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tv   Greta Van Susteren  FOX News  October 6, 2010 10:00pm-11:00pm EDT

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>> some are, some aren't. >> sean: you support amnesty? >> amnesty, yes! >> sean: you support illegal immigration. >> no! >> greta: greta is next. >> greta: newt gingrich is here in minutes. first, if you are running for office, duck! check out three samples of campaign ads getting rowdy and downright nasty. first the not so nasty but a slogan we've never heard. here's tom barrett in wisconsin. >> i'm within of the cheapest guys on the planet and proud. as governor i will cut wasteful spending and put madison on a diet. in these tough times i'll stack my record of fighting for jobs up against anyone in the country. when it comes to the negative ads, i trust you to separate fact from fiction. >> greta: that's not all. some democrats are bleeping angry and on the attack like carol clark running for the united states house. >> no one does more for the
quote
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special interests in washington than congresswoman michelle bachmann. she stood up for bp when no one else would. michelle bachmann not doing [ bleep ] for the people of the 6th district but more than her share for the special interests in washington. >> greta: candidates aren't the only ones. friends of harry reid paid for this brutal ad. >> introducing sharron angle's crazy -- made with real demint it will ref you up for second amendment remedies before militia practice. all made with nonfloor dated water. -- so, so, so extreme! >> greta: us rick klein editor for abc world news. at last they are getting more creative. >> you have to be funny to breakthrough. at last we -- at least we are seeing humor.
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you have to match that up with your campaign message. hard to see that in the crazy juice ad. >> greta: it was a good one. i don't think angle thought it was finance any. >> you need breakthrough. i think we are seeing a great, silly season of ads. you need to do something different. >> greta: governor wannabe says he was cheap. >> this could be the year of the cheapskates. if you can pitch yourself as someone who is fiscally responsible. he's talking about his personal life as well as his professional life. people can say i like that guy he will be tight fisted with my dollars. >> greta: the one we didn't show in colorado bennet says his opponent is like angle. now he's saying he's like this other person and attacking angle. >> that's a harder sell. i don't think most voters in colorado are focused on angle
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that's a nevada specific thing. i that i is one of the risks with some of the comments out there things that the tea party candidates have said. if people associate the republican agenda with individual candidates it is a little bit more of a stretched argument. >> greta: every candidate, republican, democrat cut down on spending, get jobs not raise taxes or cut them more. not a washington insiderser even if you are an incumbent, i'm for you, i am you. the other guy wants your money, cut your services, take your social security, take your medicare only in it for the lobbyists and is a washington insider. >> sounds like you have a campaign message. >> greta: they are all saying the same thing. >> whether you are coming from the left or right, you need the same message veters are angry, fed up with government and you need to pitch yourself in that wail. >> greta: my guess is, the voters -- didn't pay attention. they are amused.
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they all do say the same thing. >> i wonder about the effectiveness of ads down the stretch. we are seeing all kinds of record spending outside groups, inside groups the campaigns. you need to break away. when you bleep out a word maybe that works or things like crazy pans that can help. fret growth i -- pants that can help. >> greta: the michelle bachmann race even if she does win, if the cars fall the way democrats want them to fall, they can do gerrymandering -- >> the redistricting that happens after who controls the state house matters because you can hurt a lot of these folks. >> greta: the other news that has come out yesterday angle is fought [ unintelligible ] >> a couple of factors, obviously harry reid has a ceiling. it is going to be hard to number higher. there's a tea party candidate on the ballot people can vote
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for none of the above. there's an anti-harry reid vote if that gets split different ways that's his path to victory. >> greta: i assume none of the above with the tea party is going to be successful this year american voters don't seem happy. >> one of the strategies democrats will have to drive off the negatives of the other person and clearly if they den get any votes for them that helps, you don't have to crack 50% to win. >> you hear how the likely voters, we pay the most attention. how do these candidates get likely voters to vote? >> most of the likely voters are already decided. >> greta: you still that get them to vote! >> this election is like none other it is really an election munch you need to get people energy -- month. you need to get people energy advised. [ unintelligible ] >> greta: who likes the early he -- voting? >> it is an unknown quantity.
