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tv   Americas Newsroom  FOX News  July 6, 2023 7:00am-8:00am PDT

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this morning and couldn't find you. >> shannon: house republicans have a lot of questions for u.s. attorney david weiss over his investigation into the president's son, hunter biden following whistleblowers claims by interference by the justice department. they denied the claims saying weiss has had full independent authority. jason smith says it doesn't pass the smell test. >> now the white house is saying that they are not involved in his son's business dealings. not that he didn't know about it but not that they are involved. let me tell you it all smells bad. all the committees are following the facts to see where they lead us. >> shannon: david spunt is live at the justice department with more. >> good morning to you both. the official deadline is 5:00 this afternoon eastern time. david weiss, the u.s. attorney
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in delaware wrote a letting indicating he won't meet that dea deadline. it is to answer questions from jim jordan and other republicans. the reason according to david weiss on why he can't do this, is because technically the hunter biden investigation is still an ongoing investigation. he has yet to formally enter his plea in front of a federal judge. that will happen at the end of the month. that's one of the ropes weiss said he can't answer those questions. in his letter to jordan weiss quoted a prior letter from june saying i have been granted ultimate authority in this matter including responsibility when, whether to file charges. a few weeks later jordan asked to weiss who told him to sign that letter? he doesn't believe weiss called the shots in the probe. he thinks it was the justice department in washington based off the testimony of i.r.s. whistleblower shapley who investigated the hunter biden
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probe and he insists he personally saw david weiss in a meeting complain he was not only not in charge of the probe and not able to charge hunter biden in other districts outside of delaware. >> i even had him repeat that because i knew how important that fact was and i wanted to make sure i understood it. >> late last week weiss wrote to republicans i would be granted 515 authority in delaware or california or any other areas. i asked sources on the hill will you bring him in, they said nothing decided yet at this point. back to you. >> shannon: sounds very capitol hill. >> bill: the attorneys for the accused idaho killer, brian kohberger, got a small win in court this week. a judge granting the request to access training records of three cops who investigated the murders of those four university
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of idaho students. former nypd inspector paul mauro joins us for analysis in a moment but first dan springer has the story live in the pacific northwest. good morning. >> this is part of the routine pre-trial fight over discovery and the judge hearing the case did not take long to rule on this particular issue. he ordered the prosecution to give the defense all the training records for three of the officers involved in the investigation. two of the three officers work for the idaho state patrol. all three played some role in the investigation of the quadruple murder last november. one interviewed witnesses at the scene and was involved in the search for the white hyundai elantra. a second officer talked to key witnesses and called by the defense to testify. the third officers talked to several witnesses after kohberger was arrested. the defense successfully argued the records were material to
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preparing their case. the goal of the defense is to question the credibility of the investigation by attacking the quality of the police work and the training of those cops involved. one very contentious issue the judge hasn't ruled on yet has to do with genetic genealogy. the defense made a motion to get how genetic genealogy was used to point them toward kohberger. the prosecution said it won't be brought up at trial and real dna evidence is a between match found at a knife sheath at the scene and a swab from kohberger after he was arrested and -- we are watching for the demolition of the house where the murders took place. the university of idaho was donated the house and plans to tear it down before classes resume in the fall. the lawyer for one of the victims' family wants the house to remain there through the entire trial saying it could still be used to convict
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kohberger. both prosecution and defense have signed off on demolition. it appears they have no plans to take jurors on a physical tour of the crime scene during the trial scheduled for early october. >> bill: raises a lot of questions. thanks for that setting it up in seattle. >> shannon: paul mauro is a retired nypd inspector. let me start with the demolition of this house. you spent time with these victims' families. one attorney said the university asked forb the family's opinions on the demolition and ignored those opinions to pursue their own self-evident. it has enormous evidentiary value and one of the most important pieces of evidence in the case. what can you tell us whether it makes sense or not? do you wipe out a home that jurors could visit before you have a potential conviction. >> this is surprising neither the defense nor prosecution is objecting to the demolition of
