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tv   Americas Newsroom  FOX News  July 5, 2023 7:00am-8:00am PDT

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leadership development or teaching attributes to young children in public education? it doesn't exist. >> dana: captain intensity could do it. >> bill: don't call him mr. >> dana: i know, it is captain. thank you. good to have you. >> bill: happy fourth of july. >> dana: fox news alert the fourth of july holiday weekend plagued by deadly violence. 13 people killed following mass shootings in major cities over the past three days. tough news for a lot of families out there. welcome to a new hour of "america's newsroom," i'm dana perino. >> bill: good morning. i'm bill hemmer. good morning at home. overnight three were killed, six wounded in louisiana when someone opened fire at a holiday gathering. the nation's capital in washington experiencing violence, nine people injured and including two minors from a drive by shooting. baltimore an 18-year-old and 20-year-old were both shot and killed at a block party. the shooting on sunday at the
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block party also injured 28 others. >> dana: ft. worth, texas three lives lost and eight hurt when shots were fired into a crowd during a celebration early this morning. the recent mass shootings come as a suspect in the killing of five people in philadelphia made an initial court appearance. people in these communities say they're tired of the violence. >> i'm just saying, man, this is stuff i see on tv, not real life. that's why i'm so shocked. >> i'm livid what has happened here. people running for their lives. >> it is stressful for all of us. it is stressful for the entire city of ft. worth and the nation. it's going on all over and we're all tired of it. >> dana: aishah hosni is live in new york city with more. hi, aishah. >> good morning to you both. things are moving very fast in philadelphia where that suspect as you mentioned was just arraigned moments ago and has
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also now been named. we are talking about 40-year-old kim brady facing 30 charges for this mass shooting. no bail for the five first degree murder charges. for the injured the bail is totaling at 7.5 million. the d.a. there says this was premeditated and it was deliberate. we're also seeing brand-new surveillance video. take a look at this. it shows the gunman walking up the street in southwest philly. you can see the gunman stops on the sidewalk, points a gun and starts shooting. police say he was wearing a ski mask, bullet proof vest and carrying a police scanner. also an a.r. style riffle and ghost gun. untraceable firearm likely obtained illegally. look. these are the five people that were tragically killed. the youngest just 15 years old, dana. the injuries also are
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devastating. 2-year-old twin boys, 2-year-old boys were wounded while sitting in the back seat of their mom's car. one boy shot four times in the legs. the other hit with glass shards in his eyes. one of the witnesses told reporters that the gunman was still shooting, dana, as we were scooping up humans and here is the brother of one of the victims who said he just walked out the door to go to the store. >> just walked out of the house. right there he was shot twice. >> absolutely senseless. as you mentioned, we saw shootings at block parties and festivals over the weekend. in the nation's capital somebody drove through a neighborhood where people were celebrating and shot up nine people overnight. two of them were kids. no suspects yet, dana.
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>> dana: aishah hosni. a tough story to have to report on. sad for those families and we're sorry for their losses. >> bill: four minutes past. house republicans seeking several pieces of information from the u.s. attorney david weiss. this in regard to the hunter biden investigation after bombshell testimony from an i.r.s. whistleblower. weiss is the prosecutor who gave hunter a plea deal on minor tax crimes and seems unwilling to comply and they may have to subpoena him to get his testimony. david spunt, the department of justice updates us today. hello, good morning. >> good morning to you both. mystery over who is actually calling the shots in the hunter biden investigation is taking a new turn. the trump-appointed u.s. attorney david weiss is doubling down once again insisting he has been in charge of this probe, remains in charge of this probe despite what a whistleblower told congress and told bret baier on our air. david weiss is a trump-appointed
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u.s. attorney based in wilmington, delaware kept on during the biden administration to avoid the appearance of a conflict of interest. house republicans want info from him tomorrow, the deadline is tomorrow. weiss wrote a letter late last week warning he won't make the deadline. it began with a different june 7th letter weiss wrote to house chairman jim jordan. i've been granted ultimate authority over this matter including responsibility for deciding where, when and whether to file charges. weeks later jordan wrote to weiss asking him who told him to sign that letter. he doesn't believe weiss called the shots. he thought it was top leadership at the department of justice in washington. jordan believes in based off the testimony of whistleblower garry shapley. he investigated the hunter tax probe and he insists he saw weiss in a meeting complain he wasn't in charge of this investigation and not able to charge in other districts.