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any candidate that has institutional advantage, machine on the ground. incumbents would be favored by that. on the other side people that energized to do it. early voting is are more -- is more of the norm. candidates are adapting. >> greta: i guess the candidate who likes early voting gets arrested the day before election day. >> october surprise, you like that. >> greta: i don't like the early voting, i like the surprise of the big day. >> we still don't note results. >> greta: you're right. thank you rick. >> you've heard of men having women problems. how about the democrats? are they having issues with women voters? a pew report in may 2009 found 41% of women identified themselves as democrats. 22% as . are things changing since may '09? here's why democrats might be worry. new poll finds in a hypothetical congressional
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race, 47% of women would vote democrat. 44% would vote republican. dana perino joins us live. the women are big voters. >> women are big voters. many women also consider themselves independents. you look at those independent numbers and they can swing back and forth. you've had sarah palin who showed conservative republican women, whether or not they supported her in the long run or would support her in the future, it shows them they could have a voice out there. >> greta: does she draw out more women voters? >> sure. >> greta: for democrats as well? >> maybe. you could look at sarah palin and hillary clinton last year both having such prominent roles in politics. in addition, for the first time, to my knowledge, you have two women running statewide in california, self-funding. they are not using their husband' money, they made on
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their own merit. they are willing to pay what it takes to try to be competitive. they are competitive. they could win those races. >> greta: businesswoman in connecticut. [ talking over each other ] >> not only that for the republican party you have more diversity that you haven't seen before especially amongst women. susannah martinez is likely to be the next governor in new mexico and nikki haley should be the republican in georgia. that doesn't mean we don't have a long way to go. a great article a couple weeks ago she talks about blackburn observing what was happening especially at the tea party events. she says there are a lot of young grandmothers, grandmothers, one or two children, they are worried about their grandchildren or their children's future. i that i there's a movement afoot. i don't know if republicans
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will be smart tough to -- smart enough to take advantage of it but they have a real tune. >> greta: this campaign seems to be almost no social issues. it seems to be money a jobs. are those men and women's issues? >> increasing so for women in particular. other demographics will -- studies will show you that women increasingly are contributing more income to the household in some cases they are bringing in more. or they are the head of the household. they are thinking, i run this money. i work hard everyday. i want fairness. i want -- i don't want my children to be burdened with something they can't afford and that they don't need. and i'm for smaller government. >> greta: i suspect 20, 30, 40 years ago husband and wives, whatever the husband is going to vote, now there's a possibility they can cancel each other. >> they can cancel each other out or maybe it has become a
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family affair. women are convincing the men. women make a lot of household decisions outside of voting what kind of car the family is going to buy, household budget. women are usually the ones this take care of the health care in the family they understand this issue very well they are are worry they are not going to have the doctor they want. a know a woman in nebraska, kathleen allen started a thing called liberty lunch. she invites women to come once a month. they have a guest speaker. it is an inexpensive lunch but substancive. now speakers are vying for the possession to speak in front of this group because they realize how influential women are in these campaigns. >> greta: you expect a big turn out both sides? >> i expect a big turn out on the republican side because of what i have read. >> greta: how do you get them to vote? [ talking over each other ] >> women can multi-task -- [ talking over each other ]
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>> greta: you still gotta get people to vote. people get riled up and say they are going to vote -- >> this year making sure people get to polls, things fall in the republicans' favor because of the intensity. they've fought for two years to get to this position. the tea party movement, the whole thing. they are worried about the next two years. what i think is interesting is what happens november 3rd, as positioning for the 2012 election starts. it is like putting up christmas decorations before halloween. >> republican woman candidate? >> hopefully in the future. >> greta: wondering whether sarah palin is going to run or not. dana, thank you. next newt gingrich is here. he just did something that really ticked off speaker nancy pelosi. what did he do? he will tell you. gloria allred returns. now the last time she was here
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we locked horns over the meg whitman housekeeper dust up. there's news tonight. gloria is minutes away. >> wasn't this guy -- what did this guy do for only the second time in history? we are gonna show you. [ crunch ] look! [ helicopter noise ] [ grunting ] [ male announcer introducing new wheat thins crunch stix.
