tv The Five FOX News January 2, 2025 2:00pm-3:00pm PST
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michael waltz on this network saying he believes these two events will have a big impact on trump's confirmation process his national security picks. what is your reaction to that? >> it is always a priority to ensure that qualified nominees, especially the national security space, are confirmed. whether or not these individual nominees will be confirmed is the prerogative of the united states senate. under our advice and consent structure and refer to the united states senate. >> sandra: mr. secretary, we are up against the top of the hour and we appreciate you coming on. thank you very much. >> thank you. >> sandra: you can catch me on "america reports" weekdays 1:00 p.m. with john roberts. thank you very much for tuning in with me today and all throughout the day. "the five" is up next. ♪ ♪
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>> hello, everyone. i'm kennedy along with judge jeanine pirro, jessica tarlov, joey jones, and tyrus. it's 5:00 in new york city, and this is "the five." ♪ ♪ we are learning new details about the tragedy in new orleans when a driver barreled his truck drown crowded bourbon street, killing 14 innocent victims and injuring at least 30 more. the fbi calling it an act of terrorism. let's go to garrett tenney, who is standing by in new orleans with the very latest. garrett? >> kennedy, the focus of this investigation is shifting a bit now that the fbi has determined the suspect acted alone and that there is no ongoing public safety threat, investigators are now digging into how and when the suspect became radicalized. we have learned that in the hours leading up to the attack,
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shamsud din jabbar posted five videos to facebook where he said he joined isis before last summer and revealed his original plan was to hurt his family and friends, but he was worried that kind of attack wouldn't generate news headlines on the "war between the believers and the disbelievers." up until today, officials said they were very confident that other people were involved in this attack, and they were actively looking for accomplices. today, here is how they explained this big change in their investigation. >> the hundreds of interviews we have conducted so far, the social media, i might count the five devices we have, the three cell phones and the two laptops, then able to initially triage or go through that, and there is just nothing to indicate, the call records, through anything on those devices, through interviews, through anything in our systems, that he was aided, aided, aided in this attack by anybody. >> also today, just a couple of
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miles from here, agents from the fbi and atf were searching and airbnb where the suspect was staying. there was a fire yesterday morning after the attack at that home, and investigators found explosive materials inside, which they believe were used to make ieds. back here on bourbon street, you can see officials have reopened this area, and when we got here just a couple of hours ago, there were spots along this road that were still wet from the city coming in and cleaning up the areas where bodies were lying 36 hours ago after this horrific attack. kennedy? >> kennedy: thank you very much, garrett. great report. meanwhile, as the fbi says they believe he acted alone, they identified explosive devices planted by the suspect just blocks away. the fbi and president biden also saying he had a detonator inside his vehicle. >> fbi bomb technicians also recovered two ieds in coolers, one from a cross-section of
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bourbon and orland street, and the second at an intersection approximately two blocks away. we did obtain surveillance footage showing jabbar places the devices where they were found. >> kennedy: we have experienced so much terror as a nation, judge, and some of this, it is difficult to wrap your head around, but it has exposed soft targets, which are softer than baby lotion and drake's words. it also exposes something about the fbi. welcome back to you. what are your first thoughts? >> judge jeanine: i haven't been here for a few days, so happy new year, everybody. i am thrilled to be back. first of all, my sip at these and condolences go to the families of those who were lost and he injured in this. my kudos goes to the police officers who went after this dirtbag who was driving the truck. but i have to tell you, the
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press conference that i watched yesterday -- the first thing i watch was a disaster. i've never seen anything as bad as this in 32 years of law enforcement. number one. no one was in charge. everyone was competing to talk. everyone was talking too long, and they gave too many answers. they were not on top of their game. the mayor said they had a plan and the terrorist defeated it. anne kirkpatrick, the superintendent of police, says we've proved time and time again we can handle large crowds. and the fbi, the person who spoke for the fbi, said we are taking the lead, and this was not a terrorist event. wait a minute, you are the fbi. first of all, you never talk, and why not say we haven't ruled it in or out yet. you are not even 24 hours out, and this was all about the competition between law enforcement agencies. they couldn't wait to talk. and look, i was a chief law enforcement officer in a
