tv Americas Newsroom FOX News May 16, 2023 6:00am-7:00am PDT
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? >> amazing. >> new york city police department jazz band. they have to stop criminals from doing bad stuff in the city. how talented are you guys? >> do you do weddings? how cool with that be. you need to redo your vows and here you go. see you tomorrow, thank you so much. >> bill: good morning. the f.b.i. under fire. special counsel john durham putting out his report four years later on the russia matter. fundamental question that durham has answered. good morning. asme owe bill hemmer. a ton to get to. >> dana: i'm dana perino. this is "america's newsroom." this is big news yesterday. years in the making. durham spent four years investigating the origins of the russia probe. final report spans more than 300 pages. the results are scathing.
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>> bill: he concludes many things including the investigation was largely based on faulty evidence linked to the clinton campaign and he says the f.b.i. was seemingly eager to go after trump while staying overly cautious on hillary clinton. >> confirming what republicans say they knew all along and they want justice. >> three years, all we ever heard about was russia and mueller and this investigation and collusion and coordination. none of it was true. all based on a lie. most importantly the f.b.i. knew it was a lie. >> there needs to be prosecutions and accountability and the f.b.i. has got to be overhauled now top to bottom. >> they had contrary evidence that shows that there was no purpose to open this investigation and not a single high ranking official stepped in to stop this political witch hunt. what it means, this is the weaponization of the federal government at the highest levels. >> dana: david spunt has more from the justice department this morning. >> good morning.
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sobering is the word john durham uses himself in this 306 page report. it is not favoring the f.b.i., very critical of the f.b.i. we're talking about f.b.i. in 2016, 2017. the f.b.i. saying it has made numerous changes since then. as you meaningsed it took four years. we are a few days over the four-year mark. he spent over $6 million on the investigation. wrote, we conclude the f.b.i. strict -- the department meaning the department of justice where i join you from. the theme in the report durham says the f.b.i. rushed an investigation crossfire hurricane without the proper legal basis. crossfire hurricane is the code name used to describe the alleged connections between the
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trump campaign and russia. the f.b.i.'s failure to critically analyze information that ran counter to the narrative of a trump/russia collusion relationship is extremely troubling some. he took two cases the trial. lost them both. but a former f.b.i. attorney pled guilty to a minor charge. a claim the clinton campaign was treated differently by the trump campaign. durham's critics said he and bill barr, trump attorney general who appointed him were the ones with a politically driven agenda citing an internal justice department report in 2019 concluding that the f.b.i. investigation was justified. the conduct in 2016 and 2017 examined was the reason the current f.b.i. leadership already implemented dozens of corrective action. had those reforms been in place since 2016 the missteps in the report could have been
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prevented. merrick garland released it to the public yesterday. didn't add or take away any words and john durham agreed with the f.b.i. that the corrective actions will keep history from repeating itself. dana and bill. >> dana: thank you for that update. >> bill: legal experts reacting on this report praising it for its thoroughness and calling out the f.b.i. >> it is everything the russia investigation was not. methodical, he just goes through the facts and shows how false accounts were created, often in coordination with the clinton campaign. >> the world's greatest law enforcement agency, didn't meet anybody's reasonable expectation. the bureau needs real reform and it hasn't happened yet. >> bill: the f.b.i. says it has carried out several reports since the report back in 2019. that effort apparently
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continues. >> dana: this may not come as a surprise. some in the media giving the dauer home report the back of its hand. >> it is trying to say there is a there there when there isn't. what you have with john durham, a big fat nothing. >> four years of nothing. and now we have durham publishing another nothing. >> nothing new here but at least durham will stop wasting taxpayer's money. >> bill: another dud is what she said. nikki haley former u.s. ambassador to the u.n. and republican presidential candidate. weigh in. >> it's a top law enforcement agency that didn't follow the laws. we now see it was politically motivated. that is something that happens in a third world country. that doesn't happen in america. i fought those things at the united nations. to see what happened is unthinkable. heads need to roll over this. anybody that touched it or had a
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part in it needs to be fired and every one of their senior managers needs to be fired. the f.b.i. has lost complete credibility when it comes to this and they have a lot of fixing to do to get the trust back of the american people. >> dana: interesting to see if democrats decide to ignore this report. some are. or they are dismissing it, pretending it will go away. let's go back to 2015 and 2016 when it all started. there was president obama in charge at the white house. there was hillary clinton who had been secretary of state. do you think they deserve any responsibility here or accountability? should they speak out? >> it happened during the campaign. joe biden needs to speak out, hillary clinton does, obama does. go back to the part that i realized, go back to how many files had americans that were declassified in them. that's what i remember. i would go back and look at the united states and ambassador
