tv FOX and Friends FOX News June 20, 2023 4:00am-5:00am PDT
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>> bret baier scoring exclusive interview with donald trump grilling the front runner on everything. >> bret: why did you have this very sensitive document. >> i have every right to have those boxes. >> hello. >> both president biden and governor ron desantis taking their presidential campaigns to california with multiple fund raising events lined up. >> some of our maga republican friends in congress are continuing to try undo all the progress we have already made. >> now joey vaughn. [cheers] >> his first game back. joseph daniel votto. >> did t that beer catch the ba? >> taking a break there set to address the future of artificial intelligence which the white house has said is a top priority for joe biden. >> he will meet with tech entrepreneurs as he ramps up fundraising efforts for his 2024
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re-election bid. >> rich edson live at the white house with the latest for us. >> good morning. president biden begins second day in california in san francisco meeting with those artificial intelligence experts as the white house says to seize the opportunities and manage the risks of a.i. technology. yesterday was all about climate. president biden touring a march land in palo alto, california. announced $600 million in funding to help mitigate the effects of climate change. the president took the opportunity to rip republicans for trying to reverse climate initiatives like this as biden has started campaigning for re-election. >> we're investing in the people and places that have been hit the hardest. but who are also on the front lines of leading us forward. unfortunately, some of our maga republican friends in congress are continuing to try undo all the progress we have already made in the first two and a half years. they were holding the country hostage over the debt limit. unless i would gut the climate provisions of the inflation reduction act.
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i was determined not to let that happen. >> california governor gavin newsom joined the president. newsom has denied that he is planning to challenge biden for the '24 democratic nomination. he has repeatedly complimented the president. newsom has also said he would debate florida governor ron desantis three hours. one day's notice. no notes. the desantis campaign tweeted out a video declaring the debate is already settled. calling california's liberal governance a disaster while saying desantis' conservative policies have florida thriving. newsom asked whether they are debating or not. desantis said newsom should stop messing around and just run for president. desantis is in california. couple day swing there is he raising money as is the president. is he attending a couple of fundraisers did so last night and will do so today. back to you guys. >> brian: all right. rich. thanks so much. so ron desantis the best answer ever. gavin newsom get in the race, then call me. and that's the debate is he going to get in the race is he
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going to try to build off a sean hannity interview last week. he does have a terrible record as governor. that's what everyone keeps forgetting. he has been an awful governor, homelessness, taxes, exit of all the people. the rolling blackouts. the insistence on getting rid of the combustion engine while you still don't have any electricity. it's incredible what's going on. >> will: meanwhile former president donald trump sat down with bret baier last night in first interview since 2018. also first interview since the indictment for the mishandling of classified documents. in what many are saying is the most consequential moment of this interview. the part that was perhaps the newest, the most news worthy, it had less to do with politics and more to do with donald trump's legal proceedings. it is whereas we discussed a little bit earlier in the program, bret baier asked donald trump about an audio recording that is a part of the indictment that we have not seen or herd yet. but an audio recording that purportedly has donald trump saying i didn't declassify this document. i could have but i didn't.