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>> greta: newt gingrich is here. hear about the memo he to republican candidates? getting under the of nancy pelosi. already she has come out swatting at the speaker. she seems annoyed. what is in the memo causing democrats' noses to get out of joint? speaker gingrich joins us live. mr. speaker, you really did it this time. she is not happy with you. >> i don't understand what she is so upset about. i took a fact that in june we paid more people food stamps than ever before in american
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history. i took a fact which is their job-killing policies on taxes and regulations have made this the longest, deepest recession since the great depression. and i took a fact that the democrats left town without passing a new tax law leaving every business in america uncertain about their january taxes, less than 90 days away. and i suggested that their policies kill jobs and therefore food stamps may be right symbol for the democratic party. she seemed to get very up set >> greta: i think she didn't like the way it was framed. tell when you run, you can either -- you can say democrats are the party of food stamps, while the gop is the party for paychecks. she responded, she said that food stamps is the biggest bang for the buck when you do food stamps and unemployment insurance it is the biggest bang for the buck. she says for every dollar a person receives in food stamps,
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$1.79 is put back in the economy. >> i carry a bumper sticker that says 2 plus 2 equals 4. would i would be curious how a dollar given to somebody becomes a $1.79. if we could get that to work at the treasury, we could payoff the federal debt and never worry about spending or anything. somehow, i don't understand how liberal math turns one dollar into $1.79. people are being driven to food stamps because the democratic policies are killing their jobs. people don't voluntarily say, i want to give up a paycheck so i can get food stamps. most americans overwhelmingly would rather have a with a paycheck than be forced to depend on the government for food stamps. i think speaker pelosi doesn't
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realize that when her policies kill jobs people aren't greatful and happy she redisbuts income to them in the form of a food stamp. they would like a stable environment for small business, litigation reform, tax cuts, policies that create jobs. so people can go out and buy their own food with their own money. they don't need nancy pelosi giving them a stamp to buy food. they would like to keep the money in their pocket, that they could then buy their own food. by their own clothing. go on their own vacation and not have the government take care of them. >> greta: let's attack strategy on a few races. christine o'donnell since you are giving advice to republicans running what is your advice for her in delaware? >> slow down go back to 2 plus 2 equals 4. and draw the contrast between puerto rico's pet which is what he described -- between harry reid's pet which is what
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he described. higher taxes, more spending, fewer jobs. he's a perfect example of a food stamp candidate he's going to further weaken the delaware economy with liberal policies that make it harder to create jobs. christine o'donnell has to stanford the taxpayers for you having a right to get -- has to stand for the taxpayers and you having a right to get a paycheck if you just focus on that choice and make it a policy choice, not a personality choice she has a chance to win. >> greta: meg whitman in california she's got the issue over the housekeeper. what is your advice for her on how to handle that controversy? >> well, i think that meg whitman has to go back to the much bigger issue for all of california, which is how much longer are you going to allow sacramento to destroy the state's economy to cripple everybody in the state to reduce everybody's income.
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put more on food stamps and kill more jobs and drive more companies out of california? i was just in texas last week the number of companies that call them from california and say they are thinking of moving to texas, because they can't an for the regulations, the red tape, the taxes, the special interest politics, she's got to wrap sacramento around jerry brown's neck. brown represents a family in office since 1946, the democratic party of california. she has got to make it a clear choice. if you think you can afford sacramento you ought to vote for jerry brown. if you think we need real change you ought to vote for meg whitman. >> greta: please stand by. remember this? >> i know a lot of people like you and a lot people on fox news channel would like her -- >> greta: now stop that gloria, gloria, don't you dare do that to me! >> greta: yes gloria allred is
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back smack in the middle of the housekeeper dust up. john morton here with a major announcement. he goes on the record, coming up. [ advisor 1 ] what do you see yourself doing one week, one month, five years after you do retire? ♪ client comes in and they have a box. and inside that box is their financial life. people wake up and realize i better start doing something. we open up that box. we organize it. and we make decisions. we really are here to help you. they look back and think, "wow. i never thought i could do this." but we've actually done it. [ male announcer ] visit ameriprise.com and put a confident retirement more within reach. [ male announcer ] visit ameriprise.com [ malhis day starts thwith his arthritis pain.. that's breakfast with two pills. the morning is over, it's time for two more pills. the day marches on, back to more pills. and when he's finally home... but hang on; just two aleve can keep arthritis pain away all day
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>> greta: mr. speaker i don't
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have to tell you how much we in the media will have to talk are more and gossip and everything else. the rumor circling washington is vice president biden might be replaced with secretary of state hillary clinton. your thought on that? >> i didn't know. i saw a i guess something went through today that suggested maybe there was an all-time swap with randy moss going to the vikings, there's this sense of trading positions going on right now. the e-mail i -- >> greta: that actually is a done deal. he is leaving the patriots. >> the same tradition what i saw today said maybe secretary clinton would become vice president and vice president would become secretary of state and karzai could be traded to the vikings to engine moss. they didn't suggest who would replace karzai. i think is the silly season. vice president biden is vice president. secretary of state hillary clinton is secretary of state.
