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tv   FOX and Friends Saturday  FOX News  June 10, 2023 4:00am-5:00am PDT

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♪ ♪ will: we tart with this, former president donald trump hits back at special counsel jack smith after the jus department unseals a 37-count can indictment. rachel: federal prosecutors claim trump illegally kept boxes of classified documents including military plans at his home in florida. pete: here we who go. alexandria hoff is live from washington with the details.
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>> reporter: hi, good morning. yeah, we will likely hear from the former president today as prosecutors allege that he went beyond keeping the documents in his home, going so far as to show them to people and had the bulk of them spread out in random storage spaces throughout the estate and at that residence. trump is the first former president to face federal charges. he's accused of violating 7 broken down into 37 counts including 31 counts of willful retension of national defense information, withholding and concealing documents, making false statements and conspiracy to obstruct justice. some of these individual penalties max out at 20 years per count. special counsel jack smith said yesterday e that his office will seek a speed eauty trial. speedy trial. >> we have one set of laws in this country, and they aloo to everyone. very important to note that the defendants in this case must be presumed innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law. >> reporter: within this
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indictment, prosecutors said that in july of 2021 the former president is heard on his audio recording showing four people a plan to attack a country and later revealed a classified map represented to a military operation, that is. the government claims that trump lie to fbi agents after moving boxes at mar-a-lago, but the current gop primary front-runner, he calls the indictment the box hoax and stated this about smith, quote: his wife is a trump hater just as he is a trump hater, a deranged sigh owe -- psycho that shouldn't be involved in think case having to do with justice. the former president does plan to travel to north carolina and georgia today to speak at their state gop conventions. will, rachel, pete? rachel: thank you, or alexandria. isn't it curious about how we got these leaks about what was in these documents from the fbi? they were so tight-lipped they didn't want the committee under representative comber to see anything to do with joe biden and, of course, we had jason
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chaffetz on just a little earlier who says it's kind of a coincidence that the indictment falls on the same week that finally representative comer and his committee got to look at what the informant, the now we know credible informant, said about the $5 billion that -- $5 million that joe biden and his son took there there ukraine. listen. >> the allegation from a credible source that the department of justice itself paid hundreds of thousands of dollars for this source and they get to see this document, hours later they come and drop this indictment? are you kidding me? like that's a coincidence? no way. they did this on purpose to smother the idea that joe biden has been credibly tied to a bribery scheme, put $10 million into his family's pocket. that should be the headline of "the new york times", but it won't be. will: let's for a moment presume the worst this both of these cases. on one hand there is no allegation that president trump was going to do something nefarious with the documents
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held at mar-a-lago beyond simply the willful retention of these documents and the accusation that he obstructed the attempts to give them back. on the other hand, taking into account the worst specialty of this news -- specialty of this news that there is a high level, credible source suggesting that that joe biden and his son got $5 million from a ukrainian energy firm would suggest that the president of the united states is involved in a pay for play scheme, an influence-peddling scheme potentially compromising the decisions he makes. one has significantly more weight than the other, yet one is given the attention of not just the collective consciousness of the nation, but the department of justice. pete: and one is far more obvious. ofst it's so blatant, in plain sight that it's amazing to watch the media ignore it. here the vice president of the united states, joe biden, your portfolio is ukraine. your son is on a board in ukraine that he has no
