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tv   Fox News Tonight  FOX News  May 25, 2023 10:00pm-11:00pm PDT

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a day. a day. you can own your very own tracker off road or a brand new tracker vote motor and trailer package. g food brand in america and the world'sd oth number one best selling fishing and pontoon boats are built by and sold factory direct at bass. pro shops and other select dealers save big on the best brands and the boats you love, escaping to the great outdoors with tracker boats and atvsd . good >>ev good evening, i'm trey gowdy. thank you for joinin g us .arlad when merrick garland wastting be sitting before the senate judiciary committee askingo to be confirmed as thebe attorney general for the united states , he made certain a promisesttthe . he promised to be the lawyer for all people. he promiser ofd an office devoif partisan politics. he promised fairness without regardpaanic to political ortho. he promised to be independento i and notit a extension of p the president. he promised the department of justicrosed th e worthy of your respect promi
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. yo promisesed d to reiton in the abuses of those in power to take your liberty, your propert p y, your reputation d ,and indeed your life,ee he promised humility that is so often found when the powerful embrace fairness as their sur foundation. gar >> sure doesn't seem that way, does it? gary shapleighy , as hisiservisy supervisor, special agent for the irs, where he's worked for 14 years in january twenty twenty , he was assigned to what he calls a high profile investigation. who's the subject of the investigation? >> can'ti can't confirm or deny the subject to this investigation. why not?t of t because, you knohew, part of the tax secrecy laws don't allow it. >> shapleigh can't say it. but cbs news has learnede prob the investigation was the probe of hunter biden by thee by the trump appointed u.s. attorney in delaware. cbs news has obtained this o letter shanley's lawyers sen t to congress monday alleging irregularity in dogs handling of the investigation. shapleigh is seeking legal
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protections from congress so he can share specific hs of his>> t allegations. >> there was multiple stephe ws that or slow walked atn of the direction of departmentcoune justice. had you ever encountered that before? reat. >> i hi have not, no. every these deviations from normale, process and each and every timee it seemed to to always benefitsu the subjecbjt that is a federal law enforcement agent o complaining about prosecutors acting too slowly on a casa caee involving the son of the man, merrick garland works for, deviating from what would eac happen to you. and each and every deviationy benefits the suspect. la >> and what about law enforcement, law enforcement officers h have no more powerthy than what you give a them. powet sear are not born empowered to search overseas or arrest. ue these powers are to bed used jl fairly and justly based on facts and never as retribution. journalist matt taibbi was the target of some unusual irs tactics after he uncovereded
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government wrongdoing in gos and here'st he what he told fox's john roberts about that experience. ati'm curious that they opened n investigation into you on christmas eve of last year, which happened to be a saturdayt . how many folks a it home thinkth that they could ever get inro touch with anybody from the irs on christmas eve, particularly on saturday, yet they're opening an investigation intoyou. you ?e on yeah, they're opening anon investigation into me on a, on saturday, on christmas eve, on the same day that just repor released a report abouti an the ties between the fbi and other enforcement agencies and tech platforms. and itnd was a three year old mn case and i didn't know them anyy money. so o all of those factors combined to make the optics of this s really strange, you would wonder what supervisor would c be calling aaln agent on a saturday and asking him to comeo into work to open the case on that day. >> b whichri brings us to the fo
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the the former director admitted he did something to presidentdent tru.d he would not have even tried with president obama. >> former deputy director met with agents to hatch an insurancn cae policy in case a certain republican won the white house. the lead fbi i agent in charge t investigating republican presidential candidate said hinpublican e col the supporters of thate candidate. and suppora wal-mart former genl counsel for the fbi wound upfo finding a home at twitter while other agents removed from the bureau found the home on liberal cable news channels. >>e people in charge of the bureau have changed, but has the bureau itself changed? s beenspector general's been critical. special counsel's beend at l critical, and at least one candidate on the republican side for president has promiseda changes. ifnge is he is elected. >> i would not keep chris reyes, director of the fb fi would be a new oneiitt on day one . i think that's very important in terms of attorney general. ae
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you need someone that'rys got a really strong backbone. you need somebody that knows if you're going in there and you're taking caree usinesse business. "the washington post" is not going like you . new "new york times" is not gog to like you . you're going to get attacked by cnn and you got to wear thata as a badge of honor.n' you can't try to please politesi societety because otherwise you'll just get captured by thed institution itself. and i think the doj and fbi the have lost their way. ricans i think that w they've been weaponized against americans who think like meartia and you. n. and i thin k that they become very partisan as president, you have a responsibility to be involved in holding those agencies accountable, clearingb, out people who are not doingthat the job and making sure that they're doing the people's business and they're not abusining their authority if and when the obituary for this e country is written, it will include a line about the day the department of evstice was politicizejusticd. >>er politics tends to ruin everything. with at with .except