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they are not going to change. they can't constitutionally change either one. the president will decide who his running mate is in the summer of 2012. >> greta: i understand politics is politics. i guess today when i started reading thes go sip and -- reading this gossip business even though we sometimes don't have the facts to prove it. it seems to me vice presidented by a man of enormous experience whether you are for him or against him. whether you agree with his policies or not. he spent years and years as an experienced member senate of foreign relations. if he were dumped from the ticket for somebody else it shows such disloyalty to me that it bothers me. >> we have lots of governors' races. lots of senate races. lots of house races. you are on the edge of what
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may be the biggest election in modern times. i saw a reputable analyst today who said he thought the republicans could win more than 60 seats. that would be the highest swing since 1932 in terms of votes by one party. there's a lot of exciting to talk about that are real for the next 3 1/2 weeks. the time to speculate about vice president biden, i suspect is about july of 2012. and between now and then, he's the vice president. i hope he does the best possible job. the secretary of state important. i hope secretary clinton does the best possible job. i think they are both locked into their jobs for a while. >> greta: you are right let's put the lid on that. senator boxer and fiorina. you have been in the business of giving advice in the last 2001y four hours. what advice do you have for fiorina, because she is down a few points? >> again this is a year where the more republicans can make
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it an issue of policy rather than personality,. the more they can draw the contrast, senator boxer has been there 18 years. are the people of california happy with what has happened in washington? did they think the current democratic policies are good? do they want to see more money in washington and less in california? do the degree that carly fiorina can make this a fundamental choice of two directions for america. a job destroying, big tax, big litigation boxer policy and job creating lower tax pro jobs policy by some somebody who has created jobs. if you are to draw a difference between the work that fiorina has done in the private sector and boxer's work of destroying private sector jobs, you would have a clear, decent policy choice which would get you back to boxer as the candidate of food stamps and fiorina as the candidate of paychecks. >> greta: fiorina has been in
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the race since june she has been making that argument. boxer is making a different argument. apparently the people of california at last now in terms of likely voters think boxer is the better one to serve the state. there's got to be some sort of change-up. we are closing in on the election. i don't think that -- that he may be effective argument but not effective enough to win. >> well, look, i think california is one of those states if you look -- california ranks second to michigan for total unemployment every 5th californian is out of work, works part-time or has given up looking. i think you are in a situation where, if carly fiorina can drive into this every single part of california, a very complex state in the end pocketbook is going to beat personality. boxer has been part of tess jobs -- destroying jobs in a way that has made
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california poorer and weaker. i don't believe in is a year where republicans did well on personality attacks. democrats have to attack on personality, because they have no policies they can defend. they have to try to make their opponent radioactive. i think republicans are better off to look past that and go back to the voters' own self interest with a better future and more jobs and more take home pay. >> greta: what race do you think is going to surprise us more election day? >> delaware has the chance to be the most unusual upset. connecticut closing raply. the democratic attorney general there is such a weak candidate that may be a big surprise. >> greta: he's up 14 points, how could he be weak? everyone knows these this vietnam thing. he's up 14 points! >> you asked me what the biggest surprise would be, wouldn't that surprise you? >> greta: i think he's closing in that surprised me. i asked you the surprise question and your words
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surprised me. >> okay. all i'll tell you is, i think the republicans are between plus 55 and plus 65 in the house and between plus 7 and plus 12 in the senate. between 32 and 34 republican governors after election night. i think that will be bigger sweep than '94 maybe comparable to anything we've seen since 1932. >> greta: mr. speaker as always, thank you. >> thank you. >> greta: next gloria allred goes on the record again. news in the meg whitman housekeeper dust-up. last time gloria was here fireworks exploded a bit. >> donald trump, the world's most expensive barbie and baby tiger coming up. a wild night here on the record. mary: does this dress make my backside look big?
