in washington. >> good morning, bill. many here in washington are wondering how one of the lowest-ranking members of the massachusetts air national guard got access to briefings for the highest ranking officer in the u.s. military the chairman of the joint chiefs of staff. john ratcliffe making the october sayings. >> some intelligence shows they have been dishonest with the american people about our activities in places around the world. >> many present and former members of u.s. military have been concerned of how many have access to the most secure server known as the intelligence communication systems which houses top secret and special information. secret materials is on a secure server called the sipper net. too many in the military treat it like the internet.
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on capitol hill the chairman of the senate armed services committee said it was a major security breach not allowed to happen again. anyone with a security clearance by purposely mishandling or disclosing classified materials must be held accountable. the pentagon defended its system yesterday. >> when you join the military, depending on your position, you may require a security clearance. if you are working in the intelligence community and you require security clearance, you are going to go through the proper vetting. we entrust our members with a lot of responsibility at a very early age. >> officials say for those wondering how this 21-year-old guardsman had all this access, think about the access i.t. people have in corporations all over the world, bill. >> bill: fact on that, lucas. >> dana: let's bring in former defense secretary mark esper.
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he had access to final products. can you explain your concern here? >> like most people, i don't understand why a 21-year-old national guardsman had access to some of the most highly kept secrets in the united states. in particular, finished products from the joint staff or c.i.a. operations center. i don't know why he would have access to those. frankly, i don't know why the massachusetts national guard needs access to those things, either. >> bill: fair point on that. we talked about that last hour with the former head of d.n.i. john ratcliffe. we have heard so many experts over the past 24 hours say there must be a need to know. i think we can all agree on that. but if he is working in i.t., you go looking for young people when you are looking for people to do coding or to fix your technology. there must be a better system before you grant someone access
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to that. the question is what is the solution after you think about this today? >> well, i understand the need for a clearance to work on the equipment. that's what he did. he was a communication specialist who set things up and did i.t. work. there is a need to have a clearance for that but not access to the information on that system let alone finished products from the joint staff and c.i.a. i have two immediate concerns right now we need to find out through the f.b.i. and investigators is what is the scope and scale of the release so we can get a better handle on that and close up all the -- everything that's open. secondly, why did he do it? is anybody else involved? that's what we need to know right now. we could start closing these doors. d.o.d. has a problem of not overclassification but in this case overdistribution. too many people have access to this information. it should only be for the
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highest levels of our government. we knowed to get that under control. >> dana: not only did he leak the information that is embarrassing but we also found out something. here is call for number five joe rogue an reporting the most shocking intel leak reveals new chinese military advances including hypersonic missiles. what do we need to know here? >> look, it is not just embarrassing by damaging. we hurt ukraine with regard to their current and future operations against russia with a counter offensive. burned our access to the russian military and russian intelligence systems with insights where they are today and in the future. to your reference with the chinese, we may have exposed those sources, the techniques as well. those are all very damaging and why i was surprised president biden said yesterday he didn't see any harm or something like that coming out of this. this is very damaging not just to our operations but to our
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relationships with our allies as well. >> dana: i should make a point josh rogan in the "washington post." >> bill: one thing you said a moment ago about the air national guard in massachusetts and we put the question to ratcliffe last hour. why is it that way? >> well, you know, sometimes the national guard units of the national guard are called up to perform specific missions at a federal level. we need to find out whether this happened in this case. otherwise i just don't see the need for the massachusetts national guard to have access to finished products. that's the issue i'm concerned about. >> bill: sorry for the interruption here. to be clear on this. if massachusetts has it, the other 49 states have it. >> dana: right. >> that's my concern. again, finished products like this should only be for people at the highest levels of the federal government. combat and commanders in theaters of operations, not down to the reserves and the guard and young airmen and young soldiers out there.