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county for many, many years, and the first thing you do is you tell everyone who's in charge, who is going be speaking. now this kirkpatrick, she is doing interviews over here, they are doing interviews over there, they are contradicting each other. this was all ego at play. they were not prepared, and this thing about the bollards, which makes me crazy, they said, look, everybody is safe. we are looking for the bollards for the super bowl. well, why not new year's eve? if there is ever a city in this country want to get drunk in and get crazy, it's new orleans. what about the mardi gras coming up? what about the super bowl coming up? this is what i love. they say about the bollards, they say the truth is, you know, the bollards were supposed to be coming in before the super bowl. so what i want to know is why before the super bowl? i want to know -- and then they
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added a qualifier. well, way before the super bowl. they were up there patting each other on the back and recognizing that they lost -- they lost the support of the people in this country. and they set about the bollards, the last thing i want to say, how do you absorb your cells of liability by saying the bollards weren't up yet? and how were you protecting people when there were no bollards? and what kind of contract was it? was it a no-bid contract? remember, this is new orleans. what was the date of completion of that contract? what date was it required by? with time of the essence a condition of that contract? i want a prosecutor to be on that contract and i want to know why they were so lax, and they should be embarrassed as opposed to saying we did a great job. >> kennedy: yes. and their turn to distract saying bourbon street is open, everything is back to normal, it's not normal. it just shows you how easily something like this can happen.
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so tell me, what are your thoughts on the perpetrator? you know, he ranted about going after his family and then he does something like this, and then we are hearing about hundreds, maybe thousands of people associated with, you know, groups from isis-k to al-shabaab in this country illegally potentially gotaways we don't even know about. >> jessica: yeah, first and foremost, echoing the judges sentiments about the families of those that were affected by this, castaway, injured, or just there, it was an incredibly traumatizing experience. obviously the sugar bowl yesterday that was supposed to go on that was a big piece of why there were so many people that were streaming in there and some of the victims who were there to attend the game. there are two stories being told about this perpetrator. one that people who took a moment to actually think about it and to get more information are telling, which is that this was a homegrown american terrorist. this is an american of brazen
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texas who served in the united states military. and then there was another narrative that is being boosted by people who want a case about open borders and this is someone who flew through eagle pass, drove to new orleans and tried to kill a bunch of people. that is obviously not what happened here. secretary mayorkas was on in the last hour with sandra, talking about this real threat of homegrown terrorism, and i understand we need to be careful about our border and people who may have crossed over with ices sympathies. but at this moment, our focus is going to be this guy, the signs that read there, his ex-wife, who has a new husband, has had for the past few months he had been acting crazy, they didn't want them around their kids. i don't know how someone goes from i want to torch my own family to i am going to take out as many people as i possibly can. he wasn't hiding his sympathies. the flag was flying from his car. this wasn't in a glove compartment. it seems like a lot of missed
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signs in all of this. i know there have been staffing issues in terms of the police force. may be there could have been seen sooner. the bollards, as the judge was talking about. but this makes me certainly feel incredibly unsafe, and i'm sure everyone who was down there for these events come i know the game is going on right now -- >> kennedy: as we speak. the person sitting next to you cares deeply, the dawgs are victorious here. joey, let's talk about that. radicalization, you are talking about, as jessica points out, this was an american citizen, but how much easier is it for someone to perpetrate acts like this if they've already been radicalized, if they have found a weakness of the southern border, and this is essentially a road map for them, i think that's what a lot of people are scared about. >> joey: listen come a here. number one, complacency absolutely kills. we talk about the barriers. they had to replace the hydraulic mechanism so i can you put something static there,
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concrete. >> kennedy: a co like they do in times square. >> joey: not just affect the dawgs are playing in the sugar bowl right now, but they have played in the sugar bowl several times in the last handful of years. i was there in 2019 to watch them play in the sugar bowl. the reason i bring it up as i have a lot of friends -- i don't have a buddy who doesn't have a new year's in new orleans story. it is a part of our culture. it is a part of who we are. i got a lot of friends there. i have a good friend, his son plays on the team and they were just two blocks away, he was, from where this happened. and the reason i say this -- that way hit close to home for me. it also hits close to home for me when it happens in michigan or ohio or california or anywhere because i love this country. i am absolutely disgusted at how you know -- believe it or not, i think her name is sarah adams, there is a cia, former cia person who was on a very popular podcast, sean, i can't think of his last name right now.