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that's the allegation of that audio recording. now, that would court act previous potential defenses he had made of i declassified everything. so if there is an all of a suddenio tape of him saying i didn't declassify something, it's going to be a problem. brian, you brought this up earlier, there is a risk-reward of doing interviews when you are in the middle of a legal proceeding. most attorneys say don't do that because it can be used in a court of law. >> brian: right. >> will: and you will be boxed. in so last night trump gave bret an answer as to what that audiotape was about. and this answer, you can expect, will be used in a court of law. watch. >> you're quoted on the recording saying the document was secret adding that you could have declassified it while you were president but, quote, now i can't. you know, this is still secret, highly confidential. and the indictment cites the recording and the testimony from people in the room saying you showed it to people there that day. so you say on this tape. >> it's just the opposite. >> bret: that you can't declassify it so why have it is the question. >> what i said why i couldn't
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declassify it now because i wasn't president. there was no document. that was a massive amount of papers and everything else talking about iran and other things. and it may have been held up or may not. that was not a document. i didn't have any document per se. there was nothing to dehe classify. these were newspaper stories, magazine stories and articles. >> brian: he was responding to the mark milley story that mark milley said something about an iran attack plan. he said really? milley came up to me with an attack plan. i never wanted to attack. in fact, this is how wrong that story was. and they made it seem because this guy, this biographer for mark meadows, where is he why the way? where is the chief of staff. a lot of people think he has become a states witness. they are rolling tape on it. so that tape gets released where he evidently tells people yeah, i have this document. i was president i could declassify it but i can't declassify it now. and he is saying that was a newspaper clipping. >> will: that's what he was saying it wasn't a classified document i was referring to. >> brian: no video. >> will: it was newspaper
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clippings. >> ainsley: talked about the documents and boxes found, talked about all the boxes found joe biden at the garage the penn center the boxes at mike pence's house. he said putin never would have invaded ukraine if he were president. he warned putin against invading he said. bret asked about what with is your message for you is burr ban women. because you seem to fall in the polls there. well, we won the election. it was stolen and bret pushed back and said no, you lost. some of the women later said that was an opportunity i will tell the women your bank accounts looked better with me. inflation was down. gas prices were better. we were energy independent when i was elected. he talked about his children. how much he loves them how one by one they worked so hard they were good students and his children have been through enough already. something that was shocking to me when i was watching it. bret asked him he said if there is anything you would change, what would it be? listener. >> the changes you would make if you get elected? >> i would like to be less
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combative, but i find the press is extremely dishonest. and if i'm not combative, i don't get my word across. if i'm not combative, i don't know, i don't think you could win. regardless me or somebody else, if somebody else got the nomination, these radical left maniacs would come after them at a level like you have never seen before. we're in the middle of a political campaign and they want to arrest the opponent who is leading the person that's in theory in charge of government? this stuff shouldn't happen. >> brian: happened two more times. >> will: to me that last part is what we really need to be discussing and that is this. it is less, believe it or not, it is less important whether or not donald trump did mishandle classified documents. it's more important whether or not that's a worthy thing for the justice department to be pursuing. because you put him in a catch-22: you put him in a catch-22 of well i can't discuss
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this because i could be boxed in legally which we discussed earlier and that's bad for me and my court case, but i have to discuss this because i'm running for president. it's a way of stifling, of putting a gag on your political opponent to have them face an indictment for something that no one has had to face indictments for in the past. the government has not taken classified documents like this seriously, based upon precedent in the past. and it is a way now for the doj under joe biden to essentially throw a gag around his political opponents. >> ainsley: does anyone -- i mean, they shouldn't have classified documents, it wasn't being -- it's not like he is selling it to russia or giving it to russia. all these presidents have had them. joe biden had them. donald trump had them. mike pence had them. who knows if other presidents have had them, too. here's the thing. he said -- he made a good point in that interview with bret last night. when joe biden was caught he called his attorneys. his attorneys went through the boxes at the penn center and then his attorneys called and said we need to turn these in. they don't have blood on their