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they don't have a need to know. that's the issue. the question is the need to know. clearly the over distribution and overaccess to highly classified intelligence. >> dana: one thing i wanted to ask you about. you said is anybody else involved. that opened up a range of possibilities and a lot of skepticism the government -- with this individual being paid by somebody else in order to do this? what happened to change that. is that what you mean? >> on the most dangerous and months concerning end is there some type of foreign influence prodding him or asking him for information and then you ask yourself if not that, was there somebody else, another colleague in the unit aware. then you may have a negligence issue from the chain of command. was he not properly supervised or given access to information he wasn't or shouldn't have been allowed access to. i think we have to pull the threads. i'm most concerned about the most dangerous one now is, is
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there some type of outside influence involved here. we need to track that down quickly and make sure we close the doors and get it under control. >> bill: good to have you on. right now this court, dana, he was brought in about 4 or 5 minutes ago wearing khaki prison jumpsuit in handcuffs. believed to be his father in the gallery. reporter and producer in the courtroom says he had a sad look on his face. a few family members are in the courtroom. two women arrived and sat in the first row hugged a man who is possibly his father. that appearance is getting underway in the commonwealth of massachusetts. >> dana: away we go. lots of follow up on that. we'll follow that as well. fox news alert here. >> i'm in awe of him. we're so different. i'm a home body, he is a thrill syracuse and adventurer. i can't relate to him sometimes
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and the life he leads as a reporter. i think the america reports on russia sometimes in a way that makes it seem like a pretty terrifying, cold place. >> the family is talking here and making their story known. the sister of detained "wall street journal" reporter evan gershkovitch. his family gave an interview. a top russian official saying his government might be open to a prisoner swap after the verdict in his trial on charges of espionage. greg palkot is live in london and picks up the story. hello. >> we'll have more of that moving interview with the family of evan gershkovitch in a moment. first an update on the 31-year-old american's status. the "wall street journal" reporter was arrested last month in russia on charges of espionage which he and just
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about everybody else denies. he is now in a tough moscow prison. the word is he wouldn't even be considered for release by way of a prisoner swap until he is tried. and that, experts say, could take at least a year. the us is saying it is an unlawful attention and new ways to try for his release. evan is said to be in good spirits, aside from his lawyer he hasn't been able to see anything like u.s. embassy staffers and his family. the "wall street journal" interviewed his sister, father and mother for the first time since evan's captivity. let's hear a little more of what they had to say. >> he was really passionate about showing other sides of russia, the nuance. >> i trusted his judgment. of course it makes things more difficult for me now because i feel that i have failed in some
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way as a father. >> be optimistic and believe in happy endings. that's where we are right now. but i am -- i understand what's involved but that's what i choose to believe. >> i am not stupid, i understand what's involved but i choose to believe. those very, very strong words from evan's mother. remember his parents were jewish exiles to america from the former soviet union. this has got to be hard but yes, we hear from his sister, too and we hear how proud he was of his heritage. >> bill: they would clearly understand the perils of putin's system. thank you, greg palkot. >> homicide investigators developed information that identified the suspect. we can confirm that mr. lee and
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mr. momeni knew each other. >> dana: they made an arrest in the murder of bob lee. what we know about the suspect and the city's crime crisis. bay area native emily joining us on all that. >> bill: brand-new video of a woman in california moments before she was kidnapped. what the f.b.i. is saying about her case today. >> dana: california lawmakers want to ban the use of police canines during arrests because they could bite criminals. lawrence jones will sink his teeth into that story. veteran homeowners: making a big car payment every month? car loans can be expensive, and the payments high. consolidate that car loan into a newday home loan and save hundreds every month.