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and the department of justice is no exception. >> joining us now is a manattorn who used to work for the department of justice. he was the u.sey statef . attorr the great state of texas.rector he o served in the house and he was the director of national intelligence. john ratcliffe joins us now. ae director has been a terrible seven years for the bureau and the department t's just. m let's just start with the prose allegation from a federal agent that prosecutors are draggingeie their feet and a casete involvig the president is saying, hey, look, this is not like a cocomplicated cryptocurrency commodities case. fire lyingcase and buying on a firearm application and some tax matters. ow >> right. the well, trey, one of the things te the durham report that wasre confirmed has been so much talk- about a two tiered system of o justice, some would say a twoic, party system of justice. well, the durham abouort confirmed that. remember, he basically talkede about whento came to hillary clinton and investigations into ev w it was a red light. everythingal, stop slow walk it
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don't investigate. trump ,wame to donaldit it was a green light. in fact, it was warp speed.and v how fast can you go? ia and even if you look at how that russia hoke's opened up to compare, compare thathe fi wher ae a guy walks into the fbn and says, hey, i was in a bar in london, i talked to some guy that works on the trump campaign and they are talking t abou t russia. and forty eight hours later, the fbi opens a full fieldr intl counterintelligence investigatiocen, opens up on fob trump campaign associates and the fbor'si director is pusg to go to the fisa court with ar. fake dossier. comparcompare it to what you jut heard, a guy like gary shapleigh saying, hey, i work for the government. my name's gary shapleigh.y and i'm saying under penalty of perjury, this thing's being and slow. walked hunter. biden is getting preferential we treatment. so, you knowd,, the names have changed, but the problem is the e. same . clintonin, now it's i biden and it's a cultural
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problem that is that is continuing here. >> director , i can't speak for you being a prosecutor was the best job i've ever had, i suspect is among the bestnderw you ever had. i wonder whahat changeged d inar what happened to the department? i mean, can you put your finge r on a time and say that's when the blindfold slip from lady justice? >> well, i think where we saw it, trey, was wae obs was wasadi back inin the obama wen administration. and i don't know how they went about staffing at the department of justiceac and the fbi, but really, we can trace it back to from that point forward. it haspo beelitin a reallye political justice system. and unfortunately, most of the abuses havave gonee gone ont i 's gonhee against one party most of the time. i mean, you talked about the the fbi director . you know, the problem here,
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, is this is a this is a cultural problem. i heard i heard the answer that ron desantis gave. and i would expect everyd expect republican running for president to say the same thing. en n perotht personal as t the current director , but things that the fbi and the department of justice are g ttin g worse. they're not getting better.ised trey t, you and i raisedof pos the issue of possible abuse. the fbi told us it was nonsenset and we shouldn't look into it. loothat the inspector general e in and agreed with us and saidii there were 17 violationson ofdit law. and the fbori director ,, th the current director , came outo and said it was it was wrong to spy on the trump campaign. but this will never happen. aragain. t >> we are putting in policies and procedures to to prevent itk . well, then we found out last week that that very same tool, the foreign intelligence surveillance act, was usede two hundred and seventy fore improperlyasmes ,illicitly to conductess se warrantless searches on americans and onlarn so, e out of every one thousand was was, h appropriate. so sings ao things are getting n
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not getting better.what theand what the fbi and thet department of justice needgoing is someone who's going to putut the interests of the america tn people in front ofe the interests of the fbi. we need a reformerf th. ing to we need a disruptor.he we need someone who's goingteret to put the american people's o interests first. >> and wars e haven't had that ' the last six or seven years, at leas t. >> director , i'm will do so. wh i don't get ia chance to do ve often, which is to quotech todd, chuck todd, even chuck todd. so the bureau needs to be looked at. i think he loves the phrase. a church style commission. i don't care what style commission it is , butn you go people on the left alstho complaining about the bureau. you got people on the righth. who have seven years worth, but some if a republican wins you director , radclyffe, they're going to ask you to th be the attorney generalr so ye the director of the fbthi one or the other. usd to you need to come up
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with your answer to them ors yo you can tell us what reforms you would make if you said yes. >> well, i don't know. know, >> i think, you know, the one thing that i would recommend to whoever the next republican president is , is ,wn is you need to change it the dynamic here. when i talk about the disrupter ,i'm talking about doingbo something differently. you know, we've had bob mueller ,we've had jim comey, we've had christopher wray, all former federal prosecutors, and i guess maybe lawyers havep this tendency to want to defend their client and they want to defend the fbi even whee nfbv those interestterests conflictth with with, you know, gh interfering with the rights ofts the american people. anwhd i think that what we need is , is someone who's goingit df to look at ifet differently and really undertake a full defn reconstruction. we don't need to defunthd the fi . wed neen d to reforitm it comps and align its interests where it's se, supposed to be, which, is to protect and serveno the american people. self andnot the fbi itself, andt to defend the fbi, but to defend the american people.