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hands. then he said how do we know what the attorneys didn't remove things and he makes a good point. they both had them. should you go jail for this? that's never happened. it's unprecedented. it's the president of the united states. does anyone really want him, unless you hate donald trump, do you want him to be locked up for this and why is it fair to go after one and not the other? >> brian: that is true. fox news alert now. the clock is ticking rescue five people on board a submersible like this one that went missing during a dive to view the titanic wreckage site. >> ainsley: the vessel has less than 70 hours they say on thursday before it runs out of air. >> will: todd piro joins us with more. >> todd: massive search and rescue operation underway to find that touring submersible. transporting a crew of five people. some 12 12,000 feet underwater costing passengers about $250,000 per person. the crew launched around 4:00 a.m. on sunday. lost communication roughly two
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hours later. officials now fear it sank too far down f a manned rescue. hammish harding. son said by dad is on the submarine my thoughts and prayers. teenage son also on board. coast guard officials say they're exhausting every search effort possible. >> this particular submersible is advertised to have 96 hours of survival time. and so that gives us some time to continue searching and continue to using all means to try to locate the crew members. >> todd: ocean gate releasing its own statement, reading, quote we are exploring and mobilizing all options to bring the crew back safely. we spoke with titanic historian who made the same wreckage to the titanic twice. this is the only submersible to go to that depth. i'm not too certain what can be
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done. it takes about two hours to reach the wreck. so what happened happened happened on the way down or as soon as they got there i'm just, you know, i'm kind of baffled by something how something could have happened so quickly. >> todd: as of now, expert say the vessel has less than 70 hours before it runs out of air, meaning it could run out of air by thursday morning. back to you. >> will: thank you, todd. >> brian: maybe good news during our show. >> ainsley: we are all saying prayers for those individuals. thank you so much, todd. >> brian: you saw carley shimkus typing away back there you don't want to bother her getting the news ready. do you want to start? >> carley: i do. we are going to begin with american crime crisis. pregnant woman killed in d.c. after two gunmen opened fire on her parked car. her mother joined me on "fox & friends first" to speak out for her daughter. >> there is a lot that's going on in d.c. and mya, she just -- she always said mom, i just want to move
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because of the violence, because of everything that we see on social media about people being just gunned down in the city. >> carley: her daughter samaya was 8 months pregnant. the baby was successfully delivered by c section. a go fund me has raised over $14,000. turning to the crisis at our southern border, human smuggler taking texas dps troopers on a hay speed chase in stolen tractor-trailer over the weekend after driving over stop signs and hitting poles the tractor-trailer finally stopped and driver fled on foot. troopers found 18 illegal immigrants in the back of the truck. the suspect is still at large. and in baseball, rather, blue jays outfielder kevin made an incredible diving cash despite his team's 11-0 loss to the miami marlins. and the red's star joey votto returned to game action with a
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home run if and a game winning two you run signal in cincinnati. votto back in the lineup after missing nearly a full calendar year due to injury. also in cincinnati one fan got a foul ball surprise in his beer. watch this. >> watch the foul ball ruin somebody's beverage. >> did that beer catch the ball of a fly? splat seats. >> carley: the reds beat the rockies 5-4. every now and then the ball goes in the food, guys. kind a sneak thing that happens. waste of food. >> ainsley: and feel sticky afterwards. but the video lasts forever. >> brian: and a beer costs $22 and then you got a ball with it. >> ainsley: maybe more. >> brian: bill hemmer happy. every time you say something good about cincinnati bill hemmer smiles. >> ainsley: true. >> will: speaking about food, in new york city a landlord who is vegan refuses to rent apartments to tenants who will cook meat or fish in that apartment. >> brian: is that allowed. >> ainsley: actually, no, it is.
