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tv   Outnumbered  FOX News  February 16, 2024 9:00am-10:00am PST

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ajc or any other, "new york times" or whatever which i do every day, of course. >> so is it fair to say nobody instructed you you were under the rule of sequestration. >> or under subpoena, either. >> thank you. >> anything else? seeing and hearing none, thank you, mr. floyd. >> thank you very much, your honor. a pleasure to appear in front of you. >> thank you. miss cross, was the state planning to call additional witnesses? >> not at this time, your honor. we are trying to accommodate if there is last-minute schedule this afternoon. >> okay. even if mr. bradley testifies to some extent, it is still the potential the state has no further witnesses >> i anticipate one more will be available this afternoon but that would be it. >> there are potentially more state's witnesses, all right.
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>> [inaudible] >> all right. so i think the rule is invoked and instruction was for the parties to tell all witnesses subpoenaed or expected to appear about the rule. i don't think the remedy is striking and it can go to credibility as well. to that extent unless ms. cross you want to be heard on that, point is made. all right. do we have an update on mr. bradley? >> he will be here at 12:22. >> i think we should have the prese preliminary -- i don't know if you want to argue in place or whatever makes you trouble. it was relayed to you since you weren't in court earlier this morning we had some initial conversations about the
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distinction between a privilege and rule 1.6 and you wanted to be heard. >> i apologize that i >> whatever you need to do. >> your honor, i believe -- anticipation of the rule 1.6 is fiberglass versus -- is that correct? >> it is difficult hearing -- >> there is a microphone in the jury box, you can try to lift that microphone up and speak in the jury box or make your way to the podium or table. the >> sorry. >> is that better?
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>> that was authority provided by mr. sadow, our morning recess and that was indicated to go toward a potential argument, i don't think we have gotten there yet. it is fraud on the court. it is attorney-client privilege, 1.6. >> the case i had cited this morning showing distinction was tenant healthcare, that is where we were on the threshold issue, did you have something to address on that? >> i have not been able to review that. >> mr. ward, you are co-counsel with mr. bradley? >> no, i'm not here in that capacity. >> remind me why you are here. >> i am -- >> harris: it is never a dull
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moment. one point, fani willis's father says i don't mean to be racist, most black folks hide cash. i am from georgia, atlanta and i don't hide cash. welcome to "outnumbered," this whole thing in fulton county georgia courthouse with the d.a. on the line here, fani willis, and her lover nathan wade. this is what we're talking about here, her dad took the stand and she didn't, it was a twist. fulton county decided not to call her to the stand. state said it had no questions for fani willis. we've been covering this and welcome you in. they figure out what to do next, state has no more witnesses at this time. this comes after fani willis's testimony yesterday defending her relationship with special prosecutor and lover nathan
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wade. they indicate you slept with somebody the first day you met them. that is contrary to democracy, not toin moo. be clear, you lied here. i think you lied here. >> i am going to -- >> no, no, no, it is the truth, judge. >> it is a lie. these people are on trial for trying to steal an election. i am not on trial no matter how hard you try to put me on trial. >> harris: this is "outnumbered," i'm harris faulkner here with emily compagno, carley shimkus and with us for the first time fox five new york anchor star and host of fox nation special sanctuary trap, rosanna scotto wearing blue leather pants. welcome. fox news contributor and former nypd inspector paul mauro is
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here, as well. let's go to steve harrigan, a lot has happened over last couple hours nonstop in the courtroom in atlanta. we will go to you, steve. >> steve: a lot of surprises, we were surprised to see fani willis take the stand yesterday, surprised to not see her today. we got fani willis's father john floyd. it is clear the defense is trying to establish a timeline on when this relationship between nathan wade and fani willis began. willis's father every bit as colorful on the stand as his daughter. he was asked when he met nathan wade? >> did you meet mr. wade in 2019? >> absolutely not. >> year 2020? >> absolutely not. >> you see mr. wade at miss willis's house in 2021? >> never.