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she said they believe there is upwards of a thousand operatives in this country. when i went through eob school 2007-2008, we were briefed on the fact that we know there are people in this country that were sent here from other places that want to do us harm and are just trying to get the material to do it and that is part of our job. this is a thing our government should always have their eye on. i don't know that they didn't, but god, may be spend less time banning pete hegseth from guarding the inauguration in 2020 and spend more time looking for people who have absolutely gotten radicalized or at least gone crazy while on the dod payroll. you know, the shooter at fort hood, learn your lesson once, not twice. and very upset about this. both of these people are service members. they are supposed to be my brothers, and they are killing the people that i would die for, and we should have a government that can sniff that out, not that spends its time prosecuting
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people that didn't want to get a backseat. >> kennedy: well said, joey. >> tyrus: i lived there for over nine years. i called it home. this is nothing new. i'm sorry, i cannot go back to the judge's point, that press conference, to hear anne kirkpatrick say we did have a plan. >> judge jeanine: yeah. [laughs] >> tyrus: but the terrace defeated it. he made a right-hand turn because you parked a police car, that was your plan? because the hydraulics were out? there are also other things in new orleans, i forget what they are called, these big plates come up and cover the whole street. you cut fire trucks. new york used to dump trucks. you had no plan. then when you went in there, now she is trying to attach herself to the men and women, the boots on the ground who ran into things, she wants to talk them up. where were you? there was $40 million put aside to fix the security measures at bourbon street. where is that money? >> judge jeanine: oh, i love it, tyrus. >> tyrus: where is that money? you have 15 dead, 35, hundreds
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of people will never be the same, thousands of people. >> joey: yeah. >> tyrus: and your best guess is he defeated it? governor, mayor, whatever you want to tell yourself, where is the resignation? the chief of police eddie terrorist just was smarter than we are. that's the answer. no. that's what we've seen. incompetents in this entire administration across-the-board. it's. it's going to take years to get people out of these positions they were not qualified for in the first place. when you have the fbi -- he literally had a nice his flight flailing on the back of his truck. it wasn't in his glove box, wasn't around his lap. everyone who saw what it was, and their answer was forget all of the ums while you were speaking, it's not a terrorist -- all of it is cover your own ass first. it's not about the american people. it's not us, it wasn't on us. that is the problem. bad men do bad things, but when you make soft targets to the
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point where i have seen more security on a pickup basketball game in my house where you park a car in front of your garage so the ball doesn't roll out in the street. that's basically the level of security for 90,000 people coming there? new orleans used to be a beautiful place until these politicians and these people covering -- this is embarrassing. this is a sad day in america. i keep hearing about this dude, you've already made him a martyr. let's start talking about the people who were asleep at the wheel when the stuff happened. we have heard enough about him. what were you doing? what was your plan? explain yourself. because there are people that they will be scraping up remains for months. people will see the streets, you are never going to get this blood off the streets, and the blood is on the head of these politicians who said "the terrace defeated it." it's the saddest day i've seen in america in a long time. >> kennedy: all right. ahead, another possible terror
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attack, this time in las vegas. brand-new details on the cybertruck explosion outside the trump hotel. stay with us. ♪ ♪ okay everyone, our mission is to provide complete, balanced nutrition for strength and energy. yay - woo hoo! ensure, with 27 vitamins and minerals, nutrients for immune health. and ensure complete with 30 grams of protein. (♪)
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♪ ♪ >> jessica: disturbing new details about the suspect involved in a cybertruck explosion at the trump hotel in las vegas. law enforcement says the 37-year-old active-duty u.s. army soldier matthew allen livelsberger drove the truck from colorado to the outside of the trump international hotel. >> jessica: the truck then exploded seconds later injuring seven bystanders. lolas vegas police said the suspect was perhaps dead on the scene of what appears to be a self infected gunshot wound. officials also fighting inside the vehicle the passport and identification of the suspect whose body was burned beyond recognition. authorities say the vehicle contained gasoline and