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>> and we haven't had that. thank you . put your finger on it. i think when you're number one objective is to defend the reputation of your entity above everything ity else.rector j this is what you get. director john ratcliffe, thankas you for joining us .>> tre >> you bet. thanks, oprah, fory: senate. rumors are swirling thating ca california governor gavin gove wants to replace dianneth feinstein with the media titan oprah winfrey. titaraymond arroyo joins us with more . and cancer drugs are. facin gges. massive shortages. what are physicians having to do to provide treatment? more after the break. what if we live to a hundred? >> i don't want to outlive our money. i keep eating all these cheapf o seats. financial to bes next. one hundred . to bes next. >> we work in power. even if we do live to 100, we don't have to worry, not worry. take control of your financial future. to empower what's next. >> the sirius xm. listen, every event is on.
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cost for shipping like we're tied in half. >> just like that. go to ship station .com, try and get two months free. en y >>ou all right. open your boxes. i'll be back to play some great . you would think dianne feinstein was a republican the way she's treated by her own party. herfirst she was challenged in a twenty eighteen by a candidate ran to the lefwho ratf her and got 48 percent ofd
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the vote. thenehen senator feinstein mad a huge mistake of huggingrepublc one of her republican colleagues afte colr committee hearing. you can't do that.t t win the left wing of her partye ju wanted her replaced as the chair of senate judiciary and now the left wants her can to resign so governor gavin newsom can appoint replacement. feinstein has already an a replacement. feinstein has already announced she's leaving at the end of this term. nod that ain't quick enough forf some three members of the house from california or already running to replace feinstein.lu including barbara lee and katie porter and adam schiff. that senator feinstein does decide to leave early or more aptly is pushed out. governor newsom has said hea will replace her with ale black female, which seems to rule out siff and porter. but does it rule out oprah winfrey? rumors are swirling that newsom would pick the media titan, but why in the world which she takea that job? >> joining us now is raymondjo arroyo. raymond, why iining usn the wors
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and first of all, if she gave gv me a car, i might support herits two guys, not happened yet.sena i hadn't gotteton a whole lotttn from either one of my senator. vining gotten a moped. but why in the world wouldwant oprah winfrey want to go to the> united states senate? >> well, first of all, gavin newsom, the governor of california, has committed calig a blackpointin woman to replace dianne feinstein if he's given the opportunity. now, i guess queenh an latifah and angela bassett weren'to available. so oprah was the nextbut, on the list. who knows? but look, dre,k,rey, there's nos oprah's going to take this job. she's queen montecito. she has spent a career decadesd, telling her audience whatmove to eat, how to move, where to live, what to drink. ng t she's not going to reverse that math , as you know. well a, being a public servant and having the audience tell her what to do, anchoraudienceti to happen. now,d i get it. people are reading herding commencement speeches, which we
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just heard about a week ago insa tennessee, and indt does sound like the running platform of i the democratic party. buust i just don't see her doing this. and tonight, her spokesmanokesme said oprah is not considering the seat. should it become thhould open. now, i like the vagaries in that she's not considering it, but she could take it, buty: i rather doubt it. i don't think so s. she is wildly popular. asi you know, politics asidede, madt wildly popular. i can thint k of nothing thatdiy would jeopardize her popularityg quite like running for office. so she's aht she's ae' billiona. if she wanted, she could makea a a movie aboutot being a senatorr and come out much better financially and quite frankly, r still be much more popular. >> so i don't know. >> i mean, where to whether it's michelle obama or oprah winfrey, i hear these rumors t that people arhee going to run for president or the senate, but they have great lives. whn ity would they ruin it? and being the u.s. senate now, these are fantasia is true.