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>> both sides trying to make the point if nathan wade was hired before or after their relationship began. finances under scrutiny. wade would pay with credit card and get reimbursed with no receipts given. the judge warned disqualification for two of them is a possibility. back to you. >> harris: thank you. emily, can you refresh us and make i it clear the timing of this. why it is crucial to know if nathan wade was hired as special prosecutor on the trump case before or after they got together, why is that so important? >> emily: there were 19 defendants in a case in fulton county brought, one of them president trump. as it emerged later, what we learned from divorce proceeding under seal in the court by
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special or lead prosecutor, they had been in a relationship and not only in a relationship, but it looked like they had used funds, taxpayer funds to augment and go on trips. not only had they used taxpayer funds to make that relationship exciting and go to aruba, it looks like perhaps the experience was not there to justify that appointment and we were seeing a favor by the district attorney that was elected by the people and in use with taxpayer dollars of that ep ra. after which that came to light, these allegations, both fani willis and nathan wade, ve he mentally and under oath denied that. they said we did not enter into a relationship in 2021.
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appointment happened in 2020, or they said a relationship until 2023. now it looks like it happened in 2019. why this matters, these defendants have brought a motion before the court to say there is appearance of conflict of interest and potentially a conflict of interest and the team that brought this case against united states and 18 others was materially compromised in the form of fraud. we are seeing evidentiary hearing and the judge will determine if there is conflict of interest. from there, maybe the case is thrown out, or the prosecutors could be removed. this victory, what is looking like victory for donald trump would be monumental. if you bring a case against the former president of the united
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states, you better have it dialed in. i have never seen such a sham, joke of a case as this has illustrated as i have against half of americans. this is humiliating at best. >> harris: you know, rosanna, as we watch today, that gentle old man who is her father and has a background in law was put in a position today to have to say she had a boyfriend in 2019 named duce and only reason he knew about that was because he and she was sharing a residence at the time, the dad and fani willis. this went deep. it was supposed to be her on the stand, was that a good witness? >> he was honest, it seemed and he is her father, he is defending her. he had so many wonderful lines
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about cash and how it was a cultural thing. can we talk about that for a second? as italian american, it is in our background, as well, we do it, too. you expect a different behavior from fani willis because she's in the legal profession and because she is now going after the former president of the united states. i would have thought she would have played everything by the book, everything to the letter of the law, not to get herself in trouble. >> harris: take a look at that, if we have it, fani willis's dad when asked about his daughter's finances and cash. >> when your daughter moved or left the house she owned, did she say anything to you about having a large savings of cash? >> oh, no, she -- no.
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maybe excuse me, your honor, i'm not trying to be racist, it is a black thing, okay. you know, i was trained and most black folks, they hide cash or they keep cash. >> harris: hide cash. >> right, hide cash. it is a cultural thing, come on, i know you said you don't do it in your family. a lot of people in covid took a lot of money out of the bank and hid in their house. this is a legal prosecutor who should be following the letter of the law and seemed like the way she withdrew cash was also suspect. >> harris: she never said she withdrew cash, she had it around everywhere in her house. >> she said she would go to stores and take out a little more when she used her card, she was taking more cash.
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>> harris: did that help fani willis and nathan wade? bottom line of this. >> i like her father and i'm sorry he was in this position. >> harris: awkward position. paul, as an investigator, you are looking at this and putting pieces together. do you have enough pieces? >> paul: the timeline matters, according to yesterday, they were involved as per her friend in 2019. in 2020 wade was at her house 20 times, i assume he wasn't there to check the meter. that is a conflict relative to timeline. as far as cash, she said, i had campaign cash in my closet, looking at the issue in a nutshell, there is cash and there is cash and campaign cash stuffed in your closet, getting into trouble some territory and maybe perjury issues. her office is tainted.