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experience for. rachel: and he's a crack addict. pete: yes. the government, there's an investigation for a reason the company that your son is on the board of. you're the vice president, you fly there, you demand the prosecutor who's investigating your son be fired and you don't just do it because you don't want your son fired, now we're learning from a credible source that there was 5 to the big guy and 5 to hunter paid through dozens of family members at the very same time and then he brags about it? and the media's not interested in that at all? rachel: yeah. pete: and as jason points out, the minute that information starts to potentially become public, here we go, roll out the indictment. just like had to be in the middle of the night at mar-a-lago, had to roll up the fbi to secure those documents immediately. it all stinks to high heaven. rachel: it's so easy to put together. as you said, pete, you could do the crayon and connect the dots. so i think about a lot of things on this. you know, you said they're
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getting paid, so it's pay for play. guess what? we're also on the hook because this connection with ukraine, you know, zelenskyy knows exactly what happened there. the the people who are running ukraine know about this dirty deal of $5 million to joe biden and 5 million to hunter biden in addition to the $80,000 a year that hunter biden was getting per month from burisma -- pete: so when he says whatever it takes for as long as it takes, long live ukraine, there might be something more there? rachel: yes. so they're paying off joe biden, but we, the taxpayers, are paying 5:zelenskyy and all those people to keep these scent ises quiet for -- scents quiet for joe joe biden because they though exactlied what happened. our whole country was turned upside down when president trump was impeached for telling the truth about what happened there. and may i just add this, if you had your life turned upside down and everything uncovered the
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way, you know, donald trump and all they came up with was a document misplaced supposely, that's all they have? pete: or a videotape or an audiotape of i've got these secret plans of millie wanting to invade iran. rachel: that's what they have. will: monday night gavin newsom's going to sit to down with sean hannity where they'll discuss various items including, as it turns out, newsom's relationship with donald trump. watch. >> all right. donald trump -- i'd be negligence if i didn't get your reaction to what happened in the news. >> sad, and i say that as an american. >> you friendly with him? >> well, as you know, i didn't have a closed fist, i had an open hand. we had an incredible relationship during covid. he was incredible. he would plano politics -- play no politics with california, none, it's a fact. i got a lot of critique from the left when i say that.
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pete: interesting. rachel: gavin newsom trying to move to the middle and be a little more -- i don't know what's going on here. of. pete: i don't know what's going on there. all i do know is that that's a guy auditioning to be president of the united states -- rachel: for sure. pete: -- at the white house. reason, if you want to contrast yourself with joe biden, what you do is you sit down face to face with sean hannity, something joe biden could never, ever do. so if you're running a shadow campaign, you just out there say, hey -- and, by the way, he's been, i believe, cut off as a surrogate from the biden -- can i need to check that. but there's definitely an an alternate track here of if joe can't go, put me in, coach. rachel: well, also i actually believe what he says. i think donald trump was very sincere during covid trying to do the right thing and approached it the way the his -- the way a businessman would. i believe that entirely. it's just interesting to see a democrat admit to that, and you
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have to believe gavin newsom has some ulterior motives as he slicks his hair back and looks all fine -- pete: got a problem with it? rachel: no, i like it. he looks really good. he looks presidential, and you compare that to joe biden who's mumbling -- will: very similar. rachel: yeah. you are gavin newsom in the front, but you are party in the back. [laughter] will: i'm really pleased that you translated him from earlier when he said you could connect the dots with a tray on-- crayon, it took me a minute, and then i realized he was talking about a crayon. and then you understood -- rachel: i speak pete-ese. [laughter] pete: it's a very basic language, it includes language. will: mark zucker zuckerberg said something you already know, but i guess it's interesting to hear it, and that is that the establishment, the scientific establish. , the political establishment asked facebook to censor covid information during the pandemic.