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before me. they declassified all these things on americans. what were they looking at and trying to find? who all was involved in this? and democrats need to answer for this, too. this is not about republicans or democrats. this shouldn't happen to any american as we go forward. with i was at the united nations you felt this probe every day in everything we did on this russian collusion. we all felt it. now we look and see it was -- >> bill: they used the f.b.i. and they used the media to carry their message. the "wall street journal" today the f.b.i. provided briefings to the clinton campaign and did not, because it had lack of such briefings went to the trump campaign. they go to the media. the takeaways in "politico."com this morning. the lack of curiosity is stunning. "washington post" won a pulitzer for their reporting on the
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russia investigation five years ago. buzz feed broke the dossier story. they're out of business. cnn followed hours after word. last friday night they had 300,000 viewers in prime time. the point is they were working together on this, if you read this report carefully. >> they spied on americans. they spied on americans and had no reason to do it and they got away with it. and we have to hold people accountable. biden needs to answer for this. democrat leadership needs to answer for this. republicans and democrats need to come together and say what will you do to make sure this doesn't happen again. heads need to roll for this. >> dana: crime extras -- >> why are the reporters angry saying something out loud about the people in the f.b.i. who lied to them and misled them. that's the sort of thing
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reporters get furious about. they need to denounce. >> dana: you wonder if they trust the sources again. you get to the hunter biden laptop and they trust similar sources on the security front with 51 security folks. on republicans and former president trump. he called it the crime of the century and it feels like that or you worked for him and had to get a lawyer and went through years the find out there was no there there from the beginning. does he deserve a chance to do it again for a do over? >> i think first of all he never got a moment's peace. none of us did. we all felt that russia probe in every bit of our jobs. he felt it the most. i think that is something that needs to be held accountable. i don't just think it is those that tipped off reporters that did it. i think the media needs to be held accountable for not asking more questions and getting down to what needed to happen. having said that now is the time that we have to look at the future. we can't look at the past.
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when i do all these town halls in the states they want to talk about crime and illegal immigration and the debt and the spending. they want to talk about transparency in kids' schools and move forward. i think people need to be held accountable. we need to make sure heads roll over this. >> bill: do you honestly think people will be fired from this? only one prosecution and he served 0 jail time. >> congress needs to make sure people are fired and every senior manager over those people get fired. if not, what makes us any different than south sudan or democratic republic of congo. that happens in third world countries, not america. >> dana: trust in institutions that democrats and republicans lament. it is way down. this is one of the reasons why. what i didn't hear in any of those clips from media earlier was a recognition there are good reasons for people to be
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suspicious of the government as unfortunate as that is. they have more evidence to feel that way and what do you hear on the campaign trail about that? >> you hear americans, there is a deep state concern. this is only going to create more distrust of our federal agencies and why we need to have more transparency and accountability. if nothing happens because of this, it is just going to happen again. democrats should worry about that as much as republicans. >> bill: you are going back to iowa and we'll follow you along the trail. thanks for being here. nice to see you. >> dana: new york city is struggling to find beds for the influx of migrants. the city is housing some of them in public school gyms and we'll have how parents react to that. >> bill: a new report on a feud between president biden and eric adams and it could signal a campaign crisis. >> dana: an update on the former marine charged with the death of a homeless man in new york and how his lawyer is defending him from allegations of racism. >> all the people on that train.
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smugglers are recalibrating trying to figure out what they are going to do and may cause another migrant surge there. new video in the newsroom shows a large group of migrants entering illegally and trespassing on private property in eagle pass, texas. they walked in after an american soldier let them through after opening a gate. a live report from texas coming up. >> it is not just the state of texas. new york city is feeling it, too. migrants will be housed me public school gyms as the hotels and other shelters are reaching capacity and parents are not happy. nate foye is live outside one elementary school in brooklyn, new york. what are they telling you, nate? >> good morning to you. reports are six brooklyn schools will be housing migrants in gyms including ps188 behind me. the gym itself is disattached from the school. parents aren't comfortable with this. because of that we see two
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parent protests today. one protest you are seeing is at ps17 in brooklyn. an elementary school. dozens of parents protesting. 20 more parents at ps172 also in brooklyn. the mayor's office tells fox the migrants won't impact school activities. a lot of parents aren't buying that and others have safety concerns. listen here, bill. >> how temporary is this? i don't think it's a good idea. this is inside of a school. good forbid a kid go miss being then what? i'm sorry? something needs to be done. >> outrage is growing after a group of u.s. veterans were kicked out of a hotel in orange county, new york in favor of migrants. that outrage is bipartisan. listen to this. >> everyone agrees you cannot boot veterans out of hotels that are homeless that are trying to reintegrate back into society for any reason, for anyone.
