tv Americas Newsroom FOX News May 15, 2023 7:00am-8:00am PDT
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state university and your older daughter has just made you a grandmother. so life does go on, although it is difficult to do. as you channel your grief through johnny's ambassadors i'm sure you will touch a lot of hearts and reach a lot of people who need to know this information. laura, thank you. >> thank you, dana. >> even more notorious violent having a grant in the subway. they man had the outstanding warrant for assaulting the elderly woman and several others but a rap sheet as long as my arm. it will all go to the question of reasonableness. whether or not he was reasonable in the use of deadly physical force to subdue neely. >> dana: thousands of people rally around the marine veteran who restrained a mentally ill homeless man on the new york
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city subway. witnesses say the man was threatening fellow passengers. donors raised $2 million to defend daniel penny charged with manslaughter putting neely in a fatal choke hold. i'm dana perino. >> bill: laura stack was a very impressive woman. our best to her and her cause. i'm bill hemmer. good morning. 41,000 people from all walks of life contributing to daniel penny's legal defense fund donors praising him as a hero and denouncing alvin] for bringing the charges against the decorated marine who stepped in to protect others. penny's lawyer thanking the public for their generosity and defending penny's action. >> he didn't go to the subway seeking to harm anyway or attack anyone. he was putting himself in harm's way for the benefit of others. >> dana: laura engel is live in the newsroom today. hi, laura.
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>> supporters of daniel penny showed up over the weekend helping to raise $2 million for his defense fund. it happened in the last few minutes. as the 24-year-old continues to work on his defense, the family of jordan neely, the homeless man who died in the choke hold incident to lay him to rest on friday. the fund created by his legal team passed over the $2 million mark. the funds will handle legal fees and any excess will be donated to a mental health advocacy program here in new york city. and penny as we know is out on $1 hundred thousand bail after turning himself in voluntarily in connection to the may one choke hold death of neely and charged with second degree manslaughter. neely was making threats, screaming at passengers that day saying he was hungry, thirsty
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and that he didn't care if he went to jail or died before penny stepped in. neely's family along with protestors have been calling for murder charges in this case. saying that neely did not deserve to die. penny's attorneys have said he never intended to cause neely's death. penny's cousin telling the "new york post" over the weekend this saying it is disgusting. here is a young man who served our country. he is handsome, fun kid who can always be counted on when you needed help. story continues to draw attention to manhattan district attorney alvin bragg's decision to charge penny. governor desantis supports good samaritans like penny criticizing the left's pro-criminal agenda. more as it goes on. >> dana: thank you. the number of migrants crossing the border has surprisingly fallen the past few days since the end of title 42 but barely puts a dent in the number of
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migrants entering since october. the border patrol dumping migrants into border towns such as yuma, arizona relying on local and state governments to handle the problem. yuma county supervisor is with us. what have you experienced, sir? >> we've seen a little reduction after we saw a second record high in yuma, arizona where we had over 1500 come in the day before title 42 was set to expire. we had over 5,000 in custody at that point in time. the following day, the numbers dropped significantly down to about 150. and remained consistent at 600, with such an overwhelming number of people who came across at one time, border patrol and ice have had to limit the lateral transfers into other border patrol stations and turn to the community and arizona department
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of emergency management in order to decompress the number they have had in custody. >> bill: here is secretary mayokas talking over the weekend on the numbers dropping by half. >> the united states border patrol has seen a 50% drop of the number of people encountered at the southern border. >> bill: if i have this right now. i don't know if you agree with him or not. last thursday you had 1500, which is the single highest day you have ever had. you had 5,000 in custody and your capacity close to 250%. but on friday and saturday and sunday things changed. why do you think that was and is secretary mayokas right in the 50% number he cited? >> yeah, for the most part in yuma. 600 per day is 100% more than
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what we were seeing last month averaging 300 a day. if you go back two years we were at 20 to 30 a day. still a significant number of people coming across. this morning we had people from moldova and west africa. i don't know if i would agree with secretary mayokas on anything other than it is half from what we saw the week before but still a significant number of people coming across illegally into the united states. >> dana: with the big surge you had last week and it continues even if it's at a lower rate, what is it like and how has it transformed yuma? >> first and foremost it has brought everybody together as far as a community or the ability to work together between the cities and county looking for solutions. yuma fire department stepped up and unfortunately we have had to place those people who have been released into the community into