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you do? your medicare card. [ laughing ] but don't let me orone see it except your doctor or their staff. and don't tell anyone your card or social secury number over the phone. guard your card. [ woman 2 ] i hear unauthorized card use is a big source of fraud. the new healthcare law ls us crack down on crinals and win against fraud. making medicare stronger. and speaking of winning... [ man 2 ] not again! [ man ] learn more at stopmedicarefraud.gov. >> greta: i bet you didn't think she would come back.
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well she did. she is here. lawyer gloria allred is back go on the record. gloria is in the middle of a dust up that has changed the race for california governor. meg whitman's long time housekeeper an illegal immigrant says whitman knew she was in the country illegally. whitman denies it. things got heated the last time gloria was here. >> greta, let me address your other point. besides the that a multi-millionaire somehow doesn't think when the government -- >> greta: that's blackmail that that's the problem gloria. you are blackmailing her because she looks like the creep because she is the rich person against the person who is here illegally. who is going to treat her -- >> whole on! >> greta: today we a copy of a0 wage claim filed against whitman. i say with all sincerity, welcome bam gloria. >> thank you greta, nice to be
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back. -- >> here's the wage complaint. i see that it is filed for approximately two year period signed by your client, which the social security section this time is left blank. which is smart. let me ask you, this is now a search for compensation for what she says is wages that are owed, right? >> yes, that's correct. and mileage reimbursement as well. >> greta: is there any reason -- did you ever go to meg whitman and say, i represent someone who has a dispute you for x number of dollars and i would like to sit down and talk to you and see if it is a legitimate claim, meg whitman would want to settle it? >> no, and there is no requirement that i do so. >> greta: there's no requirement. as a practical matter. if you want to effectively represent your client the best thing is to see if you can settle it quietly. so you don't put the neon sign
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up, i'm here illegally and i've committed a fraud under oath. and you get the money for your client on the spot without all the circus. >> i actually disagree with you greta. because i believe that my client has a right to decide, after she is advised of the options of the way to do it. she wanted to speak out. she has a right to speak out you know what, meg whitman had her chance to pay her. she did not even pay her for her last week of work after she fired her, because nicky asked for her help in getting legalized. i think that she had notice under california law an employer has a duty to pay wages once that employee is terminated has to pay them that day that they are terminated. i think that nicky has waited for more than a year to receive her wages. that's more than a year too long. i think we have a right to do it. any way that we want to do it.
