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Transcripts For FOXNEWSW Fox And Friends Sunday 20160424 10:00:00

♪ hello, friends. good morning. sunday the 24th of april, 2016. i'm anna kooiman. we do have a fox news alert for you. gunfire inside a high school prom. there's people hurt. the brand-new details breaking overnight. and so much for acting more presidential. >> lyin' ted cruz has absolutely no way he can win. he's lyin' ted. and kasich, he's 1 for 38. i mean he's running, i'm just running. why you running? i don't know. this is crooked hillary clinton. >> that's donald trump of course, back in true trump form as ted cruz pulls even close in the race for delegates. and now we know why hillary clinton's press team gets its own separate plane. before it was used for politics there was something even weirder going on on board. we'll tell you that story and so much more, live from new york city, this is "fox & friends." just saying right now it is not monday. people are going to be -- what are you doing in? look -- >> must be a little confusing. >> a little confusing to some people and you in particular, tucker, because i'm often around this spot right here. >> it is one of the tricks we like to play on sunday morning. >> that's right. this is the sunday before a bunch of big elections, primaries on tuesday. so i came in because -- well, i need some o.t. >> plus, great to see you. >> thank you. >> great to have you on a weekend. it's a four-hour show. so i hope you brought extra food. >> one more hour, gravy. >> we need to start your news headlines because we have a fox news alert. three people are injured after a shooting at a wisconsin prom. someone showed up outside of ant anttigo high school and two were shot as they left the building. >> our officers are on scene already doing the walk-through of the area. they're able to engage the subject. we took the subject into custody. at this point, we feel that we have the subject in custody that was a threat. the community is safe at this point. >> the students suffered nonlife threatening injuries. everyone inside the school was escorted way from the prom. pop star prince was cremated in a private ceremony yesterday as hundreds gathered to remember his life. ♪ ♪ purple rain, purple rain >> the security fence outside of his minnesota estate is covered in purple balloons and flowers. family members handing out purple boxes to fans containing a photo of the musician. and "saturday night live" devoted the entire show to him. ♪ >> other people may have been on the show more times or performed more frequently, but there was always something different about a prince performance. it was special. it was an event. it was prince. >> in a never before seen clip was also shown of prince performing "let's go crazy" at the "saturday night live's" 40th anniversary party. new clues for the two missing teenagers lost at sea. the boat and iphone belonging to 14-year-old austin stefano were discovered about 100 miles off the coast of bermuda. he and perry cohen went missing after last july after setting sail from jupiter, florida. the boat was discovered in march. it was later identified by the serial number. the teenagers' families are hoping that the iphone could be restored somehow so they can recover any photos and possible clues in their disappearance. and watch out, hillary clinton. that nice private jet you have been using to transport the press -- your press team on the campaign trail, not only used for politics, tmz is reporting that the tail number actually matches the one related to the poker player and he's had quite a few wild parties on board. the jet appears on episode 11 of showtime's "the circus." those are your headlines. >> well now. who knew? >> all roads leading to cleveland, ohio, over the weekend. senator ted cruz crushed donald trump in a delegate landslide. interesting. garret tenney had more on the wins. >> good morning. >> reporter: it was a big weekend for ted cruz, but none will matter if donald trump can avoid a contested convention and win the nomination outright. yesterday, 94 delegates were selected and according to politico, at least 65 of the 94 delegates selected are supporters of ted cruz who plan to go with him if there's a contested convention. in maine, cruz reportedly won 19 of the 20 delegates that's available. in minnesota where marco rubio won the primary, cruz picked up nine seats and in south carolina he added another. but his biggest score was in utah where he picked up at least 36 of the 37 delegates seats available. but again, none of this will matter if donald trump runs the 1,237 delegates needed to secure the nomination outright on the first ballot. here's how that picture looks right now. trump has -- is far ahead of cruz and leads the way with 845 delegates overall. 400 away from wrapping up this race all together. back to y'all. >> thank you. >> we're learning a lot about this. >> who knew? >> how this works. >> the rules are the rules, but then who knew went on in the smoke-filled rooms. >> pretty hard to defend the rules i would say. all right, paul manafort who has been hired by the donald trump campaign in the last couple of months to bring stability and a steady hand to the campaign, he told the spring meeting of the republican national committee a couple of days ago down in florida, he said you know what? donald trump is going to be acting more presidential. essentially he's evolving. a lot of people have grown used to this particular guy, but you know what? he's going to be changing over time. >> but what we saw from him yesterday at his packed rallies that drew thousands, just huge crowds he went b about how the rnc has everything rigged against him so that he can't become the nominee. he started attacking senator cruz once again as lyin' ted as hillary clinton as crooked hillary. here he is. >> you know being presidential is easy. much easier than i have to do i have to rant and rave and keep you going otherwise you will fall asleep on me. presidential is easy. do you know what presidential is? i walk on. [ laughter ] if i was presidential, first of all, i'd have a teleprompter. you ever see crooked hillary clinton? she walks in -- good afternoon, bridgeport. >> it's unbelievable. >> entertainer. >> never been a candidate like this. whatever you say about trump you can't say he's false. he's telling you what he's doing as he's doing it. this is what i'm doing. >> and so toning it down, not yet. but keep in mind his strategic plan from the get go has been to get as much free media as he possibly could. somebody estimated he's probably wound up with $2 billion worth of free air time because of the stuff he has said at these rallies. if he becomes very presidential and talks in a mono tone he won't get the free media. so he is playing his game plan to a "t." >> his son, eric, in his mid 30s or "justice with judge jeanine" last