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an emergency training facility. but we did so and the city did so in order to keep them off the streets so they didn't face additional dangers. we had concerns expressed from people within the community and so it was prudent that action be taken. and we await ice and other ngos to continue to facilitate the expedited removal from yuma. we have limited resource. you've been before. we're a small community. we appreciate everybody coming together and working to solve this problem. >> bill: 600 a day is no small matter. jonathan, we'll stay in contact and see how it goes. thank you for your time. that's a new one on me, moldova. they weren't on the list before. yemen was and he mentioned egypt. over the weekend bill melugin confirmed an afghan crossed the border near san diego is on the
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terror watch list. we don't know how many of people on the terror watch list got through. >> dana: matt finn shows us the court date for one of the migrants. she showed a reporter it was for 2026. so until then what do they do? no legal papers, how are they going to take care of themselves? it shows a lack of care for them and those trying to get here legally and communities trying to deal with it. including new york city. >> bill: title 42 is over and what we get next is wait to see what happens. >> dana: we'll wait to see. >> bill: bipartisan group of lawmakers to get a stock trading ban onto the floor for a vote. watch this story now. similar measures have gotten some support but wound up stalled. aishah hosni as to whether or not this one will get over the line. how are you doing? good morning there. >> good to see you, bill. good morning to you and dana. this one has a lot of momentum. just to put it in perspective here right now in the current
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congress there are six different pieces of legislation that seek to ban stock trading for lawmakers, spouses and their dependents. so quite a bit of momentum on capitol hill. 21 members last week, bill, ranging from the far left's aoc in the far right's matt rosen dale. they actually got together and sent this letter to the house administration committee demanding the committee mark up any one of these bills introduced by members before the august recess. now last month it was widely reported that members like representative malliotakis and blume en hour were trading bank stocks. they said they were doing what their financial advisors told them to do. congress needs guardrails because the american people have had enough. >> one of the reasons they don't trust congress as an institution is we look at being self-serving. >> it goes to the heart of why
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all of us ran for office and that is to do the people's business. not our own. >> banning stocks has had bipartisan support for quite some time. former house speaker nancy pelosi, in a democrat-controlled house, did not prioritize this. representative ken buck tells fox that other republicans and himself will go to speaker mccarthy to ask that this be put on the floor. >> bill: we'll see whether or not they get it done. many remain dubious. we shall see. aishah hosni on the hill. >> dana: check this out. i couldn't take it. dramatic video of a shark ramming into a kayak off the coast of hawaii. >> holy cow. >> shark. the shark rammed me. >> dana: the shark took a bite out of the kayak and lost interest and swam away. the man in the kayak was lucky
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getting nothing but a big scare as he continued his fishing trip. i would never recover from that. >> bill: that's more than a palmetto bug, i tell you that, in your apartment. >> dana: how did that go last night? >> bill: not great. that's stunning video. >> dana: how did they get it? >> bill: i think the camera on the main sail. >> dana: amazing indeed. all right. don't have any nightmares. >> bill: they are safe at home. all right, this. >> the trojan horse for put-in in nato. with turkey now, you know, everyone is just saying enough is enough. people are suffering. >> bill: human rights activist freedom at the election in turkey where he grew up. could we see a changing of the guard there?
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jack keane, retired four-star general on this coming up. >> dana: the search for a deal on the debt ceiling looking as elusive as ever. time is running out to find common ground. whose default will it be if it doesn't work out? >> the democrats and republicans have got to get real about this thing. we are spiraling out of control. we can't continue to spend this kind of money. so you only pay for what you need. that's my boy. now you get out there, and you make us proud, huh? ♪ bye, uncle limu. ♪ stay off the freeways! only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ ♪ with wet amd, sometimes i worry my world is getting smaller because of my sight.
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serious retailers from in order nordstroms and others have left over crime and safety issues. when you start losing businesses like that, there is no job, empty store fronts and you see what happens. >> bill: started in august of 2020. we're in may of 2023. they have not been able to stop the bleeding, all right? >> dana: no, they have not. i think dave chapel picks his battles when he will speak. just at a time when you need a little boost. >> bill: like to watch that. >> dana: they might listen to dave chappelle. try to fix the city. >> bill: the white house scheduling debt deal talks to accommodate biden's trip to japan. two weeks until the deadline. both sides say they're far away from a deal. edward lawrence is tracking that from the north lawn. >> good morning.