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watch. >> you think that you get to a set of harms where there is more social debate around it. so misinformation, i think, is -- has been a really tricky one because there were things that are kind of obviously false, right, that are maybe factual but may not be harmful. it's like, all right, are you going to censor someone for just being wrong if there's no kind of harm implication of what they're doing? there's a bunch. of real kind of issues and challenges there. but then there are other places where it is, just take some of the stuff around covid earlier on in the pandemic where there were, you know, real health implications but there hadn't been time to fully vet a bunch of the scientific assumptions. unfortunately, i think a lot of the kind of establishment on that kind of waffled on a bunch of facts and asked for a bunch of things to be censored that this retrospect ended up being more debatable or true, and that
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stuff is really tough. it really undermines trust in that. so i do think that the questions on how to hang that are very nuanced. rachel: oh, please. oh, my god. will: it hasn't been answered because you didn't learn any lessons because you're not answering to this day. rachel: that's right. yes. pete: waffled on a bunch of facts. if you don't know what the facts are, you have to waffle on them, then you're choosing between pieces of information and deciding what you deem to be more important or more true, you are the disinformant or the this plant at that moment. the default setting should be we don't know what's true, let the information go out and let people decide for themselves. it's unsurprising. rachel: i think what's frustrating, i think what you're saying is frustrating because we've never seen anybody held accountable, so we know they're continuing to do this in other ways. but what really makes me mad is
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the cert tiewld that they had when they were censoring, that we know this is the truth. you are a, you are an unscientific person. you're a science denier. if they threatened doctors with their licenses. they -- pete: still are to this day. rachel: they still arement they deplatformed, remember those early doctors who came out and were, like, you know, we've kind of known about immunity and natural immunity for a long time, then they got deplatformed off of youtube -- will: the declarations. rachel: those as well, but there were these two other california doctors -- pete: no, you must take the vaccine. rachel: that is what makes me so mad because they destroyed people 's lives, livelihoods. they have a whole generation of children who, you know, were suffering with masks and no school -- will: even if you take mark zuckerberg at his word or give him the benefit of the doubt on his sincerity, one of the things i think we've learned, this
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happened last week, twitter announced that it was going to air the what is a woman documentary by the daily wire and then it was censored, did you see that? pete: immediately. will: what the heck, elon? then he said we've got to look into this and corrected it with 24 hours, but the point is the people within that institution were still of the mindset of what to and what not censor and even if you took mark zuckerberg, which i don't, at his full sincerity, how many people at facebook -- pete: exactly. and twitter, e blonde musk -- elon musk fired 80% of twitter -- will: it wasn't enough. pete: it wasn't enough to change the -- ray he's also under fire for pedophile rings -- will: yes, on since gram. rachel: which is part of his company. so they can't deplatform and censor pedophile, but they found a way to get rid are of conservatives and also doctors who had a different opinion than the establishment, as he calls
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them, on covid. it's all very curious. i don't believe a word out of that guy's mouth. pete: let's move to something i think you'll have some thoughts on, rachel. i believe it was on tiktok, a liberal woman went on tiktok to complain about how she can't find a manly man who isn't something. watch. >> i'm a libbal woman -- liberal woman. it is really hard to find a man who is willing to pay the more traditional masculine role in the relationship in today's day and age who is not a conservative. a man who wants to pay on the first date, who wants to to open your door, who has that want and desire to take care of you and to to provide who is not a conservative. pete: rachel, why can't she find a traditional masculine man who can't a conservative? rachel: so it's interesting, this woman apparently does all these tiktok videos that are -- she's a liberal, and she's proclaiming, and they're also chastising men all the time, these liberals. don't open my door can, don't do
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this, sort of emasculating men and then they go, oh, no, there's no maas lin men who are liberal. pete: yeah. is she trying to have her cake and eat it too? she goes on i want to stay liberal and do my thing -- will: she wants a masculine man that she can emasculate. [laughter] she doesn't want him pre-emasculated. pete: yes. of. will: i'm right. pete: you are right. will: i don't know what this has to do with anything -- pete: i was just going to say -- rachel: here's my advice, she needs to get out of the and west coast. she needs to go down south and to the midwest. will: check out the will cain pod cast. connection. they reminded me, i did, i spoke to senator josh hawley this week about his new book on manhood. we go deep on it, what what inspired him to write it -- rachel: what's the takeaway? will: that that he he believes, and i think he's correct, man
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manhood is under attack ask has been for quite some time. rachel: by women like that who are now mad that hen are not available. will: honestly, the reason i would want to listen to in this podcast is he does tie it into in his book the idea of the greek philosopher who advocate he doddism and momentary happiness and because of the pursuit of that over the the last half century what we have is people and men in particular who have pursued this i need to play video games, smoke dope and this whole lost path on pursuing happiness which has just destroyed manhood. rachel: yeah. probably tied to also declining church and faith in america. interesting. i'm going to check that one out. will well, thank you. boost your testosterone. rachel: oh, boy. that's a way to his the it. will: turning now to your headlines. nine people hurt in san francisco in a drive-by shooting.