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in his most recent letter late last week weiss said the opposite. he said i'm not at liberty to provide the materials you seek and i would be granted 515 authority in the district of columbia, the central district of california or any other district where charges could be brought in this matter. i'm told it is likely david weiss will have to answer questions on capitol hill perhaps under oath if he is subpoenaed there are discussions underway. hunter biden appears in court at the end of this month on the 26th for that plea deal. >> bill: watching that. david spunt, doj. >> dana: kim strassel from the "wall street journal" editorial board. she has an upcoming book called the biden malaise. abby lowell is a very accomplished lawyer, a prominent lawyer in washington. he took on hunter biden's case. one of the things they tried to do over the weekend is go after the whistleblowers for saying this. call for one. the two agents who appeared on
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may 26 and june 1st were not sworn in or told as any government interviewer does that providing false testimony could lead to criminal charges and talk about the redacted transcripts showing them that they were informed about providing false testimony. we have that here, too. it seems like bill was saying in the break, both things can't be true. so somebody here is lying. how do you see it? >> well, it's right there in the transcripts, dana, if you look at what the house judiciary committee put out. both of these whistleblowers are reminded. that normally happens when you do interviews. when you go and testify in front of congress you have to put up your hand and swear an oath. when you do an interview it is a federal offense to lie to a federal official. both of these whistleblowers were given that warning. i don't know what lowell is talking about. i think this is the classic thing that you do. when you have a client and there
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is a lot of ugly things floating out about them whether the laptop or information from the whistleblowers you try to besmirch the people who brought that information forward. that's what lowell is doing to the two whistleblowers with this and other allegations. >> bill: these two men are inseparable now, father and son. they're together all the time, right. camp david, white house, you always see them together. i did not have the sense that was the case at least through the first year of the administration. maybe something has changed. maybe it hasn't. we'll see on that. another story, john ratcliffe on last hour talking about the ruling from a judge on the fourth of july suggesting that big tech was cooperating with whatever request the administration had to take something down on twitter or facebook, etc. call for number four the missouri a.g. helped bring the case. the court has granted our motion to block top officials in the federal government from violating the first amendment rights of millions of americans.
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what a way to celebrate independence day. the judge made his ruling. we'll see whether or not there is an appeal or if it sticks over time. what's clear big tech was listening to the requests that came out of washington, d.c. how do you see it? >> that's what the judge put his finger on is why were these companies cooperating? it is because government holds all the power. that's what is so concerning and why this ruling is really great to see because we've had the government both directly threatening these companies whether it's jen psaki or the president himself when the president said these people are killing people because of their pandemic misinformation. directly saying do what we tell you, censor what he tell you. we have had them indirectly threatening in that if you are facebook and the federal trade commission holds your antitrust cases in your hands are you going to take actions contrary
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to what the government is asking you to do? it is the old mob thing. a nice place you got there, sorry if anything happened to it, right? and so the judge pointed this out. the ability for the federal government to coerce speech and that's something we've needed to get teed up in the court system. i'm thrilled to see it happen. >> dana: free speech advocates were very happy and much more throughout the day indeed. thank you, nice to have you on. >> bill: we'll have the louisiana a.g. on this afternoon. working for john and sandra: did you know that? >> dana: jumping back in. >> bill: i'm supposed to give you my schedule. >> dana: i need to know where you are at all times. it would be very helpful. >> bill: 10-4 on that. ten minutes past a deadly heroin and fentanyl creels is is taking a toll on people in philly. our next guest west to the area and what it reveals is the sad
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truth about our government. talk to her coming up. >> dana: a rollercoaster ride ends with everyone on board needs to be rescued. what led to the ride getting stuck for hours up side down. now thank you. >> bill: millions of americans heading home after the big holiday. will they run into disruptions when they reach the airports? we wonder. >> we've been to four different airports in two days due to canceled flights. we've been wearing the same clothes for 2 to 3 days. had to buy new dee odd rant, stuff like that to be able to smell fresh. your spouse has earned the right to apply for a va home loan. a va home loan is unique. it's different than other loans because it allows you to borrow up to 100% of the home's value. that extra borrowing power may allow you to pay down debt, lower your monthly payments, put cash in the bank, and give you the peace of mind that every veteran deserves.