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>> this is still an ongoing investigation. we are not at the end of the road. we're truly at the beginning of the road. my office has to again have sufficient evidence to be able
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to prosecute this case to a jury, which to do that his department still has more work to do. >> bill: there was a shocking twist in the story in san francisco. the news broke yesterday on our program. police made an arrest after a stabbing death of the cash app founder bob lee. a mystery for a week. now police think they've got their man. another tech executive, 38-year-old nima momenty arrested and charged with lee's murder. they knew each other. emily compagno is here with us. nice to see you. we're trying to piece that together. we know some things. a lot of the holes haven't been filled in yet. what are we working off of now? >> lots to be determined. what fer what we know it appears as if both of those, the defendant subject was in the car with bob lee. this was at about 2:30 a.m. in the morning. what we don't know is the nature
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of their relationship. police have confirmed that they did know each other in some form or fashion. that apparently they got into a confrontation, altercation after bob lee exited the vehicle and allegedly momeni stabbed him multiple times outside of the vehicle on the sidewalk. we know tragically bob lee tried to get help from a neighboring car. we have footage of that. we don't know whether that car contained momeni or not. was it is stranger or passer by or the killer himself? we aren't sure. we learn more details about the subject. his next door neighbor said he was the ceo of expand i.t. i never saw any employees, just him. police have executed search warrants for his sister's home in san francisco. she is married to a prominent plastic surgeon there and we also know that per the arrest of
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momeni the neighbor did mention that 24 hours prior there was an altercation situation that alerted security where a woman was pounding on his door looking for him shouting for him. perhaps unrelated but all goes into the mystery and tragic circumstance. >> dana: april 1st lee traveled to san francisco for business. he used to live there. now miami. i attended april 2nd-three birthday party of a friend. the 4th he was stabbed. i know you are not the investigator. how did they find out it was him? was there surveillance, video or the car? >> we aren't sure about the details yet. there are also conflicting reports whether or not the knife was found at the scene where it was recovered from. and we know that as you just mentioned he moved from san francisco because he called it deteriorated.
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unfortunate he left because of the rise in crime although now it doesn't seem random. it was a 16-minute walk from where he was staying there at a hotel. he moved from there. to where he was found stabbed to death. >> bill: he has two kids, married, divorced, living in florida as you point out in miami. what strikes me about this story, i know it was 2:30 in the morning but he tried to get help and could not get it in time. the best shot he had was when he dialed 911 on his phone and they got there too late. the flashing lights on this car, he pulls his shirt up to show the stab wounds and people don't react in a way that could have saved his life. >> it reminds me of that tragic situation in california when a 15-year-old was kidnapped and tortured and after she was flagging down cars after she escaped the first car drove by. i wonder if sometimes people see that horror and their instinct is to flee rather than help. he was found unconscious on the
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sidewalk and died. >> the podcast is an incredible undertaking. the fox true crime podcast available anywhere you can download podcasts for free and what is so remarkable in my opinion about this podcast is the guests of mine are the closest individuals to the actual crime. it is the family, the sister of the missing woman, the f.b.i. investigator that never gave up. the criminal himself as you will see in some of these episodes. unparalleled access and perspective by these individuals. >> dana: love it. you found your calling. >> i hope so. >> dana: see you on "outnumbered." the f.b.i. releases video moments in the final moments before a california woman was kidnapped while walking her dog in mexico. you can see her there. the 29-year-old woman is a u.s. citizen last seen november 29th in daylight when she was pulled
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into a van. the f.b.i. is offering a reward of up to $40,000 for any information on where she might be. a special agent believes it was a targeted kidnapping and monica may be held hostage. >> bill: wow. 23 past now. senator tim scott inching closer to a white house bid. why the evangelical vote might make or break his candidacy. plus the wheel of fortune taking a painful turn for one contestant. a bad luck streak that has to be seen to believe. ♪
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search. starting today commercial operations at an international bridge will be suspended to allow more agents to process migrants crossing illegally. we'll see how it works in el paso. casey is there to see how it turns out. >> this could be a big problem. that one cargo facility that you are talking about has the ability of processing up to 700 commercial vehicles coming into the united states every single day. it has been more like 200 a day recently because of tougher enhancements and security procedures they have had to go through. the closure is no doubt going to cause back-ups and delays with cbp here in el paso needing more agents, they say, out in the field to help process the migrants illegally crossing. as this sector really begins to heat up, the data shows a nearly 157% increase in migrant encounters in this sector so far
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for the fiscal year compared to the same time period in 2022. looking ahead to the weekend then agents taking steps to insure this does not happen again. remember that? a mass migrant protest at the bridge connecting mexico to el paso. several hundred were involved upset over long wait times to cross. >> the numbers have only been increasing. we are seeing an exponential number of migrants coming across, 5 and 6 times normal levels. and we don't see an end in sight. >> tensions have been running high in juarez where thousands of migrants are congregating waiting to cross the border. conditions have been described as deplorable. that's also the spot where 40 migrants died last month in a fire that ripped through a mexican migrant camp.