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containers as well as multiple firearms. the fbi is investigating the exposure and is an act of terrorism but officials say there is currently no connection between the explosion in las vegas and the attack in new orleans. joey, i want to come to you first on this. extensive explosive experience from your service. can you talk us through what happened inside that truck? >> joey: yeah, so fireworks are made of something called either black powder or smokeless powder, similar to gunpowder, it is gunpowder essentially the way we use it today, and what happens is for black powder to go from deflagration to detonation it needs to be contained. that is why you usually see it in a peel pipe bomb. the structure allows the black powder to basically -- using the term wrong -- but go critical, and explosion, the fuel moves through the oxidizer faster than the speed of sound. that is not what happened in that truck. what happened in that truck is
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fuel canisters exploded, and caught a bunch of fireworks on fire, and they went everywhere. and so the reason why i say that is this guy, if we believe -- not if we believe what we are told, because you're not not told enough to know what to believe -- with the amount of information we have, the current narrative is this is an army soldier of 18 years, and i believe on leave from germany, and decided to on december 30th buy two weapons, two guns, drive from colorado, rent a vehicle, drive from colorado to las vegas, by a bunch of fireworks and feel canisters -- when i say fuel, will look like a ct scan, the other more liquid natural gas or propane, and decided to set them on fire, what it looks like what happened. that he put a charge in there to blow up come i think it would have looked more stupid than that. i appreciate what elon is saying about it's at the explosion up because it is so structurally sound -- there wasn't an explosion. it looks like it but that is not
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detonation. talking to people that know more about this than i do -- he knows -- his skill set would know how to take ammonium nitrate, ammonium powder, would you can buy, shoot at it, stuff that explodes, he would know how to take that and make a real bomb out of it. what i'm saying is what happened, i don't know is what he was trying to do. i don't know what happened. he had a gunshot wound in him, apparently before the truck exploded. it's las vegas. i don't believe the ever told us the truth about the vegas shooting. so i don't know what happened in front of the trump hotel other than a dead man was found in a vehicle that was on fire with a bunch of fireworks. and i hate it. >> judge jeanine: can ask a question? i will take my time asking this question. they say he shot himself first, and then the car explodes. i mean, i can't get into the minutia -- >> joey: that's why i think it was some sort of he set fire back there, it would take some time for that fire -- however he set off the initial blast was
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probably through the fuel because that would be the easiest way to do it. >> judge jeanine: what are you telling committed the bullet and the gun going off have anything to do with the explosion, or did he separately initiate that and then shoot himself? >> joey: they are saying he set fire to the back of the truck probably did something to start -- >> judge jeanine: then shot himself? >> joey: then shot himself and got blown up. >> jessica: fuel canisters. >> joey: there were fuel canisters, gasoline and -- >> judge jeanine: i just want to say one more thing. the fbi said there is no definitive link between this and las vegas and new orleans. meanwhile, they are both former military, both veterans. they came from the same base, fort bragg. they both rent electric trucks from the same company -- that no one is ever heard of -- and they both served in afghanistan. >> joey: can i just say real quick was not fort bragg is a huge army base -- >> judge jeanine: i know that. what is with the electric vehicle and the fact they run from this place no one ever
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heard of? >> jessica: tyrus has heard of it. >> tyrus: people with bad credit, suspended driver's license, people who pay more, it is one of those kind of rental places. it is not hurts and avis or whatever. usually lower economic people who can't necessarily go in and get a good credit check to rent a car. the more we talk about this, johnny, the more i feel like the two are connected, but they are different. because this feels more like a political statement. still an act of terrorism, but it was like someone setting themselves on fire in front of times square. it was that kind of a thing. because i refuse to believe, to your point, that an army elite green beret could not blow up, make a huge explosion if he wanted to. >> joey: unless it was the message he wanted to sent -- >> tyrus: the message. >> joey: i'm not saying that is it, i'm guessing it doesn't all add up nicely. >> tyrus: it's ever going to add up nice and neat. unfortunately, we cannot take the word of the fbi right now in