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>> dana: some rollercoaster riders got stuck up side down for three hours.
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can you imagine that? the incident happened sunday on the last day of the forest county festival in crandon, wisconsin. it forced the coaster to stop because of a mechanical failure. everyone was rescued and evaluated. one person taken to the hospital but expected to be okay. being up side down for that long would be very difficult. >> bill: how do you get out of there? >> dana: i don't know, scary. i'm glad everyone is okay. >> bill: do you like rollercoaster? >> dana: i used to. something happened to my inner ear. i get all crazy. >> bill: i love them. i love that first hill and you just dive into it. >> dana: will you go this weekend? >> bill: probably not. i will go for you if you want. >> dana: going to the airport right now is a rollercoaster. check it out. >> flights were canceled. we sat on the plane for an hour waiting for something to happen. eventually they said it's
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canceled. >> bill: you have our sympathy. pete buttigieg saying air travel is back to normal but is facing another test as millions head home after the holiday. average of 2.7 million have gone through security since last thursday. hough is it going today? >> >> flights are better with delays and cancellations but the trickle-down effect. people are struggling that had flights canceled yesterday or over the weekend. talked to one passenger who has been trying to get home since yesterday. he has had his flight canceled and multiple rebookings. this is going to be his last time flying with united. take a listen. >> i went to the customer service in area c, waited for two hours to speak to someone.
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they say we're experiencing a lot of cancellations today. not flying to columbus. the best we can do for you after sometime was to get you to your destination which was ohio tomorrow. but i have to fly through chicago now in order to get there. another full day of flying. >> even with all of this mess, americans taking to the sky in record numbers. as you said 2.7 million on average screened by tsa. we actually had our biggest record ever set on friday, 2.88 million people screened by tsa that day. and that's after tens of thousands of flights were canceled in the days leading up to that. some of the folks are struggling to get home today like you heard from the gentleman. between monday and tuesday we are talking 10,000 flights delayed. all this coming after the turbulent week of travel. fox confirmed that united airlines is going to reduce the number of flights leaving out of
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newark. they in particular struggled last week. they're confirming they'll have to reduce those especially when thunderstorms come into play. to make up for the issues last week, they have already distributed 30,000 frequent flier miles to travelers hit by the delays. secretary of transportation says travel is back to normal. even with those thunderstorms gone, there are still problems that persist, specifically the faa staffing shortage. a recent transportation department report warns problems could linger for years because of a government-caused shortage of air traffic controllers. the agency plans to hire new controllers this year and 1800 next year. that strain is felt across the industry. doesn't matter which airline you fly on. and newark looking better the case but buffalo is dealing with a power outage. they have been struggling to get things online. security lines out the door there. back here at newark things much
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smoother today compared to last week. but 50,000 flights taking off around the u.s. today. keeping an eye on that and hope people get home safely. send it back to you guys. >> bill: nice to see you. thank you. >> dana: talk about this. the nation's full blown drug crisis unfolding in the streets of philadelphia. it's especially bad in the neighborhood of kensington. our next guest wrote an op-ed claiming it's part of a bigger picture saying the tragedy of philadelphia revealed a sad truth about our government. david markus is a columnist and thank you for going. we have had a few people, lawrence jones has gone down there, alexis mcadams and vivek ramaswamy one of the presidential primary candidates went there as well and said it was devastating. what did you see? >> it is devastating and honestly the moment that we