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we checked it out. the big apple's human rights law, landlords are not consider to 14 specific character race sticks including age, race, sexual orientation but tenant's dietary reference is not on the list. if you own the house can you tell the the people who live below you or above you that they can't cook meat or fish because this guy didn't want to smell it. >> brian: right. so every night is an impossible burger. what are you supposed to do? and if you don't like it, don't move in. >> ainsley: apartments between. >> brian: between 4500 and $7,500. >> ainsley: that's pretty. that must be the $5,750 one. >> brian: no flank steak no, lamb chops. no liver. >> ainsley: that's how much a one bedroom narmt is fort green, brooklyn. still outside of the city. it's one bedroom apartment for 5750, and you can't cook meat. the other one, the smaller kitchen one, the white kitchen
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$4,500. guess what in the guy took it off the listing. it no longer says it and he won't return our calls. >> brian: really? >> ainsley: i think he should own. this it's hilarious. >> brian: could you do this? you are a big steak guy. >> will: come home my wife cooked fish i sometimes i wish there was a rule like this. >> ainsley: and broccoli. >> brian: from my head up. >> ainsley: when you smell a steak. >> will: usually on the grill. sometimes in the skillet. the broker told the "new york times" this is not a vegetarian only apartment but the owner lives in the building and he doesn't want the smell of cooking meat upstairs. >> can you order in. you can still order meat. >> ainsley: it's brooklyn, a lot of people vegan in brooklyn he will be able to find tenants. >> brian: everyone is on top of each other everyone know what is everybody is eating. >> ainsley: a bike mechanic that's a new one. can you legally do that? outlaw smells? if you can i would outlaw whatever the hell my neighbor is cooking constantly because it stinks. another guy corey a
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superintendent of a building nearby said you can't tell people what to eat and what not to eat. >> will: what if you like, said, don't cook that and it's like ethnic food and then you are like oh, now. >> ainsley: that's a whole problem. >> brian: meatballs. >> will: what if i'm cooking meat this vegan landlord this is my ethnic dishes now you are discriminating based on my ethnicity. >> brian: what ethnicity? >> will: irish. what is mine? >> brian: cooking steak violation of ethnic background. >> ainsley: allowed to cook venice sin. >> will: most have meat in their dishes. it could be anything. >> ainsley: then you become litigious. >> will: i think this landlord launched the first bomb is it wrong on me to bomb back? >> ainsley: here is my argument. i want to live on that building every time you knock on my door when you smell it. you can order food and wring it in he
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says. which i don't understand because you can still smell that. >> brian: a lot of people use steak for black eyes to reduce swelling. >> will: that's not cooked. >> brian: that allowed? >> ainsley: or meat tenderloins or jelly fish. >> brian: coming up straight ahead. shameless aquatic squatters teacher living rent free in a house rent. the month long battle to get them out. >> ainsley: first, a boston university professor forced to resign over a tweet he didn't even write. it got nearly half a million dollars payout. we will explain the cancel culture backfire. sound the noise for brian. ♪
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goes is an account for jama. promoted a podcast discussing the existence of structural racism in medicine and he is the editor and chief, this dr. bottomner was in the enforced out from the journal of medical association because of, i guess, the inability to question the existence of structural racism in medicine? >> hi, will, it's great to see you. i mean, this is one of the craziest examples of cancel culture that i have seen in a
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while in this official was editor and chief of jamma. he was forced out. the deputy editor from my understanding was also replaced over this tweet and over a podcast episode discussing as you said this concept of structural racism. try as i might with my life to find this episode. i couldn't even listen to it because it had been retracted and withdrawn. it's crazy to me, also, that this conversation about structural racism from my understanding the episode wasn't even saying that they didn't care about racism. it was very much about maybe we should be able to talk about this without calling everybody racist because that is a very loaded term and in many cases these group differences we see among different races is due to economic disparity as opposed to outright racism. i think we should be able to talk about this. also the discussion of structural racism, it's interesting that woke people care so much about this when we have actually blatant outright discrimination against white and asian people through affirmative action. this will be overturned by the supreme court in a couple of weeks. i do think universities, medical