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>> carley: this reminds me of the johnny depp trial. part salacious, part legal, the legal matters more. we were introduced to fani willis's dad yesterday when fani brought him up several times and said only man who ever paid all my bills is my daddy. clearly they are close. i am sure she is watching this right now and this was really hard for her to see and she is probably thinking, was this relationship worth possibly blowing up my career and seeing my father on the stand, as well. >> harris: talk about watching, something phil holloway said, she was not supposed to be watching nathan wade yesterday, there was sequestration order in place and he felt she came out and reacted emotionally to whatever nathan wade said. my big question, when you say the state, you mean the defense
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in all of this. in terms of handing trump's case over to someone else, all those people will have been defending her in this. >> emily: great point and she brought that up when she said, i'm not on trial here, it is donald trump. she at all times is kcognizant f her north star. i have to make this point, when you flip to the back of the bar magazine, it talks about everyone disbarred or disciplined, 95% is mismanagement of client money. we have to have ialta-account and account for every dollar. if you buy a coke with their funds, you are disciplined and maybe disbarred. as steward of taxpayer funds to keep it in the closet in cash because it is cultural, that is a joke. >> harris: whoo. he said, i don't mean to sound
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racist, most black folks hide cash. we'll move on. awaiting remarks following the death of alexei navalny opposition leader and outspoken critic of vladamir putin. we'll bring you president biden's remarks when they happen. stay close for more "outnumbered." i have moderate to severe plaque psoriasis. thanks to skyrizi, i'm on my way with clearer skin. 3 out of 4 people achieved 90% clearer skin at 4 months. and skyrizi is just 4 doses a year after 2 starter doses. serious allergic reactions and an increased risk of infections or a lower ability to fight them may occur. tell your doctor if you have an infection or symptoms, had a vaccine, or plan to. nothing on my skin means everything! ♪ nothing is everything ♪ ask your dermatologist about skyrizi. learn how abbvie could help you save. we're travelling all across america, talking to people about their hearts. wh-who wants to talk about their heart! how's the heart? how's your heart?
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>> emily: new reaction to alexei nav navalny, they say he died in prison earlier this morning. president biden is expected to speak any moment on this. alex hostage an is live in london.
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alex. >> officials say navalny collapsed after a walk and workers were not able to resuscitate him. his wife spoke out just hours after hearing of the death of her husband. >> if it is true, i want putin and his cronies, friends and government to know they will be held accountable for what they have done to the country, my family and my husband. that day will come soon. >> last footage of alexei navalny, russia's most significant opposition leader. reaction is pouring in from around the world. french foreign minister responded saying his death reminds us of reality of vladamir putin's regime. ukrainian president zelenskyy said it is obvious he was killed by putin and we heard from vice
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president kamala harris saying whatever they tell us, let us be clear, russia is responsible. russian president vladamir putin is up for reelection next month. navalny has been behind bars on charges widely considered politically motivated. president biden in 2021 when he was arrested was asked what would happen if he were to die behind bars and the president said there would be severe consequences and emily, we are waiting to hear word from president biden on how he would react and what consequentials, if any, would be. >> emily: thank you so much. paul mauro, you and your experience in intelligence here, you had interaction with russia specifically. this calls to mind sergi, and a list longer than that of those
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who died under suspicious circumstances after offering opposition to vladamir putin. >> paul: this is primarily like the gangster world and they are a gangster state. putin is essentially mafia. he made a rare miscalculation here, created a martyr and has somebody that encapsulates resistance and he normally doesn't make these blunders. maybe he was desperate, up against a wall. with russia it is energy politics. oil and natural gas are the fuel of their economy and europeans better recognize who he is. they played, germans laughed at donald trump, you better be beholden. no putting lipstick on this pig.