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its current state, we cannot. >> joey: we could take it yesterday morning. >> judge jeanine: that's for sure. >> tyrus: the sheriff kevin mchale, thing i'm saying his name right, his press conference is how you do it. that's how you do it. >> jessica: i found las vegas so refreshing on a comparison basis. i'm seeing the same things you are seeing, these kind of connections, musk and trump, et cetera -- >> kennedy: we still have a lot of outstanding questions about another terror event in las vegas, where more than 50 people were killed, and there has not been transparency in that city. >> jessica: i wanted to go to you, kennedy, though, because your partner is a combat veteran, as well, and i was wondering if you could shed some light on what you think is going on between the military connection -- >> kennedy: yes, who also served in the army come in afghanistan, so of course my brain, unlike some things going on here, look at this fort bragg connection, they both went to fort bragg, the second
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guy who tried to assassinate trump, he visited fort bragg reportedly over 100 times. so is there something about fort bragg? is there some connection? so i asked my thomistic partner, and he said the va is such an atrocious mass that he would not be surprised if these people tried to access care from the va and they were not appropriately treated, and he said the number of people who go in for treatment and who are that down by the administration over and over and over again, particularly psychologists, because he says it is a revolving door and people truly need the help are left essentially to wither, so i'm sure we will learn more about that but that is a very important part of the story. he also said of doug collins is in fact -- if he is confirmed as the va secretary, that there will be sweeping changes, and he
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has faith in him. >> joey: i do, too. >> kennedy: i hope to share his faith. >> joey: the va get a lot better under trump real quick. >> jessica: up next, donald trump calling out the biden administration after the terror attacks in new orleans. ♪ ♪ heights. serving customers with top tier mobile service is our business, but our mission is to honor and serve patriots, like harry mcbrien. post 911. my life oscillated between multiple tours with the marine corps and my police job, profoundly disrupting my health and changing who i was. harry reached out to the boot campaign, which offers individualized care to veterans and their families. the boot campaign's intervention was a lifeline. now, after 28 years on the police force, i'm retiring. my mission now is to is served. veterans and first responders. patriot mobile gives back to organizations that defend our god given rights and freedoms.
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my new teeth have improved my life and changed my future. - thank you. - you're so welcome. get the smile you want from the number one provider of fixed full arch dental implants in the u.s. schedule a free consultation. ♪ ♪ >> judge jeanine: president-elect donald trump is tearing into the biden administration following a deadly terror attack in new orleans. trump posting on truth social, "the usa is breaking down. a violent erosion of safety, national security, and democracy is taking place all across our nation. when we strengthen powerful leadership will stop it." meanwhile joe biden needing to meet with his homeland security team in the situation room before trying to assure the public that he has everything under control in the wake of the most recent attack. >> people of new orleans are sending an unmistakable message.
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they will not let this attack or the attacks, attackers, diluted ideology overcome us. none of us should fear -- we're going to continue to relentlessly pursue terrorist organizations where they are and they will find no safe harbor here. >> judge jeanine: all right, joey. to the extent you could understand that, biden is just saying and assuring all americans everything is well. >> joey: i wish he would just say don't and everyone in his little cabinet will echo it from every microphone. it really bothers me that his entire posture, we are giving new orleans what they need to investigate this and clean this up and do what they need to do. you come out. you have two events on the same day. the only connection may be that it was new year's day, we don't know. but the people in this country have been terrorized. that is true. the people in this country are traumatized. they are worried. they are upset.