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>> bill: thanks, casey, good luck in el paso. thank you. >> i'll defend the judeo-christian foundation our nation is built on and protect our religious liberty and stand up to communist china and restore opportunities for hard working americans to thrive and prosper. >> dana: senator tim scott making his pitch to voters launching an exploratory committee for 2024. he will need the support of evangelicals if he will break out from the pack. josh is a contributor for axios, the "wall street journal" poll asking importance of faith and religion to voters. patriotism 73%. belief in god pretty strong, 65%. religion at 60%. how is it shaping up for either tim scott or others you see in the race on the republican side so far? >> dana, tim scott has made faith the central part of his
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presidential exploratory committee. that's a key part of his appeal. his positivity, the fact that he is authentically a christian and speaks his values. the big challenge tim scott will face is on the issue of abortion because evangelical voters largely want the most pro-life candidates to be running as the nominee. tim scott has a very strong pro-life record in the senate but he got himself in a little bit of trouble when he was campaigning in new hampshire this week because he said he -- he didn't say he would support a federal abortion ban at first and then settled own 20-week abortion ban. not as strict as a proposal that lindsey graham his colleague in south carolina has also proposed. there is a lane for tim scott to run as the evangelical candidate with a positive message but he is also getting tripped up on the one issue right now that
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evangelicals care the most about. >> bill: here is what he said to fox digital on that topic. roll this clip yesterday. >> i think there is a need for some kind of threshold that says we will limit access to abortion for no more than x number of weeks because we continue to see the rise of the far radical left wanting abortions up until the day of birth. we hope to be a culture of life. >> bill: you consider a few things now in a primary contest. iowa, new hampshire and south carolina, 1, 2, and 3 out of the gate. ron desantis signed a bill yesterday that makes abortion after six weeks illegal. what tim scott has said he would sign a ban at 20 weeks. i think he said this week he would consider 15-week ban. who runs to the inside of that issue? how does he get people in iowa to get behind his candidacy who
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you know will be conservative enough to show up at caucus night? >> you laid out the central challenge for a lot of republicans running in the primary on the issue of abortion. tim scott's 20 week federal abortion ban proposal is kind of in the political sweet spot. in the republican primary you have a candidate like ron desantis looking to run for president who just signed a six-week abortion ban in his home state. so you have candidates that are to the right of scott, to the right of donald trump, for instance, as well on the issue of abortion. and there is a tension between what it takes to win the primary by promising stricter and stricter regulations on abortion. it looks like it was ron desantis's calculation when he signed the six-week abortion ban in florida but also the issue of electability. democrats won key elections in swing states by attacking
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republicans for being too pro-life and too supportive of abortion bans. tim scott is one of these republicans who looks like a very electable candidate but on the issue of abortion that's a tricky test for all these candidates. >> dana: it really is. we didn't mention nikki haley. give a quick thought how she handled it so far? >> she has kept the question open. she hasn't committed to a certain week ban for abortion. but sle she is also looking to appeal to moderate voters. if she takes too hard line of a position on abortion regulations it could undermine that very, very strong case she has. >> dana: thank you. you missed my earlier in the commercial break i had a big thought about all of this. i may share them one day. great to see you, josh.