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it is a gangster state and he just revealed it. >> harris: i keep thinking what we learned about the threat against the united states by russia. and while that material has not been declassified that intelligence, lawmakers are learning what that would look like. some involves shooting down satellites and disrupting our communication among law enforcement and so much more. from the white house, they're still in the process of diplomatically engaging with countries that have assets and interest in outer space before they release more information. this to me is exactly a thug move. this is letting everybody know if you try to push against us and find out more information about what we want to do to the united states, we'll respond particularly to things that the united states have supposen about. the president said he put in
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consequences if navalny died, we don't know what those look like, that is what putin does, he kills him. as american public, we need to know more about national security threat with russia. don't need to know every detail, what does it look like. >> carley: harris, great point how we respond now, how does the western world respond now and president biden said there would be consequences. vladamir putin feels embolden now so much so he did an interview on russian state tv and asked who would you rather win the election, president biden or donald trump and he responded biden, he's more experienced, more predictable, politician of old formation, that is not an endorsement you want. predictable means you know what they are going to do and know
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president biden will not do much. you could venture to wonder if alexei navalny would have died if there was a different president in office today. >> all i know, can the united states afford to get into another war situation? how many more things can we get involved with? we have a crisis going on here in our country and now we have so much going on around the world. i don't know, it sounds like we're being spread too thin. >> paul: this should be idlogical full frontal from the world, i think putin just created russia's nelson mandela. see what the president has to say as he comes up shortly, our hearts go out to the navalny families and all the families. migrant suspects accused of beating a pair of nypd officers in time square are in court and we are getting chilling details
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about who they are.
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>> emily: four migrants accused of beating a pair of nypd police officers are due in court today. two of the suspects are linked to a violent venezuelan gang. the gang is involved in robberies, drug dealing and human trafficking across south america and now contributing to the wave of assaults against new york city police officers being called a full-blown epidemic. nypd is crunching numbers and project for 2023, there will be more than 5400 cops injured in attacks. you can see that number rising steadily the past few years. paul mauro, your thoughts? >> paul: all 5400 will not go to this prison gang.
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we have gotten people that madero is not taking back. we will not get help from alvin bragg. lock these guys up, there is structure, big federal cases, where are feds? absentee. >> emily: rosanna sat down with mayor eric adams. the sanctuary trap is available on fox nation, here is quick preview on how out of control the situation has gotten in new york city. watch. >> the roosevelt is just a few blocks from the port authority bus terminal, new migrants arrive by the bus load claiming asylum and all come through this processing center. further downtown, the mayor is running out of options. >> i did get a chance before i
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sat down to go to roosevelt hotel and that was an eye-opener. can you ever see yourself shutting down roosevelt hotel and saying we can't process anymore? >> not in the near future. as long as the laws stay the way they are where people are allowed to come to the city and there is nothing i can do, i must have an intake center. >> emily: that interview with the mayor so compelling, what else did you learn? >> you remember that, the mayor originally when the migrants started coming here, he was embracing them, they were at the bus depot, arms wide open until he started to see the city's wallet could not afford it anymore. there was no room at the inn, had 200 shelters set up, some had to do makeshift, tents and places where kids go to play.
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city kids have nowhere to play and they have taken over that area for the migrants and started floyd bennett field and turned that into a migrant shelter. they have problems there. they have weather problems and had to move migrants to a school displace students, students couldn't go to school. >> harris: had to study at home on their devices. >> the mayor is concerned, it will cost the city, almost break the bank, he is figuring 12 billion, 5 billion a year. he basically said he is concerned he's going to have to cut costs across the board. he has already started doing that in new york city. >> emily: what will viewers learn from this? >> we'll take you behind the scenes with mayor adams and take you to the roosevelt hotel inside, a lot of people have not seen it.