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neighbors were gathering for a community block party. the victims, most in their 20s, are expected to to survive. a motive is still unclear, but authorities believe it was a targeted shooting. the blue jays dropping a pitcher who apologized after sharing a video of supporting boy9 cot against bud right and target. toronto treating: anthony bass has been designated for assignment following yesterday's pride weekend game against the twins. the team now has seven days to trade him or put him on waivers. bass has said the clip reflected his christian beliefs, but he took it down and apologized. pete: they just cut him. he's not a big enough star. rachel: i'm sorry, he had a struggle session and then he went to reeducation camp. will: had to apologize -- rachel: welcome to the chinaification of america. will: jack link's is getting ready for nationallier key day on monday. we had some thoughts at the company's new meat retreat in
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montana. >> is the bed made of meat? can you imagine waking up and and just taking a bite out of your bed? rachel: that is a wonderful family, by the way, who runs that company. pete: great. well, would they like to bring their meat bed e to "fox & friends"? will: meat bed? rachel: how about just some jerky sticks to have here? will: jack link's showing us some love by sending us some of these awesome meat if -- rachel: they're meat robes. they're very soft. it's sort of like beef geraghty key -- jerky meets hugh hefner. [laughter] they're very soft. pete: meat robe. we don't have a meat bed, but we can get in bed with meat many robes. rachel: yeah. by the way, they sent, they sent us -- well, there's -- yeah. i'm going to tell you this, they left both of us, all of us big boxes full of beef jerky. good protein to get us through,
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you know, the show. pete: president excellent. where is it? rachel: i have it downstairs for you guys. pete: thank you, jack link's. all right, let's check in with fox news' senior meteorologist janice dean from belmont park. janice, good luck with that transition. janice: well, i was going to say maybe i need christine to make me a meat hat to go with your wonderful robes today. i will ask her that. thank you again, christine, for this beautiful hat. my husband says this is the best one so far. joe is here, how long have you been working at belmont? >> i started here in 1965, so it's been quite a while. janice: and, listen, you have the pleasure of saying that you saw history happen 50 years ago today. tell me. >> it was an overwhelming experience, once in a lifetime, and there was nothing like it when the crowd started yelling and he started opening up that big lead, it was an experience that i'll always remember. janice: who are we talking about? >> secretariat.
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janice: did you know it was special when that horse crossed the finish line? >> oh, yeah. it was such an overwhelming victory. he just destroyed the field. it was him and nobody else. janice: oh, my gosh, what an amazing moment. what do you do here now? >> i work as the clocker here now. we record all the workouts so the betting public has the information on how the horses are training. janice: you're amazing. every time i come to belmont, he comes and sees me, is so thank you, joe, my friend. >> my pleasure. it's great to be here with the wonderful people from fox. janice: oh, that is a wonderful way for me to segway in to the styled can owe we will, pete and rachel. can i have a hug? thank you. >> we get a picture? [laughter] will: thank you, janice. rachel: coming up, a louisiana business other than paying a steep price for -- can owner paying a steep price for his catholic faith. literally, how he lost two-third of his clients for just praising the lord. pete: plus, your neighborhood coffee guy could soon be has
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rachel: a louisiana father of five paying a steep price for his catholic faith, literally. ross healthcare knight says his -- mcknight says his business is under attack after this instagram post commemorating the catholic celebration of the sacred heart of jesus which occurs every june and has been since the 17th century and worning of the -- warning of the attempted coup of the month referring to pride festivities. he sells a dell gassy, goose liver, and thousand lost two of thirds of his customers as critics accuse him offing being anti-lgbtq. ross healthcare knight eau° mcknight joins us now. thank you for joining us now. why do you think that you enraged the pride activists so much, so much so that they are now launching this economic warfare on you? >> certainly. well, when there's no philosophical underpinning to your life, i think the only