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you are the leader of this country. you come out and you say we are going to get to the bottom of this, we are going to make sure our citizens are not vulnerable to over the horizon threat because we are not in afghanistan or the middle east anymore, i'm saying these organizations that were so defeated that we could bring everybody home, apparently are getting it done in our home. that goes to the federal government, not the police in new orleans and not the national guard national guard in louisiana. that goes to the federal government, the federal quarters, the federal fbi, to every mechanism we have that already infringes upon our rights to keep us safe, then at least do the keeping us safe part. then at least do the part where you find these people. you don't get radicalized sitting at home reading a book that was published five years ago. you get radicalized online. how do you not know these people are getting radicalized? how do you not know these people are getting to the point that they're going to commit mass murder and say that you are just
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going to support the new orleans police? >> judge jeanine: you know what, tyrus, joey brings up an interesting question, and that is the issue of how much, how far, how deep should law enforcement go in terms of online statements that people are making, and do they have the capacity to do that? >> tyrus: well, we know they have the capacity to do it because we saw the amount of people who were persecuted and gone after four saying i don't like what is going on in my child's school or someone saying i don't trust the vaccine. so we know they have the ability to track and stuff like that. there things you can do. there is a connection with everything, and it is failure. absolute failure across the board of our federal government, our federal agencies. americans are not safe anymore. it's not just about the fact that people are always going to do bad things, but there was always at least a fear. there is no fear right now. we are seeing open online celebrations of a guy shooting somebody in the back, or push a
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guy on the subway. we see across the board it is always the same thing no matter where this stuff happens. the first thing they say his thoughts and prayers. i don't want any more thoughts and prayers, i want angry and results. i don't think their families want to hear your prayers when you are not paying attention to them in the first place. i'm just saying come of the connection, to finish my point, is that we are seeing, whatever the president speaks, it is embarrassing, okay? he barely stepped out to give we are going to send money, we are going to send this, they should have already had money. >> judge jeanine: he is an embarrassment. that is the end of that. trump protecting terrorism is on the rise, what do you say? >> kennedy: i fear that he might be right. i share joey's concern from a little bit ago in the show that there has been a great deal of complacency and the fact that we haven't seen chatter, activity, an action like this in so long, people felt like it had been defeated. it's here. it's easier than ever.
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it certainly does feel coordinated. but also what struck me as we are in this nebulous period with a lame duck president who might not even know that he is president. i mean, he has a hard time articulating very simple points on a teleprompter. how is he making the critical calls in the middle of the night that god forbid will have to be answered given the environment that we are in right now. so yeah, i think there is an element of that and it scares me. >> judge jeanine: jessica, the biden administration say they caught 2,000 terrorists during the biden term and almost a million known and unknown gotaways. why would they continue to bring in under the cbp one app people who don't even have to stop at the border? >> jessica: well, we actually have a huge change in the amount of people that are getting into this country and the number of deportations, so we now have the lowest number of border crossings in four years -- >> judge jeanine: they are flying them in, wipe cross the border if you get a free flight? >> jessica: is not true -- that they are just flying them in.