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a lot of people think this migrant situation is a blue state problem, it is not, it is coming to your state. they are going everywhere. we've heard from some gangs who have been working with the migrants. one of them has set up in florida, paul, have you heard about this? pawk of course. >> he's got gang members here. he calls them on some kind of what's app phone and tell them i need cell phones, cash, i need cars and basically they go on their mopeds and steal and drag people in the streets of new york. they send it back to florida and then florida sends it to texas. texas sends it back to venezuela, a crazy situation. it will be coming to a city near you unfortunately, there is nowhere else to go, the mayor says we're out of room, it will destroy new york city. >> harris: i don't know if you were able to or had interest to
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get into it. when he was a candidate, he talked about allowing illegal immigrants ability to vote in this city in his jurisdiction, is he going to do that? >> it is being challenged in court right now. if he doesn't want to do it, the city does. the city has left, mayor and city council of new york are fighting tooth and nail and overriding his veto, we have not heard about this. it is -- >> harris: can you imagine that, they get right to have resources our own veterans don't have in this country. in new york, they have prepaid debit cards this mayor is in favor of. it is supposed to be for food. >> harris: we provide food to them. they don't like the food. >> it also costs a lot, giving them this prepaid card would be cheaper in the long run. they get a lot. i talk to the mayor, you are
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giving them housing and health insurance. >> and right to vote. what he made is a campaign promise. >> there are other people who want that to happen. >> i did not know that. without him, it could happen. >> right to shelter is tied up in court, the mayor is trying to get out of that. it was established in the 1980s, under the mayor to help the homeless, our homeless on the streets of new york and now they apply it to anybody who comes to new york. >> carley: this is a great special, people don't know, roosevelt hotel is big historic hotel in new york city and you have migrants wrapped around the block and people are waiting to get in. everybody can see the crisis first hand and that is why it is so important that you bring this to viewers who can see inside
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the hotel. >> we get inside and they usually don't allow reporters inside the roosevelt hotel. >> carley: i worry about this organized crime thing, it is start of a trend. >> harris: we need to go to president biden, he'll be speaking on the death of alexei navalny who died at 47 years old in a russia prison. >> president biden: reported death of alexei navalny, he bravely stood up to the corruption and violence and all the bad things that putin was doing. in response, putin had him poisoned, had him arrested, prosecuted for fabricated crimes, sent to prison and held in isolation and that did not stop him from calling out putin's lies. even in prison he was a powerful voice for the truth, which is amazing when you think about it.
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he could have lived safely in exile in 2020, after the assassination attempt. he was traveling outside the country at the time and instead returned to russia. returned to russia knowing he would likely be imprisoned or killed if he continued his work. he did it anyway, he believes so deeply in his country and russia. report of his death, if they are true, no reason to believe they are not, russian authorities will tell their own story. make no mistake, putin is responsible for navalny's death, putin is responsible. what has happened to navalny is more proof of putin's brutality. no one should be fooled, not in russia, at home anywhere in the world, putin targets citizens of other countries, as we have seen what is going on in ushg
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ukraine. he inflicts crime on his own people. people mourning navalny today, he was so many things that putin was not. he was brave, he was principled, dedicated to building russia where rule of law existed and applied to everybody. navalny believed in that russia, that russia. he knew it was a cause worth fighting for and even dying for. this tragedy reminds us of the stakes of this moment, we provide funding so ukraine can defend itself against putin's vicious onslots and war crimes. there was bipartisan senate vote that passed in the u.s. senate to fund ukraine. now as i've said before and i mean this in the literal sense, histories uch wa watching the house of representatives.
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failure will never are forgotten, it will go down in the pages of history, it is consequential and the clock is ticking and this has to happen. we have to help now. we have to realize what we're dealing with with putin, reject dangerous statement made by the previous president that invited russia to invade our nato allies that were not paying up. if said if an ally did not pay their dues he encourage russia to do whatever the hell they want. i guess i should clear my mind here a little bit and not say what i'm really thinking. let me be clear, this is outrageous thing for a president to say, i can't fathom. they are rolling over in their grave hearing this. as long as i'm president, america stands by commitment to
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nato allies as they stood by their commitment to us. putin and the world should know if any adversary were to attack us, our nato allies would defend us. now is time for greater unity, to stand up to the threat putin's russia poses. deepest condolences to navalny's family. most of all to his family, especially to his wife, his daughter and his son. they have sacrificed so much for their family and shared dream for a better future for russia. so i want to say god bless alexei navalny, his courage will not be forgotten and i'm sure it will not be the only courage we see coming out of russia in the near term. thank you.