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now the government is going to intervene and attempt to see if they can settle it. >> greta: a couple of things. one, in the complaint you don't mention that extra week. you just talk about the 15 hours versus the 18 hours a week. that's an omission. >> it is not an omission. but it will be amened. we've also recently learned that. in -- in the complaint we talk about the fact that nicky alleges she had to work more than 15 hours a week but was only paid for hours a week even though some weeks she had to work 18 hours a week in order to get the job done. >> greta: she was paid about $23 hours not significant but that was the a.m. she was paid an hour, right? >> yes but she wasn't paid for all hours she worked. >> greta: but that was the hourly rate. the state of california the phaupblg is about $8. to the -- the minimum wage is
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about $8. was there any explanation as to flexibility discussion saying look i'll pay you $23 hour and there will be some level of flexibility in the employment? >> absolutely not. she was told that she would get paid for 15 hours a week. when she did tell them, look you've added responsibilities. in addition to the housekeeping, you are asking me to drive the children to school. you are asking me to drop becomes off at the library. to you to the airport. still, even though she told them she couldn't possibly clean that 3700 square foot house, plus the guest house and do all those added responsibilities in only 15 hours a week, still she was told, you will have to prioritize. so they knew she was working more than 15 hours a week. but they refused to pay her for more than those 15 hours, that's wrong. >> greta: i still don't get, if a client came into my house
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who had a problem. and the client had possible criminal problems because of falsifying a document. if a client had the possibility of being deported because the person is illegal here. if the client had a money problem. the first thing i would do, i would send a demand letter or contact the person. i can't get past that. i can get past the whole charade thing. it looks so much to me like this is so gaming the election. that this is not typically the way lawyers actually do -- try to help their clients this is not trying to vole of an economic dispute. it has all the markings of trying to smear meg whitman. whether she owes $600 for not -- or not -- whether she owes $6,000 or not, -- >> there is no law that says i have to do things other lawyers may do emthem. we've won hundreds of millions of dollars for victims of --
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>> greta: this is $6,000. it is worth putting this woman at risk? is $6,000 the amount of money that you put a client at risk of being deported or prosecuted? is it really worth that? >> well, here's the point, nicky wanted to speak out publicly. as she said yesterday in our news conference, no one held a gun to her head. no one -- she is no one's puppet. she has made an informed decision after she thought about it at great length and was advised of all of the risks she want odd to speak out so people would know who meg whitman really is! >> greta: i think she would have been a lot smarter to talk to a lawyer who worried more about her liberty and whether she would be deported and whether she can make some public statement about someone running for office. >> you really don't know what her lawyers worry about or don't worry about. >> greta: you know what gloria, first thing of a job of a
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lawyer to do protect the client not throw the client out to the wolves. that's the first job. if you can protect your client, you shouldn't do your job -- you -- >> this client nicky is intelligent, you shouldn't underestimate her ability to make informed choices she can decide she wants to take the risk. >> greta: does she need a lawyer for? was this your advice? >> i will never disclose what advice give to a client. i will tell you she has been fully informed of all of the risks, the benefits versus the risks. she has may her own accident she was willing to take those risks and -- her own decisions she was willing to take those risks and she is not sorry she did. >> greta: she may ultimately be sorry it is regrettably for $6,000 she puts herself at
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enormous risk. >> it wasn't because of the $6,000, she wants people to know how she was treated when she was an employee of meg whitman -- >> greta: gloria, she lied and violated the law. she not the ideal spokesperson for that -- this issue. >> maybe meg whitman is not the i dell person for governor if she was on notice she an undocumented worker and continued to employ her -- >> greta: that's your idea that is your idea: you -- you can keep making this stuff up. you can make it up. you have the document where your client lied and said she had a social security number. you can make this stuff up because that's what you want it to be. >> and you can spin support meg whitman although you may try.
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>> greta: i'm not spinning it. i don't know whitman. i've never met her. i don't even know the woman q >> i believe you, you don't know her. you also don't know my client. the document we held up last week which is the 2003 social security letter that meg whitman denied receiving that has her husband's handwriting on it. obviously she lied saying neither of them had received that letter when they. put them on notice they had an undocumented employee they were continuing to employ. she says they received letters every year after that, >> greta: i got to go, thank you. >> always a pleasure greta, thank you. >> greta: ice director has a major announcement. he tell you, next. ♪
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>> greta: there's much more ahead but first to our new york newsroom. >> reporter: washington apologizing for a renee toe helicopter attack which left three pakistani soldiers dead. as gunmen set fire to 55 tankers trapped between pakistan and afghanistan. pakistani authorities closed that crossing to trucks carrying supplies to nato forces. >> wild weather for residents near flagstaff, arizona, three tornadoes touching down wednesday. the twisters derailed 28 cars of a freight train, knocked over big rigs and damaged homes. >> checking the markets in asia, nikkei is up 9702. hang seng up at 22,940. dow jones futures at 10,905. for more business news tune into the fox business network. i'm ainsley earhardt now back to on the record. >> greta: does the illegal
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immigration problem getting better or worse? we report you decide. today in washington homeland security secretary napolitano and ice director morton made an announcement. big announcement. 392,000, why is that the number that is part of this announcement >> that's the highest number of individuals who have been removed from the united states in the agency's history. >> greta: before we came on air, we did math it is more than 1,000 people a day. >> right more than we removed last year. the big news here is not only is this the largest number of total removals, the number of criminal offenders removed this year has gone up dramatically to 195,000. over half the people we removed from the country this year had criminal convictions. >> greta: which means the other half didn't. >> other half didn't just people here unlawfully. >> greta: that brings me to the question.