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and , you know, the costs of being in public office. this is a tough life. you have to hear everybodyr griping about you . you know, whatever decision hau make, there' maks a group in new york in your constituency that hates you for it. oprah does not want to be in that position, but i'm glad shee taught gavin newsom the onete line you get out of the senate seat , you get a senate seat , you get a senate seat . get abut at the end of the day, the real story here is gavin eo newsom preying on a base of the democrat party, pandering shamelessly to them by locking himselto thef in to not only a appointee, but a black femalemae appointee. he's only doing that to cover his hindquarters because he gave camilla harris' senateseatt seat to a white guy,o y, alex padilla, and this is to make up for that. for so put a oprah aside for a secod and look at the raw, cravenve political calculus play here and realize what newsom is about. oprah,s i don't think is goingn >> be taking this show on the road.
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look, i served with adame i have schiff. it's been a little while since i've seen him, but i think he checks either one of the boxes, either one of the requirements that gavin newsom has. so w why in the world is he i on it? >> well, t i thinkhink he wantst seat , but that's the other obstacle to all these people. newsom oprah and her friend adam schiff. dianne feinstein is still ins no the chair and she has not decided whether to let go of it or not. they're going to have to wait. and it looks like dianne feinstein means to serve out her term. so whoever gets it, it'shoev no going to btoe any of these three candidates that so desperately wanted. katie portererately , barbara lee ors your friend schiff and oprah, she is going to be at the nexttn michelle obama event that shese ain't going to the senate. i can tellnateyou. raymond, if s were a montana montana senateaue seat , they would not be pushing them out becausestat that's a red state. but californialifornia, they wa to push her out. raymond arroyo, thank you soe much for joining us li. we are living in a magnificent r time as it relates to medicine
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or our ability to stay well a cuver from illness or injury. there is seemingly a therapy orr a cure for most everything, ort at least a way to treat it.what >> what if the technology was there, but you could not quitewt reach it? what if the cure had been foundo but you could not access it?ss our country is facing a shortage of cancer drugs and other life saving. medications. how did we get here and what here? can be done about it and how quickly can it be done, givent i the fact that life literally bal hangs in the balance? joininang us now is dr. marcu sm siegel. thank you so much foucr beinh fg here, doc. g i guess peopleet are wondering how did we get here? is it is it a supply chain issuh is that there's no there's nero profit in some of these drugs?ow >> how do we get here? lehet me tell you how we got here. e us90% of the drugs we use fort these lifesaving conditions that yin you're talking about ae generic generics have a very narrow profit margin. if the drug's been around e, a generic company like
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teva in israel is not goingt go to compete with 15 otherr country companies. they look for a market thatisn' they can control. and if the government isn'tt e paying enougnoh. sten t hello, welcome to that. o medien to our government, ledicare and medicaid, paying less and less forss thesh drugs. the generics are not goinge drug to produce them and then the government starts regulating. right. the government look at goment stan reduction actn saying if you raise prices faster than inflation, giv inflation, you've got to give. a rebate. guess who gets the rebate? no hospt the patient. not the hospital.dleman it's the it's the middleman.e the middleman that's putting itr all together just to make sureui that the drugs get inttao the hospital. all of thataget goin.g on leadsa shortage. and you know what? a dothat means for a doctor like me, it means i can't prescribeoe the lifesaving drug i need. i got to delay treatmentla forr things like cancer, for intravenous, for for for life threatening asthma. let me give yo u one specific example that you're going to bed amazed at bladder cancer. lo for bladder cancer, we use
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a local bacteria thacat we inse. into the that's now a greathor. shortage. you know, we have to do we have to give more powerful, more poisonous poiso chemotheras to patients that we would ps th give that treatment for if wate could get it. >> government.. it sounds like it is economics. it is not supply chain. it is not government regulation. it is the economic because ofof where the drug companies can make money. or is that a simplg compane miny of looking at it? i >> you're never simpleminded. that is exactly right. put it another way. we've hai d so much exposure in the media about the greedy drug companies that we lost sightt gr of. my big headline hereeedy, this 0 joke short, we're three hundred drug short right now. huge0 now, number it, but it's c generics. generics are stay out ofs. the headlines. genetay out they don't get the e that's all we're talking about is mozambique about a govey,k au about novo nordisk, about, you know, about drugs like that ,about adderall.py but we're not talking about chemotherapy or intravenousns mk drugs because generics make e m them they don't make money.