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we are still hearing some optimism, though and progress possibly made over the weekend. the president is still planning to have his meeting with congressional leadership on tuesday right before he leaves for the g7. >> president biden: what i learned a long time ago is never good to characterize negotiation. i remain optimistic. i'm an optimist. i really think there is a desire on their part as well as ours to reach agreement. i think we'll be able to do it. >> bill: white house economic advisor says the talks over the weekend were serious an constructive. >> our expectation is that congress will do what is necessary even as we continue to have parallel discussions on the budget, which is a normal thing that congress needs to do every year. >> the white house is trying to say it is not negotiation over the debt ceiling. rather negotiation over the budget.
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the two are clearly linked. on the table we may have areas of agreement. clawing back some covid fundsing and well as limiting growth of spending. also permitting reforms that senator joe manchin wanted. republicans say there is extra money, though, that could be clawed back. listen. >> the unspent covid funds should be a no-brainer. the covid pandemic even this administration admitted it is over. those funds should come back. one of the things i would hope to see on the table is the unspent and unallocated debt relief funds, if you will. the student loan debt relief that biden has provided that i think is unconstitutional. >> bill: the red line for this president and white house has been the inflation reduction act. any money in that act and any of the programs for climate change that came out of that act the president not willing to negotiate on that. >> bill: your job is to follow this. keep us up to date on this. >> dana: you follow it so i
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don't have to. >> bill: see you, edward. >> dana: turkey heading for a presidential runoff election. erdogan with a small lead. the staggering inflation and the earthquakes giving him the biggest challenge of his 20 years leading turkey. let's bring in general jack keane. why does this matter to all of us here at home? >> well, it definitely matters. turkey is strategically located part of europe, to be sure, nato member, and also a nation in the middle east. and that strategic location is actually vital. when we look at nato, turkey has the second largest military in nato. the first is obviously the united states. now we have a strained relationship with turkey as a member of nato.
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the reason is simple. they moved closer to russia. major trading partner with russia, obviously helping them avoid sanctions as a result of all of that. but the reality is that when you look at what is happening in turkey, you also see that this is still a deeply divided society. that erdogan's policy of polarizing his nation for 20 years has worked. and despite his authoritarianism and moving away from democratic freedoms, despite the economic mal practice in tanking his economy largely due to inflation that you mentioned and as i mentioned his moving away from the united states and the west, he is likely to win this runoff my sources are telling me, dana. and that's just the reality that they are facing. his opponent fell way behind in the polls. they are deflated as a result of the primary election.
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>> dana: he said this in a tweet that while the election was held in such a positive and democratic atmosphere trying to -- a question for you is do you think that if he wins again, what do we think for the future of nato in that scenario? >> that's a great question. something we've talked about prior to this election. as disturbing as he is in our relationship with nato and with it these the fact he opposed finland coming into nato and eased up on that and finland is part of that. opposed sweden coming into nato and staunchly still opposed to that and he purchased s-400 missile defense systems from russia. their most advanced and also has our getting our advance fighter aircraft and bringing those two
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together. russian technology can understand our technology made no sense to us. what we've always looked at with erdogan for the 20 years is to look beyond erdogan. turkey matters as a part of nato and in terms of helping to provide stability in the middle east. turkey is not just erdogan. so let's look beyond him. but i think what's going to happen here, we have five more years dealing with erdogan. he is not going to change his stripes at all. that does not mean that we should evict him from nato. that would be a strategic mistake. a near-term feel-good moment but long-term recipe for disaster. >> dana: what is your thought how the biden administration has dealt with turkey? >> they have tried to reach out with erdogan, played heavily in
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finland becoming part of nato. playing heavily with sweden. i'm not certain what is going to come of all of that. they certainly have criticized the s-400 deal as did the previous administration. they have tried to work with erdogan. erdogan marches to his own drumbeat and that's been the problem we have had for some time. many of us looking at this are hoping that the people would finally reject him. mainly for what he is doing to them in taking away their individual freedoms, the free press restrictions, crushing the parliament and clearly what he has done in terms of his macroeconomics in absolutely tanking and crushing the turkey economy. which is impacting all the people. nonetheless he is likely to win this re-election unfortunately. >> dana: general jack keane, thank you for your time this morning. have a great week. >> great talking to you. >> bill: 25 past.
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over the weekend governor ron desantis hit the road in iowa over the weekend and took a few swipes at his expected challenger, former president donald trump. taylor swift stepping in to protect a fan. dramatic moment in philly in the middle of her concert. don't miss this, dana. ♪ from big cities, to small towns, and on main streets across the us, you'll find pnc bank. helping businesses both large and small, communities and the people who live and work there grow and thrive. we're proud to call these places home too. they're where we put down roots, and where together, we work to help move everyone's financial goals forward. pnc bank.