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americans, veterans, have to come first. >> meanwhile democrat congressman pat ryan tweeted this is b.s. 20 veterans lost their housing because of incompetence by new york city government. back out here live, bill, i can confirm the 20 veterans are staying at a different hotel. a handful are on their way to permanent housing. >> bill: vets and school kids, wow. thank you, nate. migrant crisis in new york city strange the relationship between president biden and new york city mayor eric adams. adams has been trying to get holy spirit attention. the biden 2024 campaign advise re board dropping the mayor as a surrogate after adams criticized the white house for not doing enough to deal with the surge on the border. >> several different conversations i had with the president and meeting with his team, communicating with his team. sending out how urgent this is for the last few months. we aren't getting the support
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that we deserve here in new york city. >> bill: what will happen here? we see how the white house responds to this. not just new york. cities like denver, colorado >> dana: and chicago and they're drafting behind eric adams thanking him trying to get them resources. it won't be the last you hear of this. until the biden administration gives these governors some support and relief it won't end. if you're eric adams you think you won the prize, free up your calendar. you don't have to worry about that anymore. >> daniel has been called a murderer by some, vigilante by others. many say he acted based on race. >> none of that is based on the facts. as to race, it is simply not the motivation for danny. he is the one that put himself in danger to save who, all the people on that train.
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>> dana: the interview about penny who put a choke hold. he also says those second degree manslaughter charges filed against penny came out of the blue. let's get more from laura engel live in our new york city newsroom. hi. >> good morning. we're learning more about the legal process that led to charges being filed in this case. the 24-year-old former marine was arrested, charged, and arraigned with second degree manslaughter. that happened last week in the subway choke hold death of jordan neely, who suffered from mental illness and fellow witnesses was threatening passengers on the subway car. in an interview with fox's judge janine one of his attorneys said they expected a different timeline and process from the manhattan district attorneys office before learning their client was going to face a
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criminal charge last week. >> we were told that there was going to be a grand jury presentation and that would take some time and it was going to be a deliberate process. was not going to be rushed. >> and his attorney said penny was questioned the day of the incident and released without any charges. a former assistant district attorney for new york says by filing the criminal complaint attorney bragg is indicating he has had enough evidence to prosecute. >> the district attorney has laid down a marker saying based on our investigation it is our office's position that he has committed this particular felony manslaughter in the second degree. he didn't have to make that decision, he chose to. >> now a grand jury will have to confirm the charge of manslaughter in the second degree. 12 of the 23 will have to say his actions were justified. neely's family hopes elevated charges will be coming and
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penny's attorneys hope the case will be dismissed. he will be back in court in july. >> dana: the daniel penny attorney who spoke to judge janine yesterday talked about how jordan neely was arrested over 42 times. the top 50 list of people the subway system was watching. probably shouldn't have been in there. listen to him on this point. >> i think it's really fair to look at jordan neely's arrests as missed opportunities from our system to be able to help mr. neely and to get him the help he needed so a situation like this wouldn't occur. so that he wouldn't be on a train the way that he was demanding help and being angry about a system that had failed him. >> that will be part of the story. this case will go to court july 17th unless something happens before then. which could be the grand jury. >> bill: could be the story of the summer. president biden meeting with top four congressional leaders later today. will they get anywhere on the
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debt ceiling and spending? we await word on that. plus the report on trump/russia investigation is public. it is nothing short of scathing directed at the f.b.i. senator lindsey graham on what he found inside next. >> i'm not at all convinced that this matter could not repeat itself. you talk about policies and procedures in place. what policy and procedure is going to govern the head of the f.b.i.? your spouse has earned the right to apply for a va home loan. a va home loan is unique. it's different than other loans because it allows you to borrow up to 100% of the home's value. that extra borrowing power may allow you to pay down debt, lower your monthly payments, put cash in the bank, and give you the peace of mind that every veteran deserves.