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the house. let's go back to the alex murdaugh case. the defense made it an issue in that case. the jurors asked to see the location of the homicides, did a walk through. it didn't work. in this case, the path that brian kohberger took through the house will be a relevant piece of information, recall something. story goes he is accused, innocent until proven guilty, but he is accused of coming in through the back door, going to the third floor, doing what he did, going to the second floor and seen by a witness, a survivor. the question is how did that happen? what's the configuration of the house? there is no 3d model or photograph in the world that can substitute for walking through the house and seeing the path. that witness testimony was crucial because from that witness testimony six foot, bushy eyebrows, the detail. it was one of the things that went into the search warrant affidavits that got the cops
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access to the digital data on his social media and his phone pings. that's one of the ways they were able to put together the path he took and strengthen him as a suspect. so this is one of those things that depending how it goes, that issue, it could be very dispositive. if the house gets knocked down it won't end the case. i'm very surprised the prosecution is letting that happen. i agree with you. i want an opportunity to walk through the home and understand the physical relationship between the two floors and all the bedrooms. >> it's a complex house. i've seen it. it is hard to describe. three floors, first floor is only access one way. the back of the house is the second floor. it is built into the side of a mountain. all this matters. i remember walking the scene and walking around back and looking at the back from the parking lot saying this is where he came in. you can look right into the
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house. these are things that could really have an impact on jurors. again i'm very surprised they aren't making more of an issue of this. >> shannon: the families have no power here. if the prosecution and defense have decided, it's done. >> maybe, maybe not. there is a civil case pending. the family has filed a notice of claim that says we reserve the right to sue. in a civil case, you can file a preservation lets. the lfs for the families can say we want this preserved for the civil case. so it will be there for the criminal case. it gets a little complex legally. as of now lawsuits haven't been filed. they only say they reserve the right to sue. university the saying you have no case. if we want to knock it down, we can. your civil case has no basis and we want it down before the semester starts. >> bill: listening to dan
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springer's report there, they will put the cops on trial. they will try, anyway, do you have agree? >> i do. one of the things i think is particularly important here is that in one of the cases of the three cops they want the records from, that cop was involved, as dan said in his excellent report, called all of it. one of the cops was, i believe, a supervisor. he decided what tips to pursue. the tips coming in through the hotline. so defense seems to be setting up a scenario they will say you rushed to judgment. you focused on my client. they're talking about other male dna found at the scene and a glove found outside of the house. you looked at brian and forget everything else. they'll say this guy wasn't adequately trained to vet the tips coming in and he focused
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just on my guy. at the end of the day what's really going on is the defense is up against a very strong prosecution. they are trying to create a collateral issue to take the jury's mind off their client. it happens when the evidence is stacked against them. >> bill: are cameras in the courtroom? >> it's up to the judge. there is a real public interest in this. i think of he might allow it. >> bill: okay. thank you, paul, nice to see you. facebook is taking on twitter. launching a new app in the latest battle for your eyeballs. what musk has to say about zuck's latest effort. >> shannon: charles payne comes in next. >> bill: a.i. is what it's about on the trail in 2024.
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>> bill: republican senator tom cotton pressing the secret service for answers about this cocaine that was found in the white house on sunday. he wants to know the precise location and if the culprit will be prosecuted. he wrote a letter saying illegally possessing cocaine is a crime under federal law. if the secret service discovers the identity of the individual who brought illicit cocaine into the white house complex, will they make an arrest under this provision?