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arrived in kensington the first thing we saw is a man laying on the ground in an unnatural position open sores in his face and neck. do we call 911? we did. in 10 or 12 minutes it took the ambulance to get there a small crowd gather and one woman ran off to see knar con. when the emt got out of the ambulance and looked at the people of the neighborhood did you call this in? they said no. i said i called it in. i couldn't tell if the guy was breathing. what was i supposed to do? the emt sighed and said this is everyone here. what do you want me to do about it? that's the problem that our government doesn't have an answer for right now. so we do nothing about it. and that's not sustainable. >> dana: you wrote the democrat party and allies in the unions would wet their beaks but order
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was maintained and -- what does that mean? >> what it means is that the big democratic party machines in our cities like san francisco and philadelphia and new york, that was the deal, right? there was corruption but also order. things like this were taken care of. their attitude now is it's cruel to either arrest these people or put them in an institution involuntarily. what's going on right now is cruel and kensington is as much an open air asylum as it is an open air drug market. it doesn't need any bars or doors because this is where these people want to be. it is no kindness to let them wither there and die. >> dana: philly overdoses in 2022, 1400 people died, opioids or fentanyl pretty much split 50% there. and i wonder, are more people
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coming to kensington? do they realize if they have a problem with drugs they think that might be a place where i could go? maybe people there would understand what they need in terms of what they think they need? >> yes and i'll say something and i don't mean this in a snarky way at all. kensington's addict community is very diverse. the horrible addiction does not discriminate and neither do its victims. the lesson that every american needs to learn from that is that nobody is safe from this. everyone watching this probably has wanted to degrees of separation away from someone if they aren't living this way yet are in risk of that. it becomes really clear in a place like kensington. it is horrible. one of my editors -- he sent me the son died on the streets. it broke my heart to get that tweet. >> dana: it is good to have you
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here. i'll be looking for your work on foxnews.com and appreciate you going out there and bringing the story back to us. thank you. >> bill: so this is a mass funeral on the west bank town after the withdrawal of israeli forces. it has been hot there but it is calm today. see whether or not it stays that way. america's disastrous exit out of kabul is the subject of a new report from the state department. they held that report for a year. who they now say made poor decisions. >> it did not have to be inevitable the taliban would take over. we didn't need to lose those 13 american brave men and women. you deserved so much more than that report to be leaked on a late friday afternoon holiday weekend. they'd love to buy gold. but because it's gold - they think it must be complicated.
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>> >> bill: crews responding to a 911 call after a white powder was found at the white house on sunday night. sparking a brief evacuation, preliminary testing shows the powder is cocaine. secret service found it during a routine inspection in the west wing. it is now investigating how it got there. stay tuned for more on that when it comes. >> dana: israel withdrawing its troops from jenin after launching an operation there. 13 palestinians and one israeli soldier were killed. as that winds down the one in gaza could heat up. what's happening there? trey yengst is live in jerusalem. >> good morning. overnight an israeli soldier was killed amid heavy gun battles as the israeli military withdrew
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from jenin. the israelis recovered multiple blowsive devices. 140 wounded and some killed. casualties were civilians trapped amid the fighting. they conducted more strikes out of the refugee camp killing one gunman. the funerals for those during the operations were today. factions inside gaza that have fighters in the west bank fired five rockets to southern israel. the military launched air strikes. the united nations security council plans to hold a meeting later this week on israel's operation into jenin. the palestinian authority demanded they impose an arms embargo for crimes against the palestinian people. despite the threat from the palestinian authority we do know that there has been some tension between officials in ramallah
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where the p.a. is based and civilians in palestinian. ongoing frustration about the relationship those officials have with the israeli governments and seeing it play out today. officials from ramallah were kicked out of the funeral for the militants. >> bill: the state department releasing a damning formal evaluation of america's kabul chaos. that disastrous evacuation resulted in thousands of americans and afghans who served with u.s. forces left behind. a highly-anticipated review placed blame on both the biden and the trump teams. the decisions of both president trump and president biden to end the u.s. military mission in afghanistan had serious consequences for the viability of the afghan government and security. joey jones, retired u.s. marine, bomb tech and fox news contributor and author of a new book we'll talk about in a