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thing you're left with is rage. so, you know, if you can't have your will, then all you can do is respond outrage so it's perfectly, you know, it makes perfect sense to me, right? that that would be the response. rachel: yeah. to you're a longtime native son of louisiana. you have very deep roots in your state but also in your faith. french catholics that that came over. your message is really quite simple, right? it's humility, it's the humility of christ versus pride. >> certainly, yeah. i mean, there's not much else there. we don't have anything really to be proud of except for, you know, to acknowledge that our dignity comes from being with christian. rachel: so you've stated on your instagram that you don't have a litmus test for your customers. did you expect that your customers would have this reaction? when you posted that? >> well, for the longest time, you know, i've never been -- i don't think i've really been
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very quiet about my faith. i always, you know, celebrate major feast days and the faith's always a part of what i do. i always sign off, you know -- [speaking french] for god and the king. that's kind of generally my sign-off there for posts and things like that. so i did know i suppose in the back of my mind that eventually there would be a conflict, so i'm not -- you know, it's not out of nowhere, of course, right? because the conflict happens across the country all the time. but that it would happen now seemed a little bit perhaps like it was a concert effort. rachel: right, certainly. but you are a family, you know, you're the father of a family, you have how many, i think, four children? a beautiful wife -- >> we have five. rachel: how has this impacted your livelihood and what are you going to do moving forward? >> sure. so like you mentioned, you know, about two-thirds of our restaurant business. so that's, of course, never a good thing when you're a really,
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really tiny operation. it's just a family farm. [laughter] but, you know, we have a great deal of confidence many our faith. -- in our faith. we have a great deal of confidence in the triumph of the sacred heart and of the immaculate heart of mary, and so we're not worried in that sense,? we know we will be taken care of regardless of what that looks like. it's a veil of tears, to what's to be expected other than suffering. rachel: yeah. you say you're them a, to carry this cross, i guess. listen, there are americans, ross, across the country who are having to face these kinds of decisions that you're facing right now. you know, what they can say or not say, whether they can express the way, you know, they feel or what they believe, and many people are not making that choice. they're famously, you know, we see, for example, you know, in all kinds of corporations, in target, other places where people who are associated with this movement are staying quiet
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because they don't the want to lose business. what is your message to americans out there, especially christian americans, people of faith who are confront with this? -- confronted with this? >> certainly. well, i would have to say that, you know, if we're fighting a battle, there's no ground behind this particular battle. i believe it was pope john paul ii, he said this would be the last battle, the assault on the family. and he was speaking perfectly here during his visit to the united states. and so this is where we have to stand because there's nothing behind it, there's nothing, you know, once this battle's over and we lose if it is that we do lose, then there's nothing else behind it. so we have to fight. rachel: wow. a man who understands truly what's at stake in this battle and is willing to take the arrows and the financial results of that. and, ross, you are an
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inspiration to so many. you have a beautiful family. i'm sure you're ab amazing example to them, and you are an amazing example to every american, especially americans of faith. ross, thank you for joining us. >> thank you. rachel: fox news alert, a miraculous rescue. four children, including a baby, found alive 40 days after their plane crashed in the amazon jungle. inside the efforts that saved them, that's next. like the #20. the elite chicken and bacon ranch. built with rotisserie-style chicken and double cheese. i love what i'm seeing here. that's some well-coached chicken. you done, peyton? the subway series just keeps gettin' better. ♪ today, my friend you did it, you did it, you did it... ♪ centrum silver is now clinically shown to support cognitive health in older adults. it's one more step towards taking charge of your health. so every day, you can say, ♪ youuu did it! ♪ with centrum silver.