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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. >> my better half and i have been able to be all over iowa today. before we go back to florida we wanted to come by and say hi to the people of des moines. >> bill: florida governor ron desantis hit the capital city of des moines. former president trump canceled a rally on saturday after
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tornado warnings were issued. the contributor to axios here to take us through this. a lot of headlines about him taking swipes at donald trump. the sound bite where -- for those who would suggest these are indirect jabs or more, number two, guys, watch. >> we must reject the culture of losing that has infected our party in recent years. the time for excuses is over. if we get distracted, if we focus the election on the past or on other side issues, then i think the democrats are going the beat us again and it will difficult to recover from that defeat. >> bill: we turn to you, the analyst, to analyze whether or not it was effective. >> well look, electability will be one of the strongest arguments that governor desantis will make when he gets in the race. he won his re-election by 20 points. donald trump lost a lot of --
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endorsed candidates lost in the mid-terms and he lost re-election in 2020. we have a piece out today where a lot of senate republican strategist including mitch mcconnell are worried if donald trump is the republican nominee a lot of purple state republican contests that will come off the board. it will narrow the senate map a lot if trump is the nominee. desantis has the opportunity to bring in a very healthy senate majority. there are a lot of electability issues with donald trump. desantis didn't mention his name but he certainly -- everyone knew who he was talking about from his comments. >> dana: didn't donald trump defy all of the questions about electability in 2016? >> he did and look, if you are with the trump campaign, you will make the argument that trump brought out a whole lot of new voters, apathetic voters but
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you look at the polling and donald trump's favorability numbers are a lot lower than they were in 2016. he trails biden in a lot of polls even though joe biden's approval rating is awfully weak. there is a poll out from one of the top republican opinion strategies this past week showing that desantis is competitive in some of these blue and purple and blue states on the map. where trump is far behind joe biden. that is the argument desantis will make. you can pick certain polls and make your own argument but certainly desantis's approval ratings overall are a lot better than donald trump's right now. >> bill: a big day whether or not he gets in. a few polls out there about religion in america and one a month half ago from americans who believe that religion is very important to them. in march of 2023, josh, you are at 39%. back in 1998 that number was
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almost 2/3 of americans polled. what does that tell you as you try and relate that to politics now in 2023? >> it is a huge, huge dynamic and a trend that inescapable in our politics. the more religious you are the more likely you are to vote republican. the less religious, the more secular you are you are more likely to vote democratic. it wasn't that way. religion wasn't the dividing line in politics like it is today. i will say that as strong of a correlation there is between religion and politics one thing that donald trump showed in the 2016 election is there were a lot of less-religious conservatives who voted for donald trump who voted for republicans and what made trump the president by winning in the midwest with some of those constituents. so whatever candidate or whatever party breaks that mold, whoever is able to -- if democrats are able to get more
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religious voters into their camp. if republicans, whether trump or desantis can get some of the more secular voters, they will have an advantage in the upcoming election. >> dana: how do these numbers, though, affect the biden campaign or president biden himself? >> look, democrats used to always focus on winning over religious voters. joe biden himself talked about his being a catholic and -- there was a need to win over religious over and pro-life voters. that's no longer the case. democratic base these days is overwhelmingly secular. doesn't -- is not affiliated with religion like the past. it affects the dynamic in our politics. >> bill: thank you for your time. pew research three-year span, all u.s. adults, protestants
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down 10%, catholics three and jewish faith is down three also. interesting findings. those from pew. josh, talk to you very soon. come on back. >> dana: politics continues. thank you. >> bill: thanks. >> dana: no shortage of reaction from towns and cities both near and far from the border since the end of title 42. california governor gavin newsom has been mostly mum during the migrant surge. even though he runs a border state. what gives? kelly o'grady is live in los angeles for us. >> that's right. we're not getting much response from the governor thus far. he hasn't sent the fashion nall guard to the border like we've seen from other states. he did not respond to questions regarding additional funds or new plans to address the influx but maintained quote, california has served as a model of partnership for a safe and welcoming border undertaking humanitarian efforts in border communities to support arriving migrants. they have 11 processing sites
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and shelters and a handful of migrant hotels. those are concentrated closer to the border. nothing north of southern california but they worry what happens when the facilities are at capacity. we spoke at one of these facilities. they didn't ask for that responsibility. it was given to them as a mandate by state and they're worried. they have been seeing a surge prior to title 42 ending. when they reach capacity they have to release migrants onto the street. >> the biggest challenge with street releases. once at the are released into the community they are on their own to be able to provide shelter, to provide food. the impacts could be everything from having people just hanging out in our community to inundating our 911 and emergency system. >> also highlight this. we deal with a homeless crisis in california. we're hearing frustration from