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i'll be happy to take a couple questions. >> was this an assassination? >> president biden: we don't know exactly what happened, but no doubt the death of navalny was consequence of something putin and his thugs did. >> you warned vladamir putin were you were in geneva of devastating consequences if navalny died in russ ian custod. what consequences will they face? >> they have -- position they have been subjected to great sanctions across the board and contemplating what else can be done. what we were talking about at the time, there were no actions being taken against russia and this transpired since then. >> are you looking at increasing
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sanctions on russia right now? anything you can do to get ammunition to the ukrainians without supplemental from congress? >> no, it is about time they step up, don't you think, instead of going on a two-week vacation? two weeks, walking away, two weeks. what are they thinking? my god. this is bizarre. and reinforcing all the concern and almost -- i won't say panic, real concern about the united states being a reliable ally. this is outrageous. >> are you more confident now you will get ukraine aid given what has happened today? >> president biden: i hope to god it helps. the idea we need anything more to get ukraine aid, i mean, this is in light of former president's statement that saying russia if they haven't paid dues, go get them.
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come on. what are these guys doing? what are they doing? >> sir, how concerned are you about the antisatellite capability russia is developing and what is your administration planning to do in response? >> president biden: there is no nuclear threat to the people of america or anywhere else in the world with what russia is doing at the moment, number one. number two, anything they are doing and/or will do relates to satellites and space and damaging satellites potentially. number three, there is no evidence that they have made a decision to go forward with doing anything in space either. what we found out, there was capacity to launch a system into space that could theoretically do something damaging. hadn't happened yet and my hope was it will not. >> thank you, mr. president. >> president biden: take one
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more. >> mr. president, switching gears, presented credible evacuation plan for 1.5 million displaced palestinianians and what would consequences be for -- without protecting civilians there? >> president biden: i've had extensive conversations prime minister of israel, almost an hour each and made the case and feel strongly there has to be a temporary ceasefire to get the prisoners out, get the hostages out and that is underway. i'm still hopeful that can be done. and in the meantime, i don't anticipate, i'm hoping that the israelis will not make any massive land invasion in the meantime, my expectation that is
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not going to happen. there has to be a ceasefire temporarily to get hostages -- by the way, we're in a situation where there are american hostages. american citizens being held hostage, not just israelis, it is american hostages, as well. and my hope and expectation is that we'll get this hostage deal, bring the americans home and deal is being negotiated now and we're going to see where it takes us. >> an fbi informant at center of the impeachment inquiry into you been indicted for allegedly lying, your reaction to that and should the inquiry be dropped? >> he is lying. it should be dropped and it's been a outrageous effort from the beginning.
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>> thank you all so much. >> harris: he says he will see everybody in ohio. let's unpack that a bit. the president expressed what people are feeling around the world. if you are looking at social media, you are seeing memorials pop up in small and large ways after the death of navalny. the president expressing condolences and outrage over the death at hands of russia. no matter how this man died, greatest opposition against vladamir putin, it was russia. now in the meantime, an important question was asked and that had to do with you said there would be consequences if anything happened. does the team have that ready to
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watch? we'll watch when we can. his answer, that was three years ago. >> emily: i have to point out when he expresses outrage and says there is no direct evidence, no doubt it is putin and his thugs, then he immediately said this is why we need to keep arming and equipping ukraine against russia. i underscore that because every dollar we have given ukraine has come with condition resulted in ukraine being further ham strung, just like israel, they cannot attack russia in certain fronts and cities and conditions with tanks and armament and saying be grateful for this, this will not do the job. in doing so, we further putin's interest just like we further hamas's interest by continued capitulation and telling israel
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to calm down. our president, who is only afraid of fear of escalation is only succeeding in furthering putin's interest. his words ring hollow. >> harris: talking about permanent state of stalemate. that is only important running for reelection and early republican criticism of how we didn't do what we needed to with ukraine, that is only going to get us in an ever-ending spot and they were right. ask you about russian prisons, al jazeera and what is being put out there from russia, he went for a walk and felt unwell after that walk at this prison in the arctic colony of ik3.