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schools. they are still going to put more weight on things like racial characteristics or characteristics like sex, sexual orientation, gender identity which have no bearing on someone's ability or the merit of their work. but, unfortunately, that's what social justice have decided to do. >> what is so concerning about this to me is actually beyond the subject matter of racism. it's the idea that the science community, in particular the medical community is so captured by the not just group think but lock down, inability to question, consensus think. it's apparentline 00 issue of structural racism. we know is on the issue of covid-19 vaccines. it now seems to be absolutely you're incapable of questioning whether or not boys can be girls. there a consensus within the medical community that gender is a social construct. and medicine is to important to question. it just -- it is extremely concerning to me that this profession, it used to be just psychologists and we could accept that that had ideological capture. now it's every element of
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medicine has been captured ideologically. >> every element i would say of scientific inquiry all the way up from designing your study to getting funding for it. for getting it reviewed and once it is -- even if it is published being retracted for ideological and political reasons as opposed to the content of your work. especially i would say with this conversation about racism. i mean that, podcast episode was published in 2021. i doubt anyone would have the guts, i mean, within the field or within scientists to even question this publicly nowadays because they see what happens. it's very effective this harassment campaign. that petition to have the editor and chief removed or, quote, reviewed had 10,000 signatures. that's a lot of people that sends a signal to other people if you don't sign a petition or don't go along with it we are coming for you next. >> will: medicine, the industry where you are not allowed to question that seems healthy. dr. soh, it's always great to
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>> carley: we are back with some headlines. starting with this. it is being called the new great depression. according to a new poll from the university of michigan. nearly half of teenagers say they don't enjoy their lives. nearly 50% of teens surveyed say they can't do anything right and 44% say their lives are not useful. those figures have doubled since just 2012. one psychologist blames social media for the spike saying, quote: it's by far the largest change in teens lives nothing else comes close. ozempic users serious side effects from the medication that some are using to lose weight. some users report that the injection, which is typically used to treat type 2 diabetes has led to pancreatitis, blurred vision even cancer. ozempic lists all three as potential risks. >> brian: thanks so much, carley.
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special prosecutor jack smith has a history of taking on big cases and losing big time. what is trump up against when he faces jack smith. maybe we can find out by looking back. remember john edwards once high fro file had a kid out of wedlock. he wanted to use campaign contributions in order to pay for that kid. they go ahead and decide to take him to trial because he was using campaign contributions to hide an affair. well, when jack smith decides to try him. it turns out he was acquitted on one count. dead locked on the other. he said let me do it again. the doj says no. we're not going to do this again. jack smith loses. what about the high profile 2015 case with governor bob mcdonald's of virginia? now he and his wife were accused of using that position to help out donors that supported them in their run for the virginia governor's spot. so he was tried on 11 different construction counts and he was convicted on that. it cost him $23 million, that conviction would be overturned
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because the justice department dropped the case and eventually went up to the supreme court and 9-0 they went against jack smith. do you want to note reason why basically by jack smith standard, no politician could ever do anything for anyone and not be charged arbitrarily. here is bob mcdonnell talking over the weekend about the hell jack smith put him through. >> i just think he is willing to stretch the law and here's the problem, michael, you know, as a lawyer, the ethical rules are you are supposed to as a governor attorney, a federal prosecutor supposed to seek truth and justice not merely to convict. it's an think duty. i think maybe that's been the downfall in some of these cases he would rather win. >> brian: senator menendez similar situation he got off on a case that many people thought it would be a layup that senator menendez involved with. some dicey situation. so why would merrick garland grab jack smith from the hague and say go try the former president and break precedent?
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now let's get the reaction from george washington university law professor, fox news contributor jonathan turley. jonathan, i watched you talk about the case against trump but not much about jack smith. how much does his background play into the charges and the course of this case? many people think very highly of smith. he does have a reputation as you noted, of stretching statutory provisions to the breaking point. in fact they did break in front of the supreme court. they broke in front of jurors who did not abide in the edwards case. the type of theory that he was advancing. now, having said that, he is not necessarily stretching the law here in terms of arguing obstruction. he is bringing cases and claims that the department of justice regularly prosecutes. but, he does have a reputation for being extremely aggressive. he sort of reminiscent of wiseman who was put as second in command in the mueller case.