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end quote and we're waiting for an answer on that letter and that story. stay tuned. >> shannon: meta launching thread. 10 million joined in the next several hours. it has been in the work for months but launched it sooner as twitter had criticism for recently announced changes. charles payne is here to break it down. let's check in with kelly o'grady live in los angeles with more. explain for us, kelly. >> i know, another social platform to use, shannon, right? this is unique. twitter has had a number of smaller come pet tifshs before but thread will have the scale of meta behind it. i played around with it earlier. it is primarily text based just like twitter. the character limit is 500 versus 280. it is linked to your instagram
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account and able to keep my same username and follow the folks i do on that platform with the click of a button and analysts are calling it a potential twitter killer. meta will leverage the strong relationships with advertisers and user base. they have offer 2 billion on instagram. the launch is timely coming as twitter is facing a lot of challenges under elon musk, backlash with folks not wanting to play for the blue checks, twitter limiting the number of tweets users can read. on the launch last night mark zuckerberg shared the musk-run platform has faltered at creating a public forum. >> we're launching threads, an open and friendly public space for conversations. i am looking forward to the fun journey ahead to turn this into the kind of big and friendly community that i think we all want to see in the world. >> some are asking who decides
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what's open and friendly? users are beginning to report when they try to follow certain accounts they'll see a prompt asking if they sure they want to follow that one as well as a warning that account has repeatedly posted false information. in many cases i will point out these are conservative voices. this is seeing a lot of traction but i wonder if we'll see the digital town square dividing with some choosing thread or twitter. >> shannon: we'll see. >> bill: want to bring in charles payne host of making money 2:00 on fox business. for the record, i have not signed up. you have not signed up. shannon has signed up. >> shannon: i'll tell you how it goes. i'm a tech trend seater. if you have instagram it's super easy. >> bill: zuck says it will take time but a public conversation
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with a billion people. twitter has had the opportunity to do this but hasn't nailed it. musk says it is infinitely preferable to be attacked by strangers on twitter than indulge in hide the pain instagram. >> i have gone through it all and looked at the propers and cons. the one thing that stands out to me threads is not chronological. it will destroy it. it has to find a way to be more chronological like twitter. they face some regulatory issues. instagram, thread, already. meta is already -- has some issues with the -- from from facebook, instagram and threads my have issues getting to a bill people if you don't have access to certain markets like the e.u. way too early to tell. 5 million people in four minutes is impressive. when you have 2 billion as a platform, maybe not so
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impressive. it is intriguing. we love competition and maybe the time was pretty right. i think what's interesting aside reading a story about the meta verse itself. there is a company called horizon world. the biggest platform on the meta verse. they only have 38 daily users. they said no we have 200,000 users and 470 was the tip jar so to speak. really to be quite frank with you, this might be buying zuckerberg some cover for serious issues that he has trying to make the meta verse a make it thing. make the fake world a real thing. >> shannon: younger generation because they do so much of this virtual reality stuff may dig it. we have such a lack of human connection as it is for us to go into a fake universe and wear goggles. >> i have always said i throw my wallet in there and see what i
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can invest in. personally i will be the last person in there. i'm go around and make sure everyone's goggles are on straight and robots are doing the work that you should be doing in real life but i won't go in there. >> bill: we could watch the cage match through our goggles. a enough law for a.i. >> shannon: it prohibits employ ears were using automated employment decision tools for screening candidates. my first thought if it is just doing things do you have the right degree and requisite years of experience. jobs are specialized. >> you have these restrictions. the law was passed in 2021 just went into effect this month. when i looked at it, some of the things that will remain is the biases they're looking for. they are looking for biases. these biases have to be audited once a year. the companies that use them. so sex, race, ethnicity, they
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don't do anything on ageism, disabilities. nothing on there for bias against political. you can imagine new york city being a conservative wanting to work somewhere being shut out of a job there. i also worry about these fines, right? $5 hundred the first time, $1500 after that. if you are a large corporation not much. a small business i have to pay an auditor every year and fines potentially? again, this is something that's so dumb because a.i. is a thing that makes it small businesses more competitive. we want to use it as a tool. already new york city is saying to small businesses you make a mistake with this and you'll be in trouble. >> bill: they're watching them. >> yeah. >> bill: nice to see you, thank you. >> especially shannon. >> shannon: thank you, charles. the overturning of roe v. wade prompting more colleges to stock
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vending machines with the morning after pill. the debate that's prompting on the campaign trail. the race for the white house igniting a debate on age. how younger candidates are making the case for generational change. ♪
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airport frustrated. she had an outburst at an airport ticket counter. she became very angry when airline employees couldn't find flight registration in her system. she demanded a refund, which was denied because the trip was booked through a travel agency.