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they don'tthey d make the same d of money. so they don't have flexibility . they don't have resilience. and then t what if they're manufacturing? plant gets hit by a citation. here wcie goe go .nt again with government regulation, though that mafay be fair. i want to be protected. i don't want a contaminatedthat drug, but that c costsos money.i you're right. drug discussion about weight loss drugs and not so much about pediatric cancer.u >> dr. marc siegel, thank you so much for joining us .>> g grearet to seeat you .fighti >>ng conservatives are fighting back against companies that align with the left target is the latest corporation in thc the crosshairsro. >> more on that with senatorcotn tom cotton from arkansas. doug , nex fri, three doors down on fox and friends. i'm not going will be drunk out friday on the ol american summer concert series american summer concert series presented by loews
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someone. is it good for business to sellc provocative clothes designed by yourself? is bclaim satanist? is it possible for a restaurant to just be a to just be a restaurant anymore or a clothing store to just sell clothes or has everything become part of whatever issuef h seems to be the issue of the day? is everyis everything a proxy fe the cultural issues s of the da? >> and what did you think would happen after watching bud light? target has had a ver very bay do and that was even before the devil got involved. volved >> senator tom cotton sawcotton combat duty and war. but this is sa different kind war, fought with bathing suitsea and children's books and not guns and tanks. ks but he joins us now. welc welcome , eivind. trying to avoid getting runover over in new york all week. so i missed this story. owing it i think that you have been following it based on your twitter feed. give us your take on it.e on that treyarch remarkably badye
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judgment by yet another company that'st anothe been hijacked byi wingers at its corporate headquarters. you know, you've c seen thisltan before with delta and coca-cola when they attackeden the georgia election law. the los angeles dodgerslaw, recently currying favor with a radical anti catholic organization and now target. you think all these fancy ceos with their multimillion dollar th and their vast array of advisors would have a much as much common sense as a twenty something basketball player did when michael jordan said republicansl buy sneakers as well.n' sot target shouldn't be surprised. they've seen millionthey've s de drop off their market cap.tinues they shouldn't be surprised. that continues b because they've been attempting to market trans clothing and other items directly to children contrary to their owntheims claims. >> and of course, parents don't appreciate it all. i don't know of anyone that let doesn't like tom cotton, but let's assume hypothetically that there is someone they arer free to not vote for you .they e
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they are free to work for your opponent in your next reelection. they're free to not donate re to you. so what is different whent people who don't like what target is doing just decideth they're going to go shopatrigh somewhere else? i mean thardt to me. i don't know what the right word is . my mom walked me out of greece when i was a teenager. i mean, it's beee whenn going oa a while now. it'shi a consequence olef makin decisions. you can laugh, but i never got to see greece is a consequence. e of decisions and people haveeo the right to do it right. tre exactly. try and now target is criticizing its own customers for being upset about this, for the fact tha tt theshe displays are right next to children's section during the very front of the store where a chils sectiod can't helt go by. they should be surprised again that their customer is goinge si to shop somewhere else, someplace that doesn't take such an overt political stance. er shopse suchdoesn't force this into the faces of young children. three , four or five years old, making their parents answer very uncomfortable questionsng.n
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agey could have all been avoided again. they'd simpl they y take the lik michael jordan did back when he was young man. the republicanoungs buy sneakers as well, and it companies would focus on , saywoul, flyinges their airlines like delta should have or selling their sugary beverages. coca-cola did, or target simplyo selling its wares to people in o apolitical and nonpartizan way. they wouldn't face these-par consequencestisa. >> tre you know, sometimes, senator , i think it really, really winds up backfiring your memories better than mine.ed bu tt i thinhek they move the ao star game out of atlanta and it does nothing but hurt geo the businesses in georgia.memory but maybe my memory fall. i but i thought they movedve the all star game, did they not? >> they didn't. they didd trey. asebal major league baseball quickly moved its all star game out of atlanta. i think they moved it to colorado. and ironically enough, the braves went through the world series and won the world series that fall. yet i didn't see major leaguseee baseball trying to cancel the world series, their premier
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event. >> senator tom cotton from thei the great state of arkansas, thank you for joining us . tha >> loonk yk forward to seeingd you soon. to sthank you .y. >> brian kielburger has beenrger charged with the slaying for college students in idaho. he was studying criminology ated a nearby school. t is it is alleged he entered a homem and start for young people to death. stbut was that his first crimint act? did he reall cy begin with quadruple homicide or didd he start earlier? his parents have been called before a pennsylvania grand jury investigating the death oft dana smithers, a forty five year old mother who went missing in may of last year.ying kohbce issued a statement saying kielburger is not a suspect in the death of danaen smither. so whyd would the grand jury. need to hear from his parents? >> good question. regarding exactly the right guest, former nypd inspectoror l and lawyer and somebody that i like to rely on for legal iss issues. mr . paul aurelie. his paul ubben. i'm rusty. why call his parents to the