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weissman had a very controversial record of stretching a federal laws and being reversed. >> brian: would would merrick garland, knowing the weight on this case, and this is a possible opponent to the current president, why we put someone this aggressive on a case when the objective should read justice, not conviction? >> well, you know, merrick garland has been pretty much absent without leave during this whole process. i'm not too sure why he selected smith. smith is known as being particularly aggressive as a prosecutor as have you noted. but, garland is really -- i wrote a piece recently about this sort of failure of merrick garland as attorney general when he took office he said that one of his priorities was to reestablish the trust of the fbi and doj. >> brian: nice try. >> that trust level, according to polls, is actually lower now than what it was under his predecessor, bill barr.
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>> brian: jack smith on the january 6th case, so the president was asked, by the way, why not put jack smith on joe biden's case? that zoo been an interesting little selection but he didn't. he docile robert hur. meanwhile president trump last night talked about his case and why he didn't just hand over the documents and just got out of this mess before it start wanted. listen. >> these boxes were interspersed with all sorts of things. golf shirts, clothing, pants, shoes, there were many things. i would say. >> bret: iran war plan? >> not that i know of. not that i know of. but everything was declassified. and biden didn't have the right to do that because he wasn't president. nor did mike pence, by the way, have the right to do that because he wasn't president. >> brian: golf shirts he didn't have a chance to go through them. he also had a chance -- didn't know if anybody else put something in there make him look bad. >> that's one of the best
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interviews that i ever seen of a president or former president. bret baier did an amazing job. the level of detail really was quite shocking on a legal standpoint. i don't know if they had decided on their legal defense but they have now. i mean, the position of the former president is that no such document existed at mar-a-lago in terms of that videotape. he is arguing waving at documents that were like news articles and coverage of the iran attack plan. we'll see how the doj responds to that he did not really offer a defense to mishandling. he just simply argued that he has a right and that they criminalized the process. but the level of detail that bret was able to get into this in this interview was breathtaking. these are all likely admissible statements that can be used at trial. >> brian: jonathan, had o. if they ask someone in that room what did donald trump show you
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on that audiotape it seems like he is saying i have this document and it's top secret only way i could declassify it if i was president he said i'm not president now. he says it was newspaper articles. will they go up to the people there and say what did he show you? >> i think so. they can call these witnesses. bret pushed him on this. those your words. you don't come off as saying here's a bunch of news collision. it sounds like you are holding the document. trump can say that's bravado. it's the government's burden to show this document existed. but this was an absolutely riveting interview. from a legal standpoint, i just don't have any precedent to point to of someone coming out in this detail with a pending indictment. >> brian: right. every time we talk about president trump you always say there is a precedent made. he actually does the interviews anywhere, any time and answers all your questions. it's bizarre and it's enticing.
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jonathan turley, thanks so much. >> thanks, brian. >> brian: appreciate it. still ahead, the desperate search with the titanic tourist sub. we ask a naval diver with 18 years of experience on submarines his take on this dire situation. ♪ ahhhh... with flonase, allergies don't have to be scary. spray flonase sensimist daily for non-drowsy, long lasting relief in a scent-free, gentle mist. (psst psst) flonase. all good.
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>> will: search continues for the missing ocean submiles an >> ainsley: takes vessel down to the titanic wreckage. five passengers on board. >> brian: next guest spent navy 18 submarine. naval warfare for the heritage foundation brent sadler joins us now. brent, if i put you in charge right now of finding out what happened, what's the first thing you would do? what would you need? >> well, it's a great question.