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she was arrested for damaging equipment and disturbing the peace. who among us have not had that level of frustration at the airport? i have not acted on it but i have felt what she was feeling there. it happens. >> bill: we can all relate. >> shannon: travel is no longer a luxury experience. >> bill: the race for the white house in 2024 seems to be shifting from tradition, artificial intelligence fills in the gaps for one candidate's campaign. the mayor of miami francis suarez turning to an a.i. chat botch. >> i'm a.i. francis suarez. my namesake is running for president. i'm answer to questions you may have about prosperity and other things. >> bill: thumbs up or down on
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this? >> good morning, bill. i've been chatting with a.i. francis suarez this morning. i asked how he is going to beat donald trump. he says suarez with pardon trump. he said he would stand up to china. a.i. has been used in politics before. becoming more common in campaigns and the economy. one republican candidate says congress needs to address these add advantages. >> it is coming and here and upend every industry not in ten years but in 2 or 3 years. the first thing i would do is work with congress to pass legislation that says a.i. has to follow the law, period full stop. we have a number of rules to protect our civil liberties and civil rights and we shouldn't carve technologies out from that legislation.
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>> other candidates not their a.i. versions are campaigning in person. florida governor ron desantis is holding events in iowa and former vice president mike pence also who criticized desantis and trump to understand americans national interest in supporting ukraine. former u.n. ambassador nikki haley is in new hampshire and tim scott says republicans should learn from the disappointment of 2022 and put its best team on the field. >> i believe in 2024 the top of the ticket will be incredibly important for a red wave to go through the senate races. >> trump is at the top of the polls. he raised $35 million from april to june. bill. >> bill: nice to see you in washington. >> shannon: age is emerging as a major factor on the trail. president biden and former president trump campaigning for the second term that would take them into their 80s. that's prompting candidates on both sides to tout their
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relative youth while making the case for generational change at the ballot box. here to talk about it jessica tarlov and charlie hurd, fox news contributor. you look young and spry this morning. >> >> shannon: let's start here. karl rove writes in the "wall street journal" 2024 presidential race throw the grumpy old men out. americans may dislike either frontrunner. but these polls may reveal a desire for generational shift. americans may think we can do better for president than two mean who will be a combined 106 years old when we vote next year. these two men -- one doesn't have a primary contest. the other one is running away with it. i don't know that primary voters are interested. >> they are on the slowey old
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side. what was it rumsfeld said you don't go to war with the army you want but the army you have. that's what both parties are stuck with right now. you are going into battle with the candidate that you have. and donald trump is take -- appears -- it is still early. i think ultimately he gets the nomination but it is still early, we should remember that. when you look around and have rfk who is 69 -- 69 >> shannon: doing the push-ups. >> not that i'm any -- he can do more push-ups than younger guys. >> shannon: i will video you doing push-ups. the challenge is on. >> i said that on the five. they might be lady push-ups and
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enhanced a little bit. >> i would never say lady push-ups. >> as a lady i can say it. >> i just want -- >> i have no core strength. >> shannon: i do a few push-ups. >> bill: nbc news should biden run in 2024? 70% say no. >> look at what will happen. people can voice all the concerns in the world, say he is too old, i'm not into this. on the trump side say he has been indicted blah blah blah and you'll show up and have a name under the d and a name under the r and people will go with partisan i filliations is where we are. everyone is chasing the independents and moderates that got swayed to the democratic in 2020 and could go back in 2024. it's just where we are. on the democratic side. biden needs to be out there more talking about it. he pitched himself as a bridge to the next generation. it was a caretaker presidency, right?