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moment. good morning, my friend. nice to see you. why don't we pull a quote guys. let's do number two. antony blinken on an email on a friday afternoon on the verge of a july 4th weekend said our people in afghanistan in washington sites around the world demonstrated courage in terms of complex and demanding conditions. we all know it did not have to be this way. what do you think? >> the mistakes of cowards like accountability. such a cowardice thing to come out with report a year later before a weekend and hope and pray nobody pays attention or cares. if fox news didn't exist i don't know who would. i don't need everything to be a scandal but man, you know, i fought in that war and left a couple of legs there and proud to do it. i believed my actions stopped others from being killed that day. daniel was killed that day but
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others could have. i worried about how each day would end for me and the people around me. why? strategic leadership says somebody else will worry how it will end one day. generals, a group of generals and hopefully a president of the united states. i believe in them that whatever happened to me in afghanistan would accomplish whatever mission the american people elected them to accomplish. for 20 years we watched this war. i want to say no matter how you feel about iraq in 2003, we had all the righteous cause in the world to go into afghanistan in 2001. we did a hell of a job that first year we were there. what happened those next 20 years was more politics than strategy. it felt like if someone as a boot on the crime we fought 10, 2 years words and mid-terms and presidential elections swayed a strategy as much as anything. it may not be completely true but it felt that way from 2005 when i joined until i saw our
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last troops leave. >> dana: what about lumping in trump with them? i think trump answers this very well when asked about it in terms of yes, we wanted to get out but if i had been in charge we would have done it in a different way. >> if you read a book -- fight or flight. there is called submission and posturing. posturing is huge. trump talked with hype he shallly. you'll do it or else. they bring him the best option. my belief they would never be every troop out of afghanistan but change our posture we wouldn't feel at war in afghanistan. trump's way of doing that was through hyperbole. before he lost re-election and before biden lost afghanistan. i have think it's difficult to look at president biden and president trump in the same light on this. i don't blame president biden for us losing the afghan four. four presidents that reprided over it he had eight years
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experience with it before he became president. i expected more of him than any president before him because he had the most opportunity to see through to the end. whatever happened that caused this withdrawal the happen the way it did. this report doesn't lay it out specifically. it says we didn't do enough to stop what we saw or how to end it otherwise. it is the lack of accountability after the fact. i make mistakes every day. it is my job to own up and learn something from them. i don't know how the president of the united states with half a century of experience in leadership you don't know how to be a leader. can you look at that video clip of him being asked can you acknowledge there is a mistake that killed 13 americans and we never talk about all the service members that lost limbs and traumatically and emotionally injured that day seeing it happen? all of that death and carnage that happened that day, the civilians killed by a drone strike, you can't call that a mistake?
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you look back and go i got what i wanted. okay. i thought it was isis and taliban we were worried about. are you that confused or such a coward you can't own up to it. the american people would respect him if he did. >> bill: this is the doha agreement and conditions-based. you can't do 3 or 4 unless you do one our two. page two. with the start of intra afghan negligentations and we'll pursue it. >> for my afghanistan is a human issue. that war affected most of the people in my life, if not all. the ones that loved me and all the ones i'm friends with. i sat down. we sat down and interviewed 10 people. non-service members and one gold star wife. that was stacy gear whose husband stood beside me when i lost my legs and he was killed.