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residents of accepting some migrants if we don't deal with the problem in our own backyard first. >> dana: thank you, kelly. >> bill: now t. swifty is mixing it up. check it out. today's hemmer's celebrity news happened saturday in philly. the singer was performing the song bad blood when this happened. there was bad blood, apparently. watch. ♪ >> bill: she is not doing anything. apparently some of the fans near the stage were being pushed back by the security guards. she didn't have that. >> dana: i love that. she has been performing almost every night. huge shows, great reviews. people in the parking lots waiting to get in. people in the front that she has the capacity to be able to see what's going on and she was
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willing to interrupt her concert to do that spoke a lot for her. >> bill: a lot of reaction. i track this stuff, right? just put some on screen here. i like the third one. the third one says if taylor swift yelled at me i would cry and think about it for the rest of my life. that sums up the t. swift. >> bill: apparently the security guard got escorted out. >> dana: good job. >> bill: sthe is going to england on thursday. all big artists go to europe for the summer. weather is great and seeing all kinds of places. on ward we roll. >> dana: the new twist. the natalee holloway case and why it may take longer than we thought for convicted murderer van der sloot to face justice on u.s. soil.
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>> dana: a hiccup in the natalee holloway case. convicted murderer van der sloot may be able to delay his extradition until at least august of this year. if his lawyer files a court petition. peru agreed to send him to the u.s. the stand trial for fraud in connection with the 2005 disappearance of the alabama teen. he is currently serving time in a maximum security prison for the murder of a woman in 2010. >> bill: a woman who wrote a children's book is accused of
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poisoning her husband allegedly hosting a large party the day after his death. authorities have arrested her. her husband died from an overdose of fentanyl that she purchased. the attorney for her husband's family is with us now. good morning to you. i want to take timeline for viewers not familiar. the allegations in the case, january of 2022 corey richens updated her husband's life insurance policy and bought is a 15 to 30 fentanyl pills. he became ill and claimed he was poisoned. another $9 hundred worth of fentanyl and found dead on march 4th in his bedroom from an overdose. she writes a book that's published a year later to the month, march of 2023 and then on monday you see there charged with murder. can you lay out for us what you
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believe is the key evidence against her at the moment? >> i think one of the most compelling pieces of evidence in this case was an informant that came forward to the prosecutor and law enforcement in the summit county community. a woman who admitted to selling opioids, including fentanyl, to the defendant within the exact time period that eric was poisoned and killed. and even the previous times that you have described. i think that was a compelling piece of evidence. that individual is apparently cooperating with the state and part of their probable cause statement and it corroborates the purchase of the drugs and gave testimony, information that only the person who would have really sold those drugs would have had. >> bill: so she would likely be a witness, correct? >> oh, yes, very much so. she will be a witness for the state.
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>> bill: can you give us some insight? how did she go for a year without suspicion writing this book, trying to counsel other people on grief after they lose a loved one? >> well bill, when a person dies in america in 2022 or 2023 from a drug overdose, it is not necessarily looked at suspiciously by the police because there is such an opioid problem in our country. it took a while for the police to focus in and look at it as something more than a fentanyl overdose. when they learned later that eric wasn't a drug user, that he had no history of drug abuse, no family history of substance abuse whatsoever, and the suspicion related to her in terms of manipulating his assets, changing the life insurance policy, changing the buy/sell agreement between he and his business partner they established motive.
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when the confidential informant came forward it made the case much more solid. >> bill: there is an allegation he might have been poised on a trip to greece. >> it is true he believes he was poisoned there also. we believe that he was probably poisoned, an attempt to kill him at least twice prior to the time when it actually succeeded. that's also corroborated by the individual who sold the defendant the drugs on the occasions that related exactly to the times when he was poisoned. >> bill: charged with one first degree felony count of murder. three second degree felony counts with possession to intent to distribute a controlled substance. a fascinating case. we'll see where it goes. >> dana: twitter has a new ceo. a big to do list ahead of her to say the least working to bring
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right now with your monthly gift. because of people like you shriners hospitals for children is able to make an everyday miracle happen for kids like me. that brings a smile to my face. ♪ if you're happy and you know it, dance around. ♪ ♪ if you're happy and you know it, play a song. ♪ ♪ if you're happy and you know, then your face will surely show it. ♪ ♪ if you're happy and you know it, jump up high. ♪ and when you call or go online right now to donate $19 a month or more, we'll send you this adorable love to the rescue blanket as a thank you and a reminder of all the smiles you're bringing to kids faces every day. will today be the day you send your love to the rescue? when you call the number on your screen right now and give as little as $19 a month, just $0.63 a day, you'll be making a life changing difference for a child just like sarah.