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>> paul: these are siberian prisons and conditions are brutal. one truism of any prison, certain point, the prisoners run the prison, not the authorities because they are so outnumbered. what does that mean? for authorities to execute something subtle, an operation against him assuming they tried to poison him or kill him in prison, they needed complicity of people around him and the whole thing is like intelligence operation and who knows what went on, when you have thousands of prisoners and few hundred prison guards, the way the guards control the place is by intelligence they glean from other prisoners. >> harris: do you think russia fears anything we would do? >> it is funny, i'm walking the president and this week a lot of talk about his age and whether
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he is up for the job. he seemed very strong, he had a moment there, we gasped, we didn't know if he lost his place. >> harris: we can watch it. we'll come back to you. let's look. >> president biden: we have to realize what we're dealing with with putin, we should reject dangerous statements made by the previous president that vited russia to invade our allies if they were not paying up. he said if an ally did not pay their dues, he would encourage russia to do whatever the hell they want. i -- i guess i should clear my mind here a bit and not say what i'm really thinking. let me be clear, this is outrageous thing for a president to say, i can't fathom, they are rolling over in their grave
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hearing this. >> was he trying to say the right thing or did he have a senior moment there? we all got so worried for him. what does this say to the world? what message when the president gets up there and loses his train of thought, has a moment where it was so uncomfortable for the rest of us to see him, was he going to make it through, we did not know what was going to happen to him. he composed himself and went on. >> harris: that was more than a couple seconds, but to have him acknowledge, let me get my mind, for him to speak about his mind not being focused. >> maybe he wanted to say the right words, it took a minute. >> harris: it took longer than a few. >> carley: you are a diplomat, god love you. i don't think this could have gone worse for the president,
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especially after the robert hur report and everybody focusing on his mental capacity and if he can rise to major occasions and to have this moment that will get played over and over again here and on social media and it is not just people in this country watching, it is people all over the world. for him to come out and not announce any action for this, saying that russia has faced consequences over past three years. alexei navalny died, it is reported today, no sanctions, no action? >> he just suspended liquid natural gas. there is something he could have done. he could say, he will resume that and undercut the russian economy, simple. >> emily: no wonder putin wants him to win again. he is his alie in everything he
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does and doesn't do. >> harris: weakness will make you look like somebody's friend, when you don't oppose them, we need to remind russia, we are not friends. more "outnumbered" in a minute. introducing, ned's plaque psoriasis. he thinks his flaky red patches are all people see. otezla is the #1 prescribed pill to treat plaque psoriasis. ned? otezla can help you get clearer skin, and reduce itching and flaking. with no routine blood tests required. doctors have been prescribing otezla for nearly a decade. otezla is also approved to treat psoriatic arthritis. don't use otezla if you're allergic to it. serious allergic reactions can happen. otezla may cause severe diarrhea, nausea, or vomiting. some people taking otezla had depression, suicidal thoughts, or weight loss. upper respiratory tract infection and headache may occur.
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>> harris: i want to just take a quick moment to spend to thank first presbyterian church of bonita springs, florida. they have named my "new york times" best selling book "faith still moves mountains" the book of the year and meet fabulous pastor rogers and that congregation this coming monday. so i won't be with you on "outnumbered" and "falkner focus," i'll be there with them. we'll do prayer circles all the bit, a beautiful congregation, and church, and i'm so glad to be in your faith journey for just a little while. thank you very much. people who have remained in my prayers are in east palestine,
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ohio. and after more than a year the president of the united states says he will go there. one year since that toxic train derailment spewed chemicals into the town's air, soil and water supply all contaminated. the president originally promised to visit the town weeks after the derailment and now more than a year later he will go. >> it's been a year, and the president has been on many vacations since. he's been to st. croix, camp david countless times, this feels like a box checking exercise and i don't think the people in east palestine appreciate that very much. >> harris: we will cover it stem to stern. rosanna, i love that you are having a show on fox nation, and i'll see you next week. >> e >> e >> e >> emily

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