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>> bill: bad luck street for the ages is today's hemmer celebrity news. it happened on the wheel of fortune. happened on tuesday of this week. we did not want the week to go by without watching this. >> oh. >> i know. >> how many times? >> oh, no. >> shut up. >> it's just like you have to get me. the contestant is an assistant principal. he walked away with $650 and bankrupts three times and he faints. >> dana: is that true? >> bill: i'm buying it. >> dana: vanna bought it, too. we wish him the best. america's largest store wal-mart is closing half its stores in
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chicago because of crime. california lawmakers are pushing to take away another important tool for crime fighters. why they want to end canine patrols to protect crime suspects. what is going on? lawrence jones next. ♪ ♪ limu emu & doug ♪ hey, man. nice pace! clearly, you're a safe driver. you could save hundreds for safe driving with liberty mutual. they customize your car insurance so you only pay for what you need! [sfx: limu squawks] whoo! we gotta go again. only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪
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>> bill: late word from boston. what we know from inside the courtroom on jack teixeira making his first court appearance a moment ago. he did not enter a plea. a judge ordered him to stay in jail clearly before a hearing next week. charged with unauthorized removal and retention of classified material. he was in handcuffs and prison jumpsuit. his family was there and
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apparently upon leaving court his father yelled out i love you, jack. that's the latest we have. the video from late yesterday afternoon in north dighton, massachusetts. southern part of the commonwealth in court in boston where the case is at the moment for this 21-year-old american. we'll wait until next week to see where we go next. stand by on that. more to come. >> dana: people mourning the loss of a loved one now turning to artificial intelligence to create a virtual version of their family members. mark meredith has the story from washington. hi, mark. >> stick with me on this. it will sound like science fiction. a.i. is reshaping the way people see their loved ones in life and death. it allows people to record their face, voice, mannerisms over a period of a month and data is turned into an a.i. avatar. if that same person passed away a loved one would be able to communicate with the avatar that looks like the person who is dead. there are limits to what the
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a.i. can do an say. costs $10,000 and demand is booming. a.i. reunification is a growing trend. tech capturing worldwide attention in 2020 when a south korean woman. in is a heartbreaking moment. take a look. [speaking foreign language] >> technology is impressive but what it could mean from greefrg. could it hold them back? we checked with a psychologist at columbia university. >> it has no moral sense or sense of intimacy with a person. so the potential for it to come
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up with wildly inappropriate or wildly inaccurate behaviors come as images even is right now i think quite high. that could be extremely disturbing, i think. >> the tech is evolving but clear how many people would give just about anything for one more conversation with a friend or family member. likely the tech will only get more popular. >> dana: you have given us a lot to think about. thank you for the report. appreciate it. >> you bet. >> one of our biggest successes and biggest tools to de-escalate situations is the deployment of canines. >> california sheriff lashing out at lawmakers who want to call off the dogs proposing a ban on law enforcement officers using canines to apprehend suspects or crowd control during protests. also police dogs don't bite anyone. that's the objective, they say. lawrence jones host of
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cross-country every saturday night. freshly back from california, the golden state never looked so golden, right, sir? what did you find? you have some experience with yourself with a dog of your own. what do you think about this california proposal? >> i think it's stupid. the last thing a canine handler wants to do is have to deploy the canine on a human. we're dealing with drugs now, right? these canines have the opportunity to sniff the drugs as well as go after the dealers. and wherever those drugs, there is guns. you have to protect your product. they'll get hit by the police or competitors. plus you have people that are going to put law enforcement lives at risk. we have the rule in canine handlers when your dog is deployed you are deployed. as the dog goes, you goes. it is a tool but not like the dogs are out there by
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themselves. there are cops with them as well. if the dog is in the fight, the cop is in the fight. >> dana: call for number two. the california bill on police dogs says the use of canines abuse of black americans and people of color for centuries. they think there is a target here. >> i will say this as someone on year two of getting my certification in trained law enforcement and being a black man, those are people that in a historical time abused their power. not the dogs doing something bad. those were bad humans. to lay this at the feet of the dog as well as this new age of policing is unfair. look, the dogs save black lives. drugs are in our communities, crime is in our communities and right now there is a shortage of canine handlers. they don't get the proper training. they can't even afford to get the dogs.
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>> dana: they are so valuable. >> so valuable. there is a reason why law enforcement use them. it makes them seems like dogs are biting people. they aren't trained to do that. they are trained to go after threats, to sniff bombs, to sniff drugs. >> dana: also deterrents. >> fentanyl is the number one killer. you think humans are sniffing it? if a human sniffs it they'll drop like a rock. you have to think of the big picture. >> bill: you were in san francisco. dying to get your impression what you saw there. whole foods is closing one of their stores and wal-mart closing as well. wal-mart says we're closing one. in trinity. you talked to folks who shop there and this is what they told you. >> it's my go-to spot. it makes sense given everything i saw when i was in there every day. >> what did you see?
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>> a lot of theft. a lot of safety concerns. >> it is unfortunate. it was really convenient for us. i'm sad that it is too dangerous. >> petty theft does go on. there is so much homelessness in this area and drug use. it just contributes to big businesses closing. >> bill: a couple things here. >> i was there two months ago. >> bill: 60 days. what is it like? >> it's terrible. it makes skid row looks like a mansion. drugs everywhere and stores here by the whole foods starting to board up. the interesting thing was the people didn't know yet in the community. i'm sitting out there doing the man on the street and people walking up to the whole foods for lunch to open the door. it's locked. i got their instant reaction. they go why is it being closed? i broke it down and they said we're not surprised.