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i think what is happening right now is the coast guard from canada and the united states are trying to search to make sure that this thing isn't floating on the surface which anything that goes under the water is going to have what is called emergency buoyancy control to get back to the surface, but if they have lost power they don't have comms. that's one thing. the weather is not great so it's hard to find. the other -- this is where the capability of the coast guard is going to be able to search undersea. because the other possibility is it lost power and depth control and went to the bottom. now, it's possible that the crew survived. the vehicle does have the ability to go pretty deep, 1,00. the ocean in that area is about that deep. that's like finding a needle in a haystack and they don't necessarily the coast guard don't necessarily have the capability to find it. >> will: brent, what's your level as brian posited, you were in charge of the rescue attempt. how much hope would you have at
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this point? what's your level of optimism? >> so, i think you have to keep the optimism and you have to spo focus in on the mission. the potential for the folks on board to survive is that at least until thursday midday just based on nominal oxygen on this vessel. now, if the folks on board, you know, they took active measures to slow down their activity level and try to conservative their breathing, they might be able to extend that out a little bit. but, you know, you have to be maximum focused on the mission and have high optimism that you are going to succeed in finding these folks up until the moment it becomes impossible for any human being or this system to survive at sea at those depths. so we're still a little way from that. >> ainsley: bret, u.s. congressman brandon williams a former navy officer, he tweeted this out he said that the u.s. navy should deploy a nuclear submarine. don't wait, exclamation point. get the best sonar operators in the world while there is still
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hope. can you go down there -- couldn't the people inside bang on the side? you could hear it with a sonar as an indication? can we send a nuclear submarine down there? >> not to the depths that we're talking about here. you might be able to hear folks banging on the side of the submersible and remember at 2,000, the russian submarine sank and survivors lived for hours after that explosion and sinking and only 300 feet of water. but we're talking thousands of feet of water and you need to have very precise sonar which that's a specialization that our nuclear submarines don't necessarily have for their mission. >> brian: all right, brent. appreciate it. brent sadler thanks so much. hopefully we will have good news and bring you back to analyze it. >> ainsley: could you imagine being the family members and knowing they could still be alive inside just down there waiting on them to recognize them. >> brian: until thursday. >> ainsley: say prayers, everyone. it would be quite a story if we could bring them. now to a fox weather alert.
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tropical storm bret forming in the atlantic as it heads northwest barreling toward the caribbean with 40 mile-per-hour winds the powerful system is expected to become a hurricane tomorrow. >> brian: right meantime in the south 29 million americans under excessive heat warnings advisory texas to louisiana and mississippi. >> will: heat wave fueling severe storms left at least six people dead across the state. let's check in with meteorologist janice dean with the fox weather forecast. >> janice: lots to talk about. talk about bret first of all. it's a tropical storm. a weak one. it's going to get stronger in the next couple of days and then behind that we have invest 93 l which will probably become cindy. already active very early on and here is our tropical storm models. it looks like the consensus is it will move through the lesser an tis lease and south of puerto rico and espanola and watch that in the coming days. not sure if it's going to impact the u.s. yet. but stay tuned. and when we talk about weather-related deaths, heat is
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number one. so i want to focus on our friends in texas and louisiana where this is day 8 or # excessive heat warnings for our friends in texas that will linger over the next few days with the humidity it will feel oppressive so people are urged to stay inside. keep you up to date certainly. then the threat for severe storms along the coast which we will be tracking with fox weather.com. all right, back inside. >> ainsley: what is your family saying about the weather because they are in texas? >> will: hot. >> ainsley: kids are playing soccer? >> will: several soccer tournaments going on. they take water breaks and that type of thing but it's really hot. >> ainsley: almost 100 degrees? >> brian: they can handle it. >> ainsley: used to it? >> brian: texas can handle it you have big poors? >> what is he talking about? >> will: i think that was a sweating reference. >> ainsley: i think it's a beer
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reference. >> will: insult i'm not sure. >> ainsley: big thunderstorm musts full of water. we heard about squatter takes over fourth grade teacher and her family broke into a house and lived rent-free for months. faked a lease and the realtor says this could happen to anyone. >> brian: it can. ♪ that's where i come from ♪ which was making my days feel like an uphill battle. and i don't like going uphill. that is, until i discovered something different, quviviq - a once-nightly fda -approved medication for adults with insomnia. not getting enough sleep was leaving me tired... oh come on! wait, wait! and slowing me down during my days. on your left! making even the things i love difficult.