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oh, will you pause it real quick? (mumbles) just sold the car to carvana. k, hit play please. what? when did you do that? i just did it the other day. all i had to do was enter the vin or license plate, answer a couple questions, and got a real offer in seconds. then, they just picked up the car and paid me right on the spot. i can finally quit my job and become an actor. nah, you're right. sell your car at carvana dot com today. hi, i'm norma, and i lost 53 pounds on golo. (soft music) a lot of people expect to fall apart as they age,
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but since taking release, my energy's improved, my skin's improved. i've never felt better. ♪ ♪ (upbeat music) ♪ ( ♪ ) with the push of a button, constant contact's ai tools help you know what to say, even when you don't. hi! constant contact. helping the small stand tall. pete: we're back with a fox news alert, four children including a baby found alive 40 days after surviving a plane crash in the colombian jungle. rachel: this story is incredible. locals in the amon are calling it a miracle. -- amazon are calling it a miracle. will: jackie ibanez joins us with the latest. >> reporter: they were found yesterday in the depths of the amazon after a weeks-long search effort. they were on a flight that left
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from a remote southern town on a may 1st. it went down due i to engine failure killing all the ultimate adults onboard including the pilot, co-pilot and the children's mother. the wreckage, you see it there, was not found until weeks later, but half-eaten fruit near the site sparked a massive manhunt. officials and indigenous locals worked together on a mission dubbed operation hope. they finally found the children, you can see them there in the picture. the kids were dehigh hydrated, malnourished and covered in bug bites. overnight an army helicopter brought the siblings off the jungle, they're now being treated at a hospital in bogota this morning. the bbc reports the children apparently i knew it -- made it out alive because today knew survival skills like how to identify wild fruits that are safe to eat. incredible story. back to you guys. pete: you think about the predatorses that are in the amazon and the kid and the
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tragedy of losing your mom? rachel: yeah. you just lost your parent, and you're taking care of this baby, and is you have nothing there. again, all parents wondering, would my child survive this? if i think -- pete: no. rachel: no. not american kids. we're in trouble. [laughter] all right. now we're going to turn to your headlines. the parents of nashville shooter audrey hale have handed over the killer's fan -- manifesto to the families of the students trying to stop the documents there being released. freedom of information advocates are pushing for it to be made public, but parents worry it could put the safety of students and staff at risk. haley shot through the glass doors of the elementary school in late march killing 6 before being kill by the metro nashville police. an arkansas judge is threatening to jail hunter biden for up to 6 months if he fails to appear in court next month in his ongoing child support battle with the mother of his
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4-year-old daughter. the president's son. [laughter] to the explain why he should not be held in contempt for ignoring an order to hanover information on his finances. hunter biden has asked a judge to cut down his $20,000 a month payment to the mother for the child claiming he's a broke artist even though you paid for one of his paintings for me. all right. well, maybe the judge will do what the fbi won't. the denver nuggets are just one win away from taking home their nwa chance -- nba championship after beating the heat in miami 108-95. aaron gordon leading the nuggets with 27 points. >> throws it inside to gordon. oh, another great clutch passes and gordon with a beautiful finish. rachel: game five monday night in denver, and those are your headlines. will: beautiful flay. pete: yeah. will: we're tipping our hats to
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the historic 155th belmont stakes on fox. pete: far forward fans are sporting festive hats for the race, so what are the keys to picking the perfect headwear? rachel: who better to ask, i don't know anyone better to ask, than janice dean. she joins us live from elmont, new york. janice: come on, will, put that hat on. i know you've complained that you don't like the fancy hat, so christine moore made you a cowboy hat. will: i love it. janice: what do you think? will: i love it. and i am so appreciative. beautiful. >> i feel really accomplished. [laughter] janice: absolutely. so christine hand makes these hats, and i met you several years ago because i was looking for something fabulous to wear on my head for these races. my husband sean says this is the best fascinator so far -- >> i'm so charmed by that.