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your monthly gift today could change a life forever. because of you, we're happy and i know it. thank you. thank you. thank you. thank you. please call or go online right now to give. if operators are busy, please wait patiently. or go to loveshriners.org right away. hi, i'm sharon, and i lost 52 pounds on golo. i realized i needed to make a change when i looked in the mirror and did not recognize myself. i felt sick, i felt sluggish. i was diabetic and my cholesterol was high. after about a week or two of being on golo, i felt my energy increasing and my weight shedding. i was going to a christmas party with my husband, so i decided to try on the dress that my daughter wore to her prom when she was 18. and to my surprise, it fit me perfectly. my children have seen a changing in me.
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i'm not sitting around anymore. i'm just moving and just seeing that i got up and changed my life. we are not supposed to feel sick and tired as we age. since being on golo, my cholesterol and my diabetes completely reversed. i truly feel like i'm back to the best me i can be. (soft music) >> harris: president biden hit the beach this weekend as multiple crises continue to rage on. oh yeah, he is running for re-election. put a good news sticker on his border crisis. who is filling him in on the ground? it is bad. outrage is flowing after homeless u.s. military veterans were booted from a hotel so illegal immigrants could have their rooms. plus retired u.s. marine bomb technician joey jones, and others, "the faulkner focus" top
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of the hour. >> bill: ten days in jail is the punishment for two ohio fishermen caught stuffing weights into their fish at a tournament last fall. they also have to forfeit their $1 hundred thousand boat. you might recall the video of the guys getting busted. roll this year. they are accused of cheating in a different tournament, too. now they've been busted and paying a price. they are going to jail. >> dana: if they had just stolen $9 hundred worth of merchandise in san francisco they wouldn't go to jail and you could do et repeatedly. they paid a big price. the new head of twitter linda yaccarino is speaking out about her new role looks forward to working with musk building twitter 2.0. susan lee, she will have her
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plate full. >> nbc universal's former ad boss will focus primarily on business operations while musk will focus on product design and new technology. yaccarino confirmed she is excited to help bring the vision to twitter and transform this business together. transform is a key word there. what changes can we expect to the social media site? includes possibly from this yaccarino and musk on stage back and fort at an advertising summit. yaccarino asked musk if advertiser should be able to influence content on twitter. >> that would be wrong. that would be very wrong. that would be a diminishment on freedom of speech. >> content moderation, that's what the influence is. >> yaccarino went on to clarify open feedback loop for
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advertisers to be excited about investing in twitter. now if my conversations with people who have worked with yaccarino, i can tell you she is well regarded and they make reference to her nickname as the velvet hammer. tough negotiator in a friendly package and questions about her politics and if they align with musk's, interesting sources at barth "the new york times" and wall street journey say yaccarino leans conservative and aligns with musk on free expression. a tough job to bring 50% of advertising back to twitter. >> dana: certainly will be. but, i mean we'll see what happens. i love this idea susan lee. thank you. >> bill: before we go you have some news. >> dana: i went to colorado over the weekend. colorado state university invited me to give a commencement speech. we have a clip. >> choosing to be happy, to be peaceful, to be loved, frankly
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that's really up to you. as helpful as she can be siri is not available to this one. i graduated 29 years ago. i thought i wanted to go to the frat parties an boulder but saw myself here and i'm so glad i made this decision. >> dana: also got an honorary doctorate for there. that's dr. timothy and jen and they're doing a great job. harris faulkner is up next. here she is. >> harris: we begin with the fox news alert. it is no way the treat those who put their lives on the line for the rest of us. sanctuary city mayor eric adams is busing illegals to upstate new york. what happens when they get there? homeless veterans were kicked out of hotels to make room for the illegal immigrants. i'm harris faulkner. the disgraceful treatment of our military veterans played out in orange county, new york, 60 miles north of the big city.
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