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gloria allred, her client admitted to being here illegally and falsifying her social security. the chief enforcement. often times prosecutors taking cases to messages. what are you going to do about her? >> let me say this i'm not going to on the specifics of a case particularly one that, you know involves potential criminal allegations. let's say we are going to take a look at that case and the facts and we'll go from there. >> greta: had you her of her before gloria allred went on tv with her? >> never. >> greta: that's the problem. therein lies my problem with tpwhroria. you never would have had any win -- win of this woman? >> no kpwhepb. >> greta: right that says a lot --. what are secure communities?
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>> how we are going into jails around the country and try to identify people through their fingerprints. traditionally you had your principles taken and they went to the fbi. now it guess to the fbi and department of homeland security and we are identifying people at the time they are arrested. if they are here unlawfullally, they have a different name. it offers the opportunity to -- transform the face of immigration enforcement. in a few years we'll be able to know is in our jails? who is getting convicted, charged with what? are they here unlawfully? if they are remove them from the united states. >> greta: your numbers are up fighting a problem that is difficult. thanks for being with us and congratulations. i know you are working hard. it is a tough job, thank you. >> tough, but great job. >> greta: next, the best of the rest. something just happen for the first time since 1956. we are going to show you,
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next. to germany's nurburgring to challenge ourselves on the most demanding track in the world. with us, in spirit, wasvery great car that we'd ever competed with. the bmw m5. and the mercedes-benz e63. for it was their amazing abilities that pushed us to refine, improve and, ultimately, develop the worls fastest production sedan. [ engine revving ] the cts-v, from cadillac. the new standard of the world. we all do it. but you don't have to. thanks to secret flawless renewal... with odor-absorbing micro capsules that capture... odor and release a fresh scent. it's still working, so you can stop checking.
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>> greta: here's the best of the rest this is simply dazzling. phillies pitcher halladay just threw a no-hitter in the first round of the playoffs. >> announcer: one strike away. a bouncer, ruiz, and time, roy
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halladay has thrown a no-hitter! >> greta: that's fun. only the second in post-season history. the only other pitcher to do it yankee don larson threw a perfect game in the 1956 world series. tonight was halladay's post-season debut. not a bad start. phillies beat the reds 4-0. >> anything that cost half a million dollars should not be considered a toy. however, a custom design barbie is expected to get a pretty penny. the doll is decked out with a diamond necklace, black strapless dress, price $300 to $500,000 that would make her the most expensive barbie in history. if you feel like shelling out the cash, all proceeds go to the breast cancer research foundation. that auction is october 20th.
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>> life is full of suprises especially at the accident in germany. zookeeper thought the tiger was infertile. she just gave birth to a cub. the bib weighed a little more than two pounds -- the baby weighed a little more than two pounds at birth but has gained nine pounds already. the first tiger cub at the frankfurt zoo in 26 years. still ahead, donald trump for president, 2012? there's a catch that might keep him out of the race. stay tuned. [ advisor 1 ] what do you see yourself doing one week, one month, five years after you do retire? ♪ client comes in and they have a box. and inside that box is their financial life. people wake up and realize i better start doing something.
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>> greta: 11:00 is almost here, flash studio lights, it's time. last call. now the field of presidential contenders is wide open in 2012. really wide open. >> there is word donald trump may run for president. is that a good idea? haven't enough americans been told "you're fired"? >> the we'll see if the donald goes for it. thanks for being with us tonight. we'll see you again tomorrow, make sure you check out our facebook fan page. until then, keep it here on