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i'm going to be the guy that can beat donald trump. that was then. it is difficult. you look at his record. he has accomplished so much. he is sitting there thinking why shouldn't i run again, right? when i looked at this in 2019 i thought okay, i can be the bridge, maybe it will be kamala and an open primary. i have a boat load to run on. >> bill: and i can move the primary to south carolina maybe. another story quickly here. three-part characters here. attorney general, merrick garland, it's david weiss, the special prosecutor and the whistleblower. and somewhere along the line the stories don't match up. i don't know if david weiss will testify any time before hunter biden enters his plea the end of july. republicans are going to push for it. someone in this story, charlie, is lying, is not telling the truth. >> i would say david weiss
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counts as two characters. he has said both things. he said he had ultimate authority and then he sort of hedged on that and said that he had authority and sort of in that letter that he wrote to the congressional committee where he was talking about trying to answer some of these questions, he said that he had -- he was geographicly limited meaning he didn't have the authority to press charges in d.c. or in california against biden, which runs completely counter to the larger message he was trying to make which is he had total authority. so i think talking to david weiss is going to be probably the most interesting part of all this other than -- >> shannon: if he is willing to do it. this brings hunter and all his baggage to the forefront at a time when his baggage was -- it wasn't a play on words there. but for the president has talked about he doesn't want to hear
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people who say maybe hunter shouldn't be on the balcony. president is don't talk to me about my son. >> there are a lot of people who admire him for that. it makes it a more difficult campaign to run when you have to answer questions about your son verses talking about bidenomics or all the things you are doing for the country. it is his baby boy, right? he has made it through recovery and part of that family and they are going to run that way whether they've been advised to or not. >> bill: a remarkable story about the granddaughter. >> shannon: she knows who her grandfather is. >> bill: thank you, charlie. great. we got a lot of rain and a devastating toll is underway in california. a lot of melting snow as well. you have a nut farm turning into the lake. farmers aren't doing well. the cities rise in crime in
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>> bill: frantic moments after shots rang out.
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the fourth of july festival in ft. worth. police say three people were killed when a group of armed suspects shot into that crowd. eight others injured. it goes on and on. two of the victims are an 18-year-old who just graduated from high school and a 22-year-old, the suspects are still on the loose. that is a tragedy in texas. >> shannon: crime is running rampant in philadelphia with no end in sight. more and more businesses say enough is enough. they've pulling up stakes and heading out of town for safer pastures. jeff flock of fox business is live in philadelphia to explain. hey, jeff. >> shannon, tough to see when pillars of the community, businesses that have been around so long decide they have to leave and as you point out crime one of the reasons. the blue line moving is a company that now specializes in moving people from places like philadelphia to places like
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florida. something called a david david gallery. can we go in here, sir? i want to show you what it looks like. this is something you don't see. this is what it looks like when they wrap up and move an art gallery. it is almost a bizarre scene. wrapping all these paintings up is what you're seeing right here. todd dupont is one of the principals at blue line moving. this has become all too common. people moving from new york, philadelphia to florida. >> residential, commercial, we see a ton of people moving down, crime, taxes, freedom, you know, people are leaving the northeast. >> this is different. >> art gallery. one of our clients we deal with on a regular basis and he is going down to florida to open his art gallery up down there. >> look at the numbers. you've seen some of these at home. states that, you know, are
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gaining and states that are losing. pennsylvania, of course, is one of those that is losing. maybe we come back live here and you see these are -- can i look at one of these things? can you do that for me just to see? these are -- businesses go, the people go, the culture sometimes goes, too. this is part of culture, philadelphia's cultural fabric. >> yes. >> sad to see, shannon. maybe some culture in florida. they can use some maybe down there. i don't know. >> shannon: tough decisions by folks. the impact on community broadly when businesses leave, you know. jeff, thank you. >> bill: our next guest has a huge investment and that investment is now underwater. torrential rainfall, melting snow drowning his farm sitting two feet under water and running
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out of solutions to salvage it. he joins us now and thank you for your time. you are an immigrant from egypt. this was your life ambition, right? you saved all your money and threw it into this farm and bought it two years ago and now you feel forgotten. what's next? >> good morning, bill, good morning, shannon. i am an immigrant from a cotton farm family in egypt. i immigrated here in 1979. met my wife in college. i was a grad student, she was an undergrad. we fell in love and raised a good family, realized the american dream, we saved our money, worked hard, convinced my friends to join me and we bought