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grand jury? >>o, is there another explanatin ? >> so this gets verys ge legalistic, but the way i see it is that there'sossibilities. two possibilities. okay, first of all, this is all this i. ak we have to caveat it off ofdon' a grand jury leak. right. single source. knowwt on't reallyt knore everything that's going on . >> but first possibility i see is that they may be tryingthis d to validate this supposed alibi of his right. this could be based on digital evidence, stuff that sunset's not. all of this forensic digitals ar stuff hangs around for over phone pings do terminate after a while. >> they get washedy get out.o th so there's that. they may be going to the parents to try to see to get they can get some anecdotal evidence from them to validate a where he supposedly was. the other possibility here sortf is that they see some sort ofmoi tya commonality between the wayo miss smithers died and something in idaho. ng >> and you really have to say to yourself, is there something there? because according to the reporting, the only indicia that kielburger ha s anythingthat to do with this is the fact that he was living 30 miles away from where miss smith's body was found. >> that's pretty thin. bufot yeunt a grand jury and his
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parents in the grand jury, there's got to be something. there just stands to reason.s th and the nuance is the judge in pennsylvania has put in tes a sharing order the grand grand jury testimony, as we know, is secret. >>re and yetntly apparentl, y t judge is willing to haveni and testimony from pennsylvaniaa shared in idaho.o >> that's not that common. so we have to say to ourselves, why it just stands to reason.isi you don't have to be a lawyer. what is it that's going to pennsylvania that he feels o is germane to what's going on in idaho? >> you know, my old job, paul , i didn't like to speculate, but once you get on television, you do it a lot. so i'm going to speak i'm not asking you to speculate. sort of. it is rare to startmicide with quadruple homicide. mostan, most people who kill for people don't start there. >> so is it smart for law? enforcement to at least look at him or rule him out and other unsolved in a geographic geo region? >> of course it is . of course it is .. you know, look, there are instances where people right out of the box d o commit multiple homicides.
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you know, it's a different kind of motive. but like the manson family, for instance, very infamously start started with a multiple murder. >> but i muln a case like this, where things feel so sort ofoul. personal, of course, they should ind. r >> and in light of the factknow that there was this long delay after the arrest, ostensiblyy ha that was going to be nine months until they had the first preliminary hearint g >> my read at the time wasat they want time to look intoometi exactly thatng. o se there's something going on in pennsylvania that they're going to be able to see that indic cod have implications for idaho. and that's another reason matte the granhered jury could mattere here, because the other thing oe it does is it increasendsanagai pressuren, on the defendant. at >> again, he's innocent until proven guilty. we all understan puttingd that.s but by putting his parents into the grand jury, he's not goinget to know what is said, eveny visi though if they visit him in tell, he's never going to know if they're telling him everything. >> but he also doesn't know al who elseso d has has been in a. jury from back in pennsylvania. >> so it puts him in a spot him where he doesn't know exactly what's being said about him out there and what his parents
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don't cooperate and they're held in contempt. well, that means? hat mean jail for them, more pressure. and so these are things thatsyla all come to play in pennsylvania that could have a big impact out in idaho when a decision is made on whether or not to seek the deathe penalty in his idaho case. i need to have you back and we will talk about that and we'lljn talk about the strength ofthanko the case. in the meantime, thank you foruo joining us . r havitlantaidentsthank you for. >> atlanta residents have come up with creative solutions to the city's crime problems. >> that and more after the break. still tying your shoes. >> it's 2023 handsfree shoes are the next big thing. no more hands touching, pulling ,heel crushing. and once they're on, they stay on . >> don't take my word for it. they have over thirteen thousand five star reviews, free shipping, free returns and a 30 day money back guarantee a style or color
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oh, the coca-cola 600 sunday on fox oh oh.n, i'l on fox oh oh.n, i'l >>l watch where you're going. yeah, mom, pay att. what if it's a concussion?probab lyhang on , i'll look it up.t ho >> i'm probably fine. >> probably we noticed something wasn't right and got her to a doctor . hit i i thought i was okay. t,but i had a concussion. >> sometimes it's hard to tell on your own. don't mess of your melon. >> if you hit it, get it checked when you can't watch. listen, get the latest news business and news headlines on sirius xm any time anywhere . fox news radio on sirius xm america is listening. i am s for shipping in like
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we're cut in half just like that. ♪o to ship station .com, try and get two months free public safety is the preeminent function of government. for all the debate aboutnt shoul government should or should not do, there is preciou ss littlef debate or should be when itkes comes to public safety, which whs sense. what are the rights matter if you're dead? what good is the right to assemble? if you're afraid to leave the housave e?e, what use is the right to own property? if you're constantly worried, someone will steal it. but what?