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it is sad for us but not surprised. a lot of folks telling me they'll move out because they can't do it. >> dana: we'll see you tomorrow at 10:00 p.m. eastern. >> it is so great she records and watches it sunday and gives me her thoughts the next day. >> dana: i can't stay up that late. it is a great show. you can do what i do and record it and watch it sunday morning before you watch shannon bream. wal-mart the latest victim of progressive crime policies costing them millions. costing them millions. or ulcerative colitis symptoms are stopping you in your tracks... choose stelara® from the start... and move toward relief after the first dose... with injections every two months. stelara® may increase your risk of infections, some serious, and cancer. before treatment, get tested for tb. tell your doctor if you have an infection, flu-like symptoms, sores, new skin growths, have had cancer, or if you need a vaccine.
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mass general brigham -- when you need some of the brightest minds in medicine. this is a leading healthcare system with five nationally ranked hospitals, including two world-renowned academic medical centers. in boston, where biotech innovates daily and our doctors teach at harvard medical school and the physicians doing the world-changing research are the ones providing care. ♪ there's only one mass general brigham. >> bill: the latest on the court appearance in downtown boston. video of what we believe is jack teixeira's family leaving the courthouse a moment ago. i don't know what was said, if anything there. >> dana: teixeira did not enter a plea in court today. he will be held for another week in jail and then they will revisit that. that's the family leaving.
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a pretty charged courthouse this morning. >> bill: we'll follow that for you. court is over for the day. that might be his father there, we don't know. he left court and said jack, i love you and that was the end of that for today. more updates when we get them. >> dana: we told you who whole foods shutting a san francisco store over a crime. it will close four chicago stores as crime surges there. the retailer is losing millions each year. lydia hu live in chicago. >> here is one of the stores that will be closing on sunday along with three others across the windy city. chicago saying in a statement that our chicago stores have not been profitable since we opened the first one nearly 17 years ago. these stores lose tens of millions of dollars a year and annual losses nearly doubled in just the last five. some, like democratic chicago mayor brandon johnson say the closures are part of a larger
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trend. you can see on the map wal-mart is closing more than 20 stores across 12 states. dana, local business analysts that we've spoken to say these closures in chicago more of a reflection of the local trend, high taxes and rising crime. watch. >> property taxes can be tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands of dollars for businesses. they also have one of the most cu cumbersome regulatory environments in the city of chicago. >> people walking by here are sad to see the wal-mart go. it is one less place to buy affordable goods and groceries, something they desperately need in this inflationary environment. >> dana: happening across the country. before we go on this friday. >> bill: a double shot, right? >> dana: so years ago -- two years a little puppy named after me, dana, a canine companion
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puppy being raised by jennifer williams. she is a part of a canine companion prison program. erin met up with him for about a month and trained with him and guess what? he is turning his life around to the point that he credits the dog with helping him get paroled and getting that back out there back into society and the canine companion prison program representative said every time aaron talks about the puppy he got tears in his eyes. a big change of heart. >> bill: beautiful dog. i love labs. lives of cohen and rosen. you want to get benefits at fox you have to go here. that right there is mason axle born on the 13th of april at
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11:31 a.m. he came early but good and healthy. we love to see. big brother chase is in the middle, too. a family of four for liza. things are growing. they might have a baseball team soon. well done, congratulations everybody is healthy. >> dana: good week, big week. busy week indeed. have a good weekend. harris faulkner is up next with "the faulkner focus." have a good weekend, everyone. >> harris: we begin with a fox news alert. the first court appearance for the suspect in that massive classified pentagon leak, we saw that just a little while ago. that 21-year-old accused of the largest national security breach in a decade. i'm harris faulkner and you are in "the faulkner focus." the f.b.i. arrested the air national guardsman jack teixeira yesterday at his home in massachusetts. the bureau citing unauthorized removal, retention and transmission of national classified defense information. it's a crime under the

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