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this farm, pistachio is a great environmentally friendly tree, plant-based protein and micro nutrients and what you don't know about pistachio tree is also a piece of the environment. each tree has 29 ton of carbon and 170,000 trees on my farm that would create a forest. the lung of central california. we enjoy the product, we also enjoy raising good food for america. as you know, san joaquin valley produce 70% of all the fresh
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fruits and vegetables and 80 and 90% of all the nuts in the world is grown there. it is a very unique area and we need help. we need help to get more water storage. we need help to get good flood control especially in this climate extreme dry weather and drought, water comes down rushing in 4 or 5 atmospheric river through the year, very short period of time and it runs down from the mountain to the ocean without anybody able to capture it or use it or utilize it. not for environment, farming or community. and it is very frustrating not to have a good flood control system that we could rely on and
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capture the rainwater and we use it, release it when we can. >> bill: it's feast or famine in that state and you have too much right now. thank you for coming on. i know you are wondering how you are going to get help. we'll stay in touch with you and see if we can figure it out. don't want that dream to go down the drain. >> i appreciate it very much. >> bill: thank you for being here today. good luck. >> shannon: an aide to president trump accused of helping him hide documents at mar-a-lago arrived in a miami federal courtroom and more on his arraignment straight ahead and how schools are expanding access to emergency birth control making these pills available in vending machines on campus sparking new controversy. those who tried me felt more energy in just two weeks. uh... here i'll take that. -everyone: woo hoo! ensure max protein with 30 grams of protein,
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>> shannon: after the supreme court overturned roe v. wade universities in 17 states started offering the morning-after pill in campus vending machines. some states are working on laws to make that mandatory. it's likely to be a sharp dividing line for candidates on the campaign trail. mike emanuel has more on all of this. >> good morning. one would expect this to be a hot topic during the 2024 campaign. more universities putting in vending machines that sell the morning after contraception. the american society for emergency contraception says at least 39 universities have these machines so far. at least 20 more are considering installing them. the university of washington selling generic plan b for $12.60. one quarter of the store price. 640 boxes have been sold so far. a troubling trend for the folks at students for life action. >> these pills are just a throwaway. they throw away women's safety and their health. they throw away informed consent. maybe they throw away a baby.
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they aren't even checking to see if the girls are pregnant. >> george washington university installed the machine in january. one of the students behind the vending machine project at g.w. says the overturn of roe v. wade is a war on reproductive rights, a war on human rights. i believe that students across the country will need to feel supported in hard times like this one and by implementing small measures like a wellness vending machine they're able to feel supported. there are some who raise the concern college students are unaware of the impact the drug could be having on their fertility and overall health. >> shannon: mike emanuel in washington. thank you, mike. >> bill: cue the music, here we go. ♪ ♪ man on the run ♪ >> bill: you ever been a disc jockey? >> shannon: in another life i might be. you like when i sing, though,
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one of your favorite things when we worked together. >> bill: i won't disagree with that -- hemmer's celebrity news, roll it. here is the why, shannon. sir paul says bruce is to blame for the long concerts that everybody else has to do now. the legend said they used to perform for 30 minutes in the 1960s. springsteen ruined it for everyone in 70s for his three plus marathon shows. swifty is playing 3 1/2, 4 hours. >> shannon: they aren't leaving. what is your ultimate time frame? 30 minutes doesn't feel like enough especially with ticket prices. >> bill: i think i've seen springsteen 40 times. >> shannon: you could put on a concert. >> bill: that would be a lot of fun. swifty is setting the new
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standard for the next generation who got used to the one hour and 30 minute concert. >> shannon: don't sing new music we don't know. just give us what we know. it will save time. >> bill: before we go a cool story. i like this. a fairytale ending for two old friends. tatum and lleyton. they met in the nicu at the hospital in nashville. both born prematurely. only half the story. 17 years later the two went to prom together. how about that? >> shannon: no pressure. these two better get married. this needs to be a hallmark movie. they need to get march eft at the end. >> bill: the invitation is out to join us on "america's newsroom." so cool 17 years later. the dow is getting hammered, off just about a point and a half.
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the totals 500 points on the dow 30. 1.4%, 1.5%. >> shannon: the markets are digesting it. >> bill: janet yellen is in china. they've been having problems the last month or two. >> shannon: good to see you. enter>> bill: we have to roll. "the faulkner focus" follows now and here is julie banderas in today. hi, julie. >> julie: we begin with a fox news alert. more questions than answers over the cocaine found at the white house. the president saying mum appearing even to laugh off reporters' questions. i'm julie banderas in for harris and this is "the faulkner focus." secret service ordering a dna and fingerprint analysis of the small baggy of cocaine found in the west wing over the holiday weekend. white house press secretary karine jean-pierre saying the drug was found in a heavily traveled area. th

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