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government doesn't do its job? what if you live ine a jurisdiction where the leaders have a different view of public safety? isat in anf you live in an area where it seems like the violence is winning? we do not have vigilantet we thstice in this country, but we do the right self-defense and the defense of others. gun o a suburb of atlanta, georgia, me has begun to takrse some matters vito its own hands because the violence is too much. our local atlanta affiliate had this to say about the plan, bucd a plan to keep buckhead safer. >> details from the buckhead safety alliance expectede shot t one day after two people were vo shot while trying to break up a fight in the area. police say the violence sundened outside o trader joe's on peachtree road just before 3:00 sunday morning. officersofficersson say one pes shot in the stomach, the other in the leg. police are still looking for the shooter. it's the latest violence grabbing headlines ithn the busy buckhead district easter sunday. a 16 year old armed with a guno tried to rob two people near lenox square mall.ople n i don't like crimeea anywhere .
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so something has to be done laws about this lawlessness that that's tha that exists here. >> there is also a new app called blackwall for people who feel safer with armed drivers. kerry brown is the creator of this app and joins us now. >> welcome to you, mr. brown . what led you to give people whe option of riding with someoneo who was armed? >> and you guys, i just wantedrn to bring a safer ride, a safer environment, because, again, living i atlanta, you know, we h see what's going on ine the streets, schools, stores,wad wherever the case may be . i wanted to provide a sense of a security for everyday peoplew ha and what has been the reaction?r how have your friends, georg neighbors and fellow georgians respondesponded d? and the response have been beautiful. we're up to two hundredgettin
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thousand downloads. i've been getting a lot oft r great praises for it. people are loving it.essity they're seeing the necessity o o it. >> so i've beef n getting a lot of great responses. >> this is what when i read this story, the first thing it r entered my mind is if you wanted to take it to other states , you would have to navigate a labyrinthine series of laws because everyne e state seems to have different tk gun laws. so are you thinking aboutor exporting this idea? ting tr to other states ?nce wi and if so,th how will you ensure compliance with those gun laws?. >> yes, we are actually going into other states . that is the plan very soon as well. and the way we'ven movine movina very strategic. we've been teaming up pwithes with security companies, lawstas enforcement operators in each of these states , learninghe the laws and moving very slowly but speeding. and at the same time, we're learning the rules of the land, getting to know the people whats
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the most important thing is , te wis connecting those who arefil already in the field, law enforcement, those who have in the security field. wir a minute, weow you know, we've been connecting with them to learn more about it. so we've been taking the rightautn steps, the precautions to get into each state. you asre a there a specific incident or occurrence that t led you to this or was it justa? the cumulative impact? i mean, we see something, itas seems like every day. gyo was there somethin specific that led you to say, , i'm going to do this?e be >>en well, i mean, i've been in the field for so long, it one wasn't really one thing. >> it was just multiple thingsng that, know, i was thinking i like, how can i create s fielthinomethig in order to prot people because it's my field. you know, the thought initiallyr started with me protecting childrendren and and women, crea a transportation line to and from school becauseee i've seen a lot of mothers who are singlen and with their children going to sports events. and i wanted to see how canhelpc i help creatreean
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the transportation line. so it starte id there and then l just it kept evolving. you know what? i can do this more than just, you know, women and children. i can do this for all people. cm so the idea came about. with that. and then, you know, as iand thtt growing, i thought about more things through the app, which itt has a lot more to it, but that's how it initially started. t king brown , thank you very much. we'll be watching to see if we'l export this idea to other states . >> appreciate you joining us .sr thank you .>> tha >>nk joe biden wants to leadantt america into a greenview tour, but has he put the power in our homes at risk? w a new report warns that two thirds of the country could face power shortages this summer. more on that next. >> so musty in here, everybody damp, everybody damp.