night. is your dad going to be more serious? yeah, but what he's doing right now is working with my generation, you can't take your eyes off the tv screen. >> it is compelling. well, to the democratic side now, hillary clinton among other things is a lawyer. she went to yale law school. but she would never -- but you would never know it from the account of what the second amendment is. here she is in scranton, pennsylvania. >> i know how important gun ownership and particularly hunting is here in northeastern pennsylvania and i want you to know that we can't ignore the second amendment and we can't ignore the 33,000 people a year who die from gun violence. and i think -- i think we are smart enough to figure out how to do that. >> so the second amendment is not about hunting, does not mention hunting. it's self-protection. >> and a hedge against government overreach. but what's so interesting, not one proposal that she put forward would do anything to curb gun violence. there's no one who would disagree. none are about reducing violence, but about controlling the population. >> people say this is about pandering and they're sick of her being a politician and pandering like many do. like last week when she was -- when she said -- while she was on a hip-hop radio show she carried hot sauce with her all the time. many accused her of pandering. >> that would be so cool if she really did. >> she did say that. >> where's my sriracha? unbelievable. >> you want to see something amazing? how many misstatements of facts can you pack in to a single paragraph? it's actually -- this is almost haiku. >> this guy is not a professional politician. >> yes, he is. >> not a politician. >> he's an actor. this is danny glover. he's a bernie supporter. he was on the road in maryland. watch this. >> dr. king would quote dante often. the great french philosopher. tomorrow here in maryland, here in maryland, a state that seceded from the union. >> so maryland was -- okay. let's start at the end. maryland did not become part of the confederacy. he wasn't a philosopher, he was a poet. and a socialist. long -- >> fantastic. everything about that was wrong. but it was heart felt. if you're going to be wrong, might as well be sincere. he was sincere. >> do you think that he was bernie sanders' lethal weapon or not? >> a great actor. >> tonight, we have bill and mart martha mack column will be on with a town hall. >> now time for town weather with rick. >> i would have fallen for the dante part. >> a great french philosopher. >> he was a poet. real warmth across the plains. a lot going on starting today and for a lot of this week, one of which is severe weather. the east coast not the case. in fact, you're completely dry. get ready for tuesday though. some of the states that are going to be voting are going to have some weather. we'll talk about that this morning. but we have had this system here that's diving out across parts of the plains. yesterday, towards the northern rockies it's there, and we'll have some severe weather. a big bull's-eye is mostly hail across eastern parts of nebraska and kansas. but a tornado threat today, anywhere from the parts of the missouri valley to northern oklahoma. tuesday, a much bigger tornado threat across the central states. look at what will happen with the temperature today. temperatures into the lower 90s across parts of the south. >> no way. >> summer. get ready. >> lots of shorts and tank tops. >> thank you. coming up, we have a fox news alert. the newest weapon in the threat against the zika virus. genetically modified mosquitos like those. do we know what the modification means? 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ask your doctor if movantik is right for you. if you can't afford your medication, astrazeneca may be able to help. hi, friends. good morning. there's a zika virus emergency with the cdc reporting 388 travel related cases nationwide. florida has the most cases. and now some officials want to take action. what they're doing, they want to release swarms of genetically modified mosquitos in the florida keys to try to help combat zika, but some residents fear they may become guinea pigs and they have launched a poe -- a petition to stop this. >> should they say no to gmo? >> joining us now full of guidance, dr. jennifer cadell and she is an assistant professor also. >> great to see you guys. >> so this sounds scary. sounds cool but also scary to those of us who don't know anything about it. >> i think you characterized that quite well. i'm kind of like, wow, but also oh. i understand how the people of florida might be weirded out for lack of a better word. they don't want to be guinea pigs and there's big questions. is this going to be safe? they're probably wondering. for my family and pets me, and the environment. also some people have ethical issues with the concept. some people don't want genetically engineered anything. >> so let's explain what they'll do. they'll take the mosquitos down to the keys and when they breed they will be a new form of mosquito that will instantly died. >> basically. they're going to be built in a lab essentially. brought over here. the males are the only ones that will be released to mate with the females and the off spring will not likely survive. >> it all sounds great. that sounds great, but it's because they modified the gene of it, if one of them bites you -- could do something. >> what could happen? >> we don't know. >> there's a lot of things we do know about this. first of all, genetically engineered animals have going on since the 1980s the fda reports and the genetically mosquito trials have happened in other countries, south america, because of other diseases. like chikungunya. they not only carry zika, but yellow fever. the fda did release a report to answer many of the questions, preliminarily it thinks it's a relatively safe and unlikely to have harm to community, to people and to animal. >> wait a second. zika obviously is a great threat, but malaria kills millions every year. if we can eliminate mosquitos, why haven't we? >> well, the people say why do we have to do it this way? why can't we use insecticides and larvasides? the company producing these says we have the other methods but it's not enough. remember, let's look at the big picture. there are a lot of sides here. we are talking about protecting against zika. the cdc has stated that it causes microencephaly in birth defects that means a generation of children can be born with troubles walking, seeing, developmental delays. this is a potentially big problem so we have to look at the best science to see what can work. i know there's a lot of fears. i completely understand that. but what i think needs to happen here is really good communication. that's what needs to happen amongst the citizens in florida. the company that's producing the mosquito and the fda. >> speaking of, do you think companies