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the relationships in their lives that allowed them to get through the things they got through. all of them talked about their relationship with me in some way. but you learn what men learn from their fathers, husbands and wives learn from each other, what kids need to see from their dad or mom. you learn personal human relationships and how each of these people went through extraordinary things because people were there to help and believe in them. not everybody is a combat veteran in the book but saw the war firsthand. lacey learned to fly planes raised in poverty in west virginia. he didn't believe in himself. he had one uncle that did. he does great things and now a leader of men and women and teaches others to fly multi-million dollar aircraft and does it in a way that touches their lives. everyone in this book including my best friend growing up, these are exceptional things that happened to everyday people. that's -- they responded
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exceptionally. >> dana: we're so glad you wrote a book and honored to get an early copy of it. thank you for being here with us as well joey jones. >> we saw a school of sharks. they were 50 sand sharks there. and we react to that and did not authorize swimming. >> dana: shark season up and down the east coach. a round-up on the sightings and attacks next. fasenra is an add-on treatment for asthma driven by eosinophils. it's designed to target and remove them and helps prevent asthma attacks. fasenra is not for sudden breathing problems or other eosinophilic conditions. allergic reactions may occur. don't stop your asthma treatments without talking with your doctor. tell your doctor if your asthma worsens. headache and sore throat may occur. tell your doctor if you have a parasitic infection. get back to better breathing. ask your doctor about fasenra. (vo) consumer reports evaluates vehicles for car shoppers in... reliability, safety, owner satisfaction,
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>> dana: five new york swimmers including two teenagers are recovering from shark bites this week alone. a group of 50 shots shut down a long island beach yesterday. the sharks were swimming off the coast of babylon. beach goers in florida had to flee waters after a hammer head shark was seen in the ocean. we're in long island. cb, interesting with the drone footage you see this along the coastlines. we were a lot more sharks than we realized. >> yeah, dana, good morning. sharks are swimming closer to the shore than ever before. this is the new normal according to experts and why waters in the northeast are being closely monitored every day before swimmers can get in. take a look. a pod of 50 sand tiger sharks
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was spotted by drone surveillance fourth of july morning. 200 yards off shore of a long island beach. they were spotted at 8:00 a.m. and swimmers weren't allowed in the water for an hour. a 15-year-old girl was beaten the day before. since july 3rd a total of five swimmers have been bitten leaving behind wounds on people's feats, thighs, knees, hands. all non-life threatening injuries. in florida a shark was spotted at a pensacola beach close to swimmers who rushed to shore. unprovoked attacks are rare. sharks are swimming closer to the shore to feed on bunker bait fish. if you stay in areas where lifeguards are there is less chance a shark will mistake you for food. >> swimmers should only swim in lifeguard protected areas. don't go into murky waters and don't go into areas with
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dolphins or other marine life. >> some great advice there. last summer there were eight shark bites in waters off long island beaches and this summer lifeguards and emts and state beaches will be using drones and jet skis to survey the waters. dana. >> dana: cb, keep safe out there. >> bill: my next guest here from the ocean to outer space is a physics professor who just discovered what he believes is the first interstellar object to land on earth. is it true? the director of the institute for theory and computation at harvard. professor, thank you for your time and nice to see you today. i have two specific questions based on what i'm reading. you went to new guinea and dredged the ocean floor. let me get to that in a second here. but initially you believe this interstellar object entered the
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atmosphere at an angle that is not normal for a regular meteor. how did you know that? >> well, it was based on government data about this fireball. the government monitors the earth for national security reasons and it noticed the meteor back january 8th, 2014, that moved very fast. it was moving so fast that we concluded it came from outside the solar system because it moved faster than the escape speed from the solar system and material strength was tougher than all space rocks based on the fact it maintained its integrity to the lower atmosphere. so we decided to go there and check whether it's a rock of some unusual origin on maybe a spacecraft from another civilization. we went there a few weeks ago on a ship that was fittingly called the silver star. we had a sled with magnets
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attached to it that we dragged over the ocean floor and guess what? we found these tiny metallic marbles that are molten droplets from the surface of the object. >> bill: how deep was the water where you found it? how deep, do you still have me? >> the ocean is two kilometers deep and we surveyed the region of ten kilometers in size and with a sled of a meter in width and it was like a needle in the ocean to find the droplets. we found them. now we're studying them in the laboratory at harvard university. >> bill: so you have 50 metallic marbles, what are they? >> that's the question. so the first thing for us to check is whether the material