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>> judge jeanine: they are -- >> jessica: without background checks. >> judge jeanine: waiting minute, you think they are flying them in and they do background checks on them? >> jessica: yes, i do think they get it back on check. >> judge jeanine: from chile, venezuela -- >> jessica: mexico and central america and the amount of cooperation -- >> judge jeanine: you're telling me that haiti, ghana mollo, venezuela are giving background checks? >> jessica: you are telling me that in the last year where we have gotten out over 700,000 people which is the most that we have deported since the year 2010, the lowest number of border crossings, record seizures of drugs that are supposed to be coming across the border, that this is a wide open border -- >> judge jeanine: why did biden lose if it was so great? >> jessica: it was too little, too late, but when you say -- i'm glad we can agree on something. but when you say i'm embarrassed watching joe biden come i'm not embarrassed seeing someone stand up there and say let's wait for some facts here because donald trump went out there and he said -- >> judge jeanine: he assured americans --
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>> jessica: all of the comments that he made and the statements which said we need to make sure we have the right facts, the right facts were that the guy in new orleans was an american. he wasn't an illegal -- >> judge jeanine: no one is saying he wasn't -- >> jessica: that's not true. there have been republicans who have been on tv today talking about -- >> judge jeanine: i will call them myself. >> jessica: that it's an open border problem. >> kennedy: not a mutually exquisite problem -- >> jessica: but you know what they are trying to do. they are trying -- it is a demonization, undocumented people. these aren't undocumented people. >> judge jeanine: 75% of the arrests in new york city are illegals. >> jessica: move the goalposts. move it, shoot a goal wide, whatever. >> judge jeanine: coming up, major safety concerns across the u.s. allegedly. after the a terror attack in new orleans. ♪ ♪ or what if... (vo) once-weekly mounjaro could help?
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>> joey: new safety concerns of high-profile events across the country following the deadly terror attack on bourbon street. we are just weeks away from the super bowl and mardi gras in new orleans. the sugar bowl is curtly underway after being postponed. the new orleans police commissioner that security is top-of-the-line for today's game. >> can handle manage these large crowds. super bowl is still in play. we are going to harden our targets. we will correct any kind of gaps that there have been. those will be corrected. and you will see today, we are using heavier equipment and not just patrol cars, we will use heavier equipment to harden the targets. >> joey: so, judge, i'll go to you, you are pretty fired up about this for good reason. the posture there that she doesn't understand the incompetency that led to the event to the begin with. >> judge jeanine: you are so right. you hit the nail on the head. this isn't about staffing. it isn't about getting a heavier
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truck. it's about competence. it's competence. how smart are you to predict where the vulnerabilities are? and they are not. and i'll tell you what bothers me about all of this, and i'm not going to go through the whole thing about the bollards and the contracts and the corruption and all of that. although i am not connecting the bollards with corruption come i'm just asking a question which is typical in new orleans. put the issue is, is this about the economy for them? is this about saying new o new orleans, we rely on you for the super bowl, sugar bowl, mardi gras, and everything is safe? is it about politicians and making sure they get a financial return from the city? or is it about keeping americans safe? and i'm not sure what it is. i really am not. >> joey: jessica, new orleans has the super bowl coming to town, there's going to be an inauguration in d.c., there was a big new year celebration, they
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were free to walk off in both directions for several blocks here. it seems the nypd understands what he vulnerable large gathering is and how to protect against it. are you living in new york and worried about anything? >> jessica: sometimes. i have talked extensively on the show about the change in the subway and the conditions there. i commute both ways on the subway, and it is very different, and it seems like every day there is another story, two people slashed at grand central, another push and pushed into the tracks, you see someone like congressman richie torres, who i hope does have the high aspiration of running for governor here, where he is on it every single day, saying you can't have such an unsafe environment for new yorkers. these are things that make the city great. what i am interested the new orleans front is the ag, liz murrill i think is her name, said she wouldn't have had the sugar bowl today but no one asked my opinion, which seems really strange, that you wouldn't have asked the top cop
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in the state's opinion on that. that was strange to me. >> joey: i don't know about the authority the ag has at the state or federal level, but looking at las vegas, we went out and come back in, would you feel safe going to the sugar bowl today? i would, i think. i think i would feel safe. but i would have to be there to know. >> kennedy: i would feel safer today than i would yesterday. having 24 hours to get a more conference a plan together, i would trust that. law enforcement. i would certainly entertain the opinion of people who were worried and spitballing about a terror event before new year's eve who were obviously batted down in the discussion. so yes, i would talk to them. i would have more faith on a daylight today. but as someone, you know, my worry is the errant psycho who is on the subway train. i am always worried about big unstable people on a subway platform. i get as far away from them as i
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can. we need to have more port awareness as we are walking around these big cities and big events. fure, but it certainly changes how a lot of us look at other people we interact with at these big events. >> joey: tyrus? >> tyrus: think is a complete disconnect. as much as you hate to let terrorism dictate, i just feel with the amount of death and a much of people still fighting for their lives it was important is to run the sugar bowl the next day. i don't agree with that. the other thing that bothers me, seeing her comments alone just enrage me. saying you are going to have a bigger truck. they are not going to strike the same place again, it is going to be a different situation. it is a complete overhaul. the level of incompetence and the fact that's your answer should make everyone whose family wants to go anywhere right now take pause. look at the city were going to go into. look at their police force. how many police officers are able to work?