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>> bill: police arresting a man in the office of jerry connolly. they say he hit two of them with a metal baseball bat. their injuries are not life threatening and the congressman wasn't there at the time. the suspect is accused in an earlier incident caught on video. a man chasing a woman with a bat. the suspect's father says that he suffers from schizophrenia. all right. >> dana: a few hours from now
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president biden will meet with top congressional leaders on the debt ceiling. the deadline to avoid a default is a few weeks away. mark meredith has more from the white house. a high stakes meeting today, mark. >> it is. good morning. both the white house and house republicans appear to be deadlocked over reaching a deal to raise the debt limit. the president is getting ready to head out of the country to asia, we think within a matter of hours. before he does so he will be sitting down with congressional leaders from both parties. in the room this afternoon you will have the president sit down with speaker mccarthy, house minority leader, senate leaders schumer and mcconnell and the vice president. make no mistake about it, this battle rests with the speaker and the president. speaker mccarthy urging the white house to accept a deal to impose spending caps over the next decade. >> it is very simple. we want to limit, save and grow. we want to limit the outside growth of government because we are growing too big. so you know what? in future, cap what we're
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spending and put it by 1%. not a republican idea. john manchin's idea. >> the white house wants congress to raise the debt ceiling without concessions. negotiations ongoing and possible we could see a deal reached to limit spending or return some of the unspent covid funds. treasury secretary janet yellen is calling on congress to move quickly before early june where the government would be unable to pay its bills. in a new letter to the speaker she writes if congress fails to increase the debt limit it would cause severe hardship to american families and raise questions about our ability to defend our national security interests. we have heard from some democrats urging the white house to come up with a plan b claiming through the 14th amendment the president would be able to raise the debt ceiling without congress having to get involved here. of course, there would be legal challenges that come with it. even treasury secretary yellen said not too long ago it was a
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legally questionable plan. >> dana: mark meredith, keep us posted. >> bill: back to john durham special counsel releasing the blistering report on the origins of the trump/russia investigation. one of his biggest takeaways the f.b.i. probe was seriously flawed, had no basis to conduct it. here it is. an objective and honest assessment of these strands of information should have caused the f.b.i. to question not only the predication for crossfire hurricane but reflect whether or not the f.b.i. was being manipulated for political and other purposes. unfortunately it did not. lindsey graham, top republican is with me now. nice to see you. good morning to you. i will give you a moment here. i will read what dick durbin said. senate majority whip, democrat. donald trump predicted that special counsel durham would uncover the crime of the century. instead we were given a report that caused taxpayers more than 6 1/2 million to reit late the
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conclusions of the i.g.2019 report. put all that together now based on history, four years, seven years, go back as far as you like. what did you take from durham's report now? >> number one, as to what senator durbin said, he is completely absolutely wrong. the i.g. said there was reason to open the investigation. durham said there was no corroborating evidence to suggest that the trump team colluded with the russians in any fashion. so it's absolutely contrary to what the i.g. said and here is what i would say to senator durbin. if you aren't disturbed by this you hate trump too much. i don't care what your politics are, we have a situation where the f.b.i. ran every stop sign available, kept pushing a warrant against an american citizen based on a steele dossier that was a piece of fiction. the information was supplied to the f.b.i. by two russian agents. it was used to get a warrant
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against an american citizen to turn his life upside down and create a cloud over the trump presidency and try to deny him the presidency. other than that, this is no big deal. three things should happen. garland should pick up the phone and call all those that were harmed by this and say even though it didn't happen on my watch, i apologize to you. this is not the department of justice that i want you to believe in. i would like the f.b.i. director wray to get on the phone and apologize to the people that had their lives ruined by the f.b.i. and i think the pulitzer prize given to the "washington post" and "new york times" should be taken back because the entire episode was politically motivated crap. that's not something you should get a pulitzer prize for. >> bill: not so sure you can hold your breath for that. james carville yesterday. >> durham is a kind of pathetic character. i think federal prosecutors have
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a 97% conviction rate. he was 0 for two. he got a plea for a parking ticket. that's it. four years, i don't know how many millions of dollars. i actually think he did the country a service to show you how fraudulent and shallow these people are. >> bill: msnbc says durham report a dud, senator. >> well, the f.b.i. director said based on the horowitz report and the information in the durham report we made fundamental changes to how we operate. that's inconsistent with it being a dud. comey lied to the judiciary committee in 2020. i was chairman in 2020 and we had an oversight hearing. i asked comey was there any effort to verify the dossier that you were aware of? he said no, not that i was aware of. in the durham report it indicates he was briefed about serious concerns regarding the dossier and continued to use it