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janice: this actually makes my day to have will loving a hat and having sean say this this is the best yet. jan thinks: this is a good day. you're sewing a hat right now, and this is no lie, you sew hats right up until the very last moment, i've seen you do it. >> yes. janice: and people will say, oh, i love this, but could you paint a little of in this or sew a little of this -- >> yeah, and change the band. janice: and that's why you are so special. >> oh, thank you. it's new york-made, small business. it's all, ill all turns out very unique. each one of my staff member, i design the hats and each one of them kind of puts their own self into it when they make it because they digest the design and it comes out the fingers. everyone looks special and different. ask, yeah, and it's like the sky's the limit are of what key do so it's so fun. i'm so thankful to have this business. janice: about what is it about wearing a hat?
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i would wear a hat every single day if i can. it's just something, i don't know, like being a peacock. you walk in and you look good. >> you know, it's really nice because it shows your personality and what you want to present to your audience that day very quickly and what your mood is. janice: yes. >> but also i think that a hat, it frames your face, and it makes you feel noticed and significant. and people, the great thing about hats for men and women, it draws you in to the eyes, and then you really focus on that person because the frame is there. janice: i love you so much, and i love that you made hats for all of our anchors, and you supply the hats for folk, and you're just a really good human being. >> oh, well thank you. well, everyone, you as well. it's so easy to talk to you, and also you are a genuine, fabulous human being. we tell everyone when they say, janice told me i should get one of your hats, and then it's true. janice: well, we are wearing the fabulous fascinator today.
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tell me your web site. >> it's cam hats.com. janice: will, you look look amazing in your cam hat cowboy hat. of. will: please thank christine for me, i'm so flattered, and i love it. janice: he loves it. rachel and pete, you look amazing too. rachel: i feel like a peacock, janice. will: love it. coming up, steve hilton and tyrus will join us. rachel: but first, the prime suspect in the disappearance of natalee holloway pleading not guilty to extortion and wire fraud. the man who was once the lead investor on that case joins us next. your best defense against erosion and cavities is strong enamel- nothing beats it. new pronamel active shield actively shields the enamel to defend against erosion and cavities.
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pete: the prime suspect in the 2005 disappearance of natalee holloway appearing in an alabama courtroom friday and pleading not guilty to extortion and wire fraud charges. joran van der sloot being charged in the u.s. after allegedly attempting to sell natalie's mother fake information about the location of her daughter's body. this court appearance marked the first time the holloway family came face to face with the suspect. former fbi assistant director tom fuentes joins us now, he led the bureau's international task force early in the investigation.
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thanks so much for being here, tom. what do you make of this? i mean, it's not often that other countries lend someone who would be -- or is it often in and this is just on the extortion part of it, not the actual case of her death, right? >> right, pete. the way this works is if something, you know, serious happens to to a u.s. citizen in another country, you know, outside of the united states, the fbi has primary jurisdiction to investigate out of all the u.s. agencies. however, it still requires the host country to give permission for agents to travel there on official business and if to work with their authorities in this case. now, because of the value of the tourism industry to aruba, they went through the motions of trying to pretend or appear to be very cooperative with the u.s., but they really weren't. so at the time of the disappearance, you know, we were asking them about the different techniques they should have been doing immediately when they
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realized he was missing which was the morning after she was with joran, and, you know, they decided, well, we'll do one thing and if that doesn't work, we'll try something else. they refused to allow us to send a forensic team for, i think, five weeks to do the car, to do the forensic examination of the vehicle that he picked her up in the night she disappeared. and they waited, and we were trying the tell them, look, you're in the caribbean sunshine and heat and humidity, and do dna evidence is perishable. so, you know, we want to send a team down right now, and they hemmed and hawed about that. we learned later that joran's father and a couple of helpers scrubbed that car clean, and so later when they finally said, okay, come down and look at the car and is we did, it came back negative. and they said, see, didn't do anied good anyway. so, you know, we've had kind of a continuing feud, if you will, about how to do the