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new orleans at one point i think come i don't have the exact number, down to 700 law enforcement officers. with what we have had with defunding the police and no cash bail and all of that stuff, you need to really think about where you are going with your family. why even put yourself in that situation? >> joey: all right, ahead, pro-hamas protesters taking to the streets just hours after this terror attack in new orleans. ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ >> tyrus: a pro-palestinian mom takes over the streets of new york city, shocking display just hours after the deadly terror attacks in new orleans that killed 14 innocent victims and the violent truck explosion in las vegas. i just have one question for everybody: when is our federal government going to start taking these people serious? if you say you are hamas, when they going to start reading them like hamas? they are saying what they are. why are we treating the many different? why are we not investigating them? why are we not pulling them and for question? >> judge jeanine: real fast, legally, just because you say you are hamas, it doesn't mean it is a crime and you can be arrested. this is america. this is why everybody wants to come here because you can pretty much do and say whatever you want. i think the fault lies -- because i totally agree with
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you -- the fault lies in idiots like alvin bragg who had hamas camped on at columbia university. they were in charge with trespass, criminal mischief, breaking into the building, for the people who worked in that building, they let them go, so there are no consequence as many commit crimes, so they feel free to commit crimes, and one more thing. hate is hate. hate leads to violence. violence leads to reality retaliation and community unrest and that is what we are heading for, folks, you heard it from me. >> jessica: new sheriff or sheriffs coming to town, these protesters are going to meet their match on campuses and in times square and at the united nations, and there are a lot of democrats who are happy about that change that is coming. >> joey: i was here in new york and i didn't know that was happening until i saw a reporting on it. i would love to say these protests don't really matter and they don't have an effect, but they do because we just saw that people can be radicalized and inspired by the things other people do, and at this point it
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is a matter of time until someone is so mad about this that they do something evil and we don't need that. >> kennedy: this is the result of academic groupthink, and it is absolutely disgusting. people like the perpetrator on new year's eve are there martyrs. that is who they are celebrating. they want to destroy your way of life. they don't think you are cool. they are not on your side. and they are getting their talking points from terrorists. >> tyrus: the very latest on the new orleans attack is coming up next. ♪ ♪ ase or ulcerative colitis and still have symptoms... you don't have to settle. ask your gastroenterologist if switching to rinvoq is right for you. it's one of the latest treatments from the makers of humira. rinvoq works differently than humira and may help. rinvoq is a once-daily pill that can deliver rapid symptom relief, lasting steroid-free remission, and helps visibly reduce damage of the intestinal lining. rinvoq can lower ability to fight infections. before treatment, test for tb and do bloodwork.
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>> kennedy: joey? >> joey: to the republicans in the senate confirm these folks so we can get our country safe. >> >> jessica: i feel so awful for everyone affected and truly terrible start to 2025. i hope 2025 gets better. screen jean unfortunately we have seen the true face of evil. and i don't think there is anyone better to fight it than donald trump. he got rid of the caliphate in a few weeks and i think is he going to be to protect all of us. pins and needles between now and january 20th. i also know there are more good people than bad in this country. there is still greatness among us and we have to remember that and mo forward together, always thinking of those who have been affected. that's it for us. have great night. thank you. ♪
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