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gran brian all right back with a couple of headlines now. the landmark tropicana hotel in las vegas facing demolition as the city makes way for a new oakland athletics baseball stadium won't be oakland anymore. nevada approved the bill to finance the park to attract the vegas. providing the back drop for james bond film diamonds are forever and hosted the debut of siegfried and roy and all their animals. bars in our nation's capital could be allowed to stay open 24/7 for the women's world cup the d.c. city council approving a make it happen. it's a similar measure. passed by d.c. officials during the men's world cup last year. mayor muriel becauser will make
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the final call on the bill. catch all the world cup action which the tournament kick kicks off on july 20th on fox. ainsley, talk about something totally different. >> we are talking about squatters here, brian. listen up. thank you, brian. squatters are illegally entering houses and staying there while they are facing little consequences in texas a home was invaded by a squatter who was a fourth grade teacher and her family resulting in months long eviction battle. they were finally ordered to leave the home last week and joining us now is the authorized seller of that property, the real estate agent shaniqua garrett. good morning. >> good morning. how are you? >> good morning, doing well. tell us the story. i know you told our producers this is the third set of squatters? >> yes, so we have had several squatters in this home. these squatters have been in the property the longest we had gotten a call from the neighbor that there was a moving truck in front of the home and this was already after we had the
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property rekeyed. i called the cops. i got over to the property but by the time i got there the moving truck was already driving away they were moved into the home. by the time they got there they waived a fake lease the lease allowed them to stay in the home to live for free it is such blessing. you can't do that. it is illegal. you went to the judge and the judge said there is a civil matter, not a criminal matter. how did you get them out? >> so we have to file paperwork, pay a lot of fees. i have to find this lady's name. the house was never for sale. i mean, for lease. it was for sale. and so, this lease really had nothing to do with us as the sellers of the home. is, you know, i have to put on my investigative harassment.
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>> ainsley: it's crazy. shenique i can't, i want to ask about this teacher and the mother of this family who did this. what's her story? how did she explain that. >> we didn't talk very much. she has a husband two young children. obviously a school teacher. nighttime really sure what possessed her to do this. but. >> ainsley: is she going to keep her job in the average school teacher salary in the state of texas is $55,000. she could find something where her family could live, you know, safely under a roof. is she going to face consequences at work? how can you teach school and teacher fourth graders and teach them that this is something that you should be doing? >> yeah. i'm not really sure what's going to happen moving forward. i guess we will just see that play out. but there was a dual income household. but there could have been prior evictions on her record to
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prevent her from getting safe housing. >> ainsley: shanequa if people are interested in the house where can they find it? we need to sell the house so squatters don't come back. >> in 12083 alberty drive in houston, texas. >> ainsley: okay. thank you so much for coming on with us. sorry for dealing with this. i know that homeowner is happy to have you in their lives. big show still ahead with com michael waltz and leo terrell. ♪ get up and make it happen ♪ get on your feet ♪ stand up and take some action ♪how who are you? i'm your fairy hotel mother. what is happening? let me help you pick a hotel you feel good about. choice hotels is a family of brands, with a hotel for every type of stay. like a comfort with the kiddos. ooh, spacious! or, a cambria hotel downtown for just the two of you. hold my wand. don't wave it at anything.
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wait... what's that in your hand? no, no, stop! oh you're no fun. [lock clicks shut] >> our focus is getting as much capability into the area. >> the clock is ticking to rescue five people aboard a submersible that went missing during a dive to view the titanic wreckage. >> worst scenario they will run out of oxygen before they can be rescued. >> hurricane season is right around the corner. list will start with bret. >> dialing towards the caribbean with 40-mile-per-hour winds. >> powerful system is expected to become a hurricane tomorrow. >> i would like to be less combative. >> bret baier scoring an hehe c exclusive interview with donald trump grilling the frontrunner on everything. >> why did you have those documents? >> i have every right to have those boxes. >> all eyes will be on durham as he testifies erned oath in front of the house judiciary committee about his 300-page report. >> conclusively at
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