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investigation, what case to follow. pete: so if there was no justice then, let me read a statement from beth holloway, the mom of natalee holloway, on this extradition. her mom said she'd be 36 years old now. it's been a long and painful journey, but the persistence of many is going to pay off. together, we're finally getting justice for natalie. will he face justice even if just on this charge of extortion? >> yes, he will. this is a whole separate case, so nearly five years after natalie's disappearance, joran, you know, seized concern -- sees, i think, an advertisement being of offered for a reward for any information that helps find her. and he contacts her attorney, and that starts a motion where he offers to tell them where she is for $25,000. and in that situation, the attorney hand carried cash to joran, and beth holloway, natalie's mother, wire transferred money to his bank
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account. so once he had the money in hand, he flees a aruba and goes to peru where later he's convicted of murdering a woman in peru k and he's now serving a 28-year sentence for that. and that sentence has been extended. we don't know how long. was he was selling drug -- because he was selling drugs and doing other activity in the jail. pete: a real piece of work. tom fuentes, thanks for joining us. we appreciate it. >> thank you, pete. pete: you got it. is still ahead, trump is indicted again, but what about all the other cases involving leaders that had glaring similarities but there was far less action? will and i go off the wall, that is coming up. plus, your neighborhood coffee guy could soon be extinction -- extinct. the robot barista that might be serving your next order? we'll find out. ♪ ♪ off the lot. or more.
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pete: welcome back. a new robot named adam is making us us coffee e this morning. >> hi, how may i help you? will: he heard his name. here to show us how it works, timothy, and the coo, phil xhang, fellas, all right, how does this work?
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>> yeah, well, it's as simple as this. hey, adam -- >> hello. how may i help you? >> can you make me a cappuccino? >> of course. i'll work on cap a chino now -- cappuccino now, coming right up. >> just like that. >> i'm making your drink now. pete: and you could give it a complicated order if you wanted to. >> exactly how you like it. rachel: that's how he likes it. pete: extra whip please, adam. does it mess him up if you talk to him while he's making the order? >> no, it's fine. he's a professional. will: you, i assume, had a hand in the programming or or putting this business together. i mean, i don't even know what question to ask you because this feel like a massive undertaking. >> yeah, definitely. i mean, the thing is though, you know, we see right now as everyone knows, one of the biggest problems facing the
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hospitality industry is worker shortage. everywhere. so really when we looked at the biggest problems facing the industry, we wanted to develop kind of a robot that would help businesses with day-to-day operations. just yesterday the american housing and lodging associate came out with a study about 87% of hotels in the united states is down 20 workers on a consistent basis over the last 3 year, and that hasn't improved since the pandemic. so this is really about solving the issues, kind of long-term -- pete: is adam done? rachel: is he done? pete: i think so. he stopped moving. hey, adam, is my coffee ready? >> huh. rachel: so the thing that's going to be lost in all of this, let's be honest, is that you're not going to have the relationship with your barista, if you will. is that something you've thought about? [inaudible conversations] i don't even go to a barista, but there are people who go
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every day to the same coffee shop and they have that, hey, bob, or whatever. is this robot going to be able to do more than take orders and maybe take on other -- [laughter] >> yeah. i meaning i'm not sure -- i mean, i'm not sure there's going to be a long-term relationship -- [laughter] pete: we're out of time. my coffee's ready. more "fox & friends," don't go ♪ away. away. ♪ - if i would've used kayak to book our car, we could have saved on our trip instead of during our trip. ughh - kayak. search one and done. (vo) if you've had thyroid eye disease for years and itchy eyes have you itching for a fight, it's not too late for another treatment option. to learn more visit treatted.com. that's treatt-e-d.com.
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♪ ♪. pete: welcome back we start a new hour with this, former president donald trump hits back at special counsel jack smith as the justice department unsealed a 37 count indictment. federal prosecutors claim trump kept boxes of classified documents including military plans at his home in south florida. rachel: nate foy is live outside

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