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to get a warrant five times after he was told it was flawed. so he lied. and it puts pressure on the system now to deal with the i.r.s. whistleblower. everybody tells us we're not going to do this again. we fixed the system. if you believe the allegations around the i.r.s. whistleblower they still have the thumb on the scale when it comes to the hunter biden investigation and makes it more imperative that jim jordan and others continue to investigate. has anything changed? senator durbin, if this doesn't bother you your hate for trump has just blinded you. >> bill: "politico"'s takeaways. durham gone wild. who played ball with durham and who didn't? a moment ago governor nikki haley said heads should roll. who thinks will that happen? >> nobody. wouldn't it be nice for the agency to apologize to those whose lives were ruined and
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garland pick up the phone and say i'm sorry it happened and the press to admit we got it wrong. none of that will happen. people are going to get mad on our side, average everyday americans this is a generational damage to the f.b.i. it will be hard to convince anybody who is a conservative or middle of the road person the f.b.i. is on the up and up. particularly if they still got their thumb on the scale regarding the hunter biden investigation. if you don't see the damage done to the system, they just want to get trump and they don't give a damn how you do it. that's what is so sad. they are marginalizing this report that's damning to the rule of law in america. write it off because they want the outcome of destroying trump. it is a very dangerous and sad day in america when people will not take this seriously. >> bill: thank you, senator. >> dana reads sports. >> dana: last night los angeles ohtani became the first pitcher
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since 1946 to reach base five times in one game. he had a four-hit night at the plate securing a 9-5 win. the last one was in a game against the washington senators. at the plate, where else would you have hit, right? >> bill: that's good. you are getting the hang of it. >> dana: i just read it. >> bill: ohtani is a generational player. a lot of guys are good pitchers and don't hit well. a lot of guys hit well but can't pitch. he does both. heat is on for the 2024 candidates to try to break in front of the pack. one of the republican candidates is proposing raising voting age to 25. good idea? that debate is coming up. anyone who worked in an office probably had some rather uncomfortable break rooms run ins with co-workers. there is a potential solution and we have it for you coming up.
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>> it was my sandwich. >> now calm down. come look in my office. some of it may still be in the trash. [laughter] >> what? >> it was quite large. i had to throw most of it away. >> you, you, threw my sandwich away >> dana: a nightmare to keep food safe in the communal office refrigerator. padlock your milk. peek pettiness or justifiable security in the office kitchen. no one would steal your milk. >> in is disheartening. there is a code in the office. there is a code in the locker room where you just if you put something in the refrigerator, it is yours. if you didn't put it in, you don't take it out. >> dana: that doesn't happen, though. >> everyone usually finds that individual and first i believe
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it's a post it. this is huge. this can lead to -- i'm hoping. or just so you know i take a certain medication and it's in my milk. enjoy. >> bill: let us know how it works out. let's stay in the refrigerator. there is a move maybe in school cafeterias to ban chocolate milk. too much sugar apparently. >> a little high in sugar. this is the problem. we aren't educating and making something special. we have to get rid of it. we have to stop doing it. me and a certain young lady in school we got chocolate milk on fridays, a special treat. you don't need any milk every day, you know? >> bill: remember two years ago they said vitamin d was bad for you and -- >> the problem is, remember the food pyramid is corrupt now
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because cereal is on there now. we keep seeing these things where chocolate milk didn't pay their dues to the evil food lobbyists, it was to go and replace it with chocolate almond milk. >> dana: there is the anti-capitalist cafe. >> bill: it was started in canada. pay what you can and what you want. it is out of business. >> they also said you could hang out and not buy anything. the other part that was pretty cool and ridiculous was they claim they are not. to try to make up for losses for the pay what you want coffee, they had ridiculous prices on everything else. so no matter how you swing it, you were using capitalism, just bad capitalism. >> dana: he said, this is the owner. unfortunately the lack of generational wealth and seed capital from ethically bankrupt
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sources left me unable to grow in the ways needed to be sustainable longer term. what's interesting, he just got a lesson in economics. that's how it works. >> charge $7 for coffee like everybody else and move on. if you open a store and you want people to buy your product, it is capitalism no matter how you swing it. i'm sorry, wokeness. woke, you go broke. >> bill: he is talking about generational -- >> it was the world problem. not his bad business model. i stood outside going if only my ancestor would have been better i could buy this cup of coffee. you'll see me later today on "the five" and you don't stay up past 11, maybe you will. you stay up late. basketball game on tonight. i'm hosting gutfeld. >> dana: are you happy with the boston celtics?