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they are made of is different from rocks in the solar system and then the next question is whether the composition indicates an alloy that was artificially made so we can tell whether it's a spacecraft from another civilization. of course, this can be thought of as rose petals that lead to our partner in a romantic sense. there could be a big chunk of the object, the core of the object lying on the ocean floor. we hope to go there in the next expedition and look for it. >> bill: okay. if you've got the marbles and back in cambridge why don't we know? >> because we just arrived a couple of days ago. i will get the materials that were shipped to my home today and then in the coming week or two, hopefully we'll know. >> bill: i will cut you slack on that last question. do we have company out there? >> yes, i think it is not normal
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to think we're unique and special. in our private lives when you meet a partner it changes your life. and so stay tuned. >> bill: okay. i think you are unique and special, all right? once you can prove it we'll bring you back, okay, professor? thank you for your time. >> thank you. >> dana: superstar singer adele responding to the trend of concert-goers throwing things at performers. if you have graves' disease, your eye symptoms could mean something more. that gritty feeling can't be brushed away. even a little blurry vision can distort things. and something serious may be behind those itchy eyes. up to 50% of people with graves' could develop a different condition called thyroid eye disease, which should be treated by a different doctor. see an expert. find a t-e-d eye specialist at isitted.com
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i was told my small business wouldn't qualify for an erc tax refund. you should get a second opinion from innovation refunds at no upfront cost. sometimes you need a second opinion. all these walls gotta go! ah ah ah! i'd love a second opinion. take the first step to see if your small business qualifies. our heritage is ingrained in our skin. and even when we metamorphosize into our new evolved form, we carry that spirit with us. because you can take alfa romeo out of italy.
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but you best believe, you can't take the italy out of an alfa romeo.
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>> bill: now adele has a warning to her fans to take it easy on her or else. that's today's hemmer celebrity news. i know you missed it. roll it. >> bill: that blunt reaction to several recent on stage incidents involving items throne
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at performers. she said she won't stand stand for it and advised fans to act appropriately. >> dana: she is right. that's terrible what happened to the other performers. that was the first one. i don't know if it's a trend. terrible. >> bill: i saw harry styles. i couldn't believe how many things were thrown at him. >> dana: anyone throw their phone? what did you throw? >> bill: nothing. it starts innocent like it is a feather boa or a teddy bear. bottles of water. but he was great. he is athletic and he would snag it. >> dana: he can could everything. a high profile hollywood divorce getting a lot of attention. we haven't had one of these in a while. kevin kostner accusing his wife of demanding 250,000 a month for
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child supports for starters. jonathan hunt with more. >> good morning to you, dana and bill. kevin kostner and christine have been married for 18 years but now they agree they want to go their separate ways. what they can't agree on is the settlement in this divorce and having walked the red carpet together just over a year ago at the oscars, they now want to walk in separate directions. kevin kostner, the actor, wants christine baumgartner out of his $145 million mansion saying in court papers filed on friday quote, kevin kostner respectfully requests that christine be made to move out of his residence. baumgartner says she can't move out and she can't afford to get a property that would allow her children to keep up their lifestyle. so we're headed to court today in about five hours' time and may get movement on that.
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who knows where it will end up? look at the most expensive hollywood divorces in history, mel gibson 425 million. harrison ford, steven spielberg and kevin kostner $18 million. we don't know where it will end. there is a pre-nup but by the end of this his lifetime divorce settlements could be around $2 hundred million. >> dana: that's a little price to pay. thank you. >> bill: before we go got a little something, something. golfer what appears to be an accidental trick shot. practice round on monday. 20 years old managing to flip the tee in the air and the tee lands in her back pocket. show it now. spot shadow, boom. >> dana: right there. >> bill: i ask you, what is more difficult, a hole in one or putting the tee in your back
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pocket? >> dana: i think the tee in the back pocket. i have seen a million holes in one. >> bill: a tee in the back pocket. >> dana: did you hit a hole in one this weekend. >> bill: i've never had one. >> dana: is that your goal? >> bill: no, i just want to play well. >> dana: julie banderas is i in for harris. >> julie: secret service on the case at the white house after finding a suspicious white powder in the west wing. you are in "the faulkner focus." preliminary tests do suggest that substance is, in fact, cocaine. >> julie: the powder was set out for further testing. the shirking discovery sparking

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