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damp bread dropping the tab. attract and trap excess moisture, eliminate musty odors, everybody death with the sirius xm. listen, every event is on. just hit the button in your car to heat up your summer soundtrack. with some of our favorite channels, including ad free music. plus sports news and entertainment. we've turned it on from may 25th to june 5th. so what are you waiting for? all you have to do is hit the button and enjoy the listen free event. now through june 5th, visit sirius xm dotcoms summer. >> listen for details. hello, i'm mike lindell. and i'm here to tell you about my brand new product, my slippers. >> what makes my slippers different from those other slippers is my exclusive four layer design. i wanted my slippers to have everything you'd ever want in a pair of slippers. >> when i first put my slippers on , i was like, wow, they feel great. and most importantly, they have the support that i need in
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most of us would w like to reman theoretical. we don't want to find out. on want to set our thermostats. i want a precise numbe ar and leave it there. what if the power grid goes out ? what are the chances and consequences of a massiveer grid crisis in the throes of summer? thuck devor knows about the interconnectivity of energy and the economy and how publicem policy impacts our power.licy and he joins us now. thank you so much for joining. teall we all remember what happened in texas with the shortages in the wintertime? xain california with the rolling blackouts? >> what do you think do yo will happen this summer? u happewill , today we we haven increased likelihood blackouts in the western two thirds of the country. and it's beinguntry. driven trae by by federal policy, especially president biden's inflation reduction act, which, of course, had nothing to do with reducing inflation and everything to do with green energy pork . >> and shappeno what's happenind today is the more wind
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and solar that you add to the grid and the more coal fired power plants that you retire,u and they're not building natural gas plants fast enough ,the more unstable the gride mo becomes, the more difficulret it becomes to keep that grid energized 24/7, 365, oh, i mentioned staying cool in the summertime and warming up in the winter. and that is that's very serious. l inparticularly for people whoe older, which i'm rapidly warmming part of that age bracket. but it is more serious than that. i mean, iting up it' hospitals s who depend upon energy sources to stay alive. so it is it is not just, you know, i'm going to sweat a lot. >> this summer is more serious than that. and it well, it is a lot more serious than that. >> wit goes to both affordability and reliability. i so not only are we talking about people's lives, if the power fails duringli the summer or even during the winter, buves in failst we'o talking about certain types of manufacturing. for example, if you wantuter to manufacture computer chips, you need a continuous
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c, yoand reliable supply of electricity. >> and that's put in danger. another thindangerg is that we'r getting close to having winter problems. so the challenge with summerin is well known. obviously, you get a hot day, you need a lot of air conditioning. a lot of times on ho st days, you don't have a lot of wind power because that is often associated with a high pressure domet . >> but in the winter, you often don't have a lot of wind to begin with . and of course, solar isn't very strong either. .treyand today, what they havent confronted yet is that the storage technologies store ,the energy from wind and solar is highly costly. >> fro exceedingly expensive.s >>hi and what i would very much like to see is republican candidates who want to run for president talk to the public about this. h and so far ,av all i've heardani is from governor ron desantis in his talk about nuclear power is a viable option. and it seemsop to me that people of goodwill, if you're really concerned about emissions, if you think that we ought to reduce our carbon dioxide
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emissions, then nuclear power has got to be partth of that equation. and if you don't think i of t should be , what is your alternative? >> how are people going to afford it and how reliable is it going to be? i'll get you to quickly address this, because i am sure it is o qn folks minds, i'm guessig is too late to do anything about it this summer unless you want to move to one of s the states is not going to be impacted. i think you said the western two thirds not to be selfish. yes, sir. i don't think south carolina is the western two thirds notrn to be selfish about it, but i've got about twenty seconds. >> wnything they can do either move. wellell, first, first of all, you certainly need to contact your lawmakers about this, because this is not only a statutory problem, it's a regulatory problem. and it's a legal problemvironmen insofar as environmental laws. y so what you're likely going to see is a lot of demand reduction. they may monkey withy wiat. thermostat, even thoughy se you didn't give them permission to . you may see some factories closed down to conserve electricity. so just batten down maybe consider buying a generator.
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>> chuck devor, let's hopeck let's hope summer is better. than it is forecast. but i fear that you mayit's be correct. thank you for joining us . look forward to seeing you soon. thank you . i hope everyon.e was a great evening. pete hegseth is in for sean . have hannity and he is next. >> trey, now, i got to keep their hands off my thermostat, too. everything.r sean yes.ty. it's everything. that's everything. gos, stoves,s air conditioners. >> now, thermostat.it got it. i got my checklist. try great.. great show. >> yes, sir. you got it.ete: w all right.el welcome to this special edition of "hannity". >> i'm pete hegseth, in for sean. for and tonight, a dangerous new era continues at the fbi. in the doj, federal officialss inat the washington swamp or sewer, they're drunk with power and tainted by political bias. you know that fbi director wray continues to defy a legally binding subpoena from the hous e oversigh

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