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>> couldn't be prouder. >> bill: the knicks got ripped off in the game on friday night. >> which of the four they lost. >> that foul. >> it changed the whole game. you know what? i won't cover this misinterpretation of life in my new book coming out today. pre-order comes out today. enough said. >> dana: what i like to do is set the cat amongst the pigeons and see how it works. >> you are just a little manipulator. you will see me at 5:00. >> bill: senators get a big hearing on the future and that future is now. at the will hear from one of the creators of artificial intelligence and we'll be watching that. chicago has a new mayor, can brandon johnson's policies bring change to a troubled windy city? e financial freedom.
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in south carolina. a pair of traffickers were using a fake pregnancy belly to hide 1500 grams of cocaine. officers pulled the suspects over. one of them appeared visibly pregnant and tried to make a break on foot when everything fell out. that was the end of that story along interstate 85. >> dana: i want the video. i want the video. >> bill: that would be pretty interesting body cam, wouldn't it? >> dana: also this story. jeff paul will bring it to us. >> my dogs were in the backyard and a heard a loud bang. i ran outside. they ran inside scared. >> dana: terror on the streets of new mexico, an 18-year-old gunman opening fire killing three people and injuring several others. the suspect was killed in an exchange of bullets with police. jeff paul live in farmington, new mexico. >> anguish and disbelief.
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the shooting that unraveled in this quiet neighborhood. investigators are searching for a motive. the shooter roamed the streets shooting randomly at cars and people. witnesses describe a terrifying scene. >> i heard pop, pop, pop, a short pause and then pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop and it ended. zblie went outside to see what was going on and heard multiple rounds going off. >> police describe a wide and complex scene spanning more than a quarter of a mile. the first call for shots fired came in just before 11:00 a.m. local time. they say the 18-year-old shooter fired at anything to shoot at. despite police responding within minutes three were killed and multiple hurt including two police officers. the shooter was killed but the impact this event is having on
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this small city of roughly 50,000 people is immense. >> i don't even know what to say in an event like this. how do you address it? my deepest condolences to the family of the deceased. i'm unbelievably proud of responding officers with the threat that they faced. >> police recovered three guns from this scene including what they describe as an ar-15-style rifle. we hope to learn more about what happened and including the shooter during the police department's next update later this afternoon. dana. >> dana: jeff paul in new mexico, thank you. >> we don't want our story to be that chicago is so traumatized by violence and despair that our residents feel no other choice but to leave >> bill: the new mayor in
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chicago brandon johnson, sworn in yesterday as the 57th mayor addressing the city's rampant crime in his speech not without ruffleling some feathers. mike tobin was watching. >> first day on the job and chicago's no mayor is comparing the murder of a chicago police officer with an armed teenager shot by a chicago cop. he took the oath of office yesterday here in chicago. he had been a supporter of the defund movement but backed off that during the campaign. in his inauguration speech he brought up the case of adam, the 13-year-old's death caught on police body camera in march of 2021. he was chased by police late at night. he turned toward the officer and was shot. i appears to throw away a gun in the moments before he was shot. that officer's case goes before the police board. officer preston will be laid to rest this week may six. coming home from her shift wearing a police uniform.
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a group of teenage men attempted to rob her and she fought back, was shot and killed. one of her assailants came back and stole her gun. >> tears of adam toledo's parents are made of the same sorrow as the parents of officer preston's parents. [applause] >> chicago alderman that when he compared the deaths of a gang banger and officer are wrong. officer preston's end marked the short end to a life and sacrifice. we see there is no compareson. since johnson was sworn in six people are shot and two killed in the city of chicago. >> bill: mike tobin watching that story in chicago. thank you. >> dana: the rapid rise of
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artificial intelligence and growing dangers is front and center on capitol hill today. open a.i.ceo sam altmann is making his first appearance before congress as lawmakers try to race to understand the new technology. we'll tell you how it will go. welcome to a new hour of "america's newsroom," i'm dana perino. >> bill: i'm bill hemmer, good morning. a.i., artificial intelligence has the power to change just about everything, we're told. from jobs and business to education and social media. there are even concerns it could play a role in political elections. it has a lot of people worried trying to scramble and learn more about this emerging technology. it is happening fast. altmann heads the company that makes chatgpt. that's an a.i. chatbot that allows different computers to speak with each other. california congressman ted lieu wants to hear what he has to say about the need for regulation from government. >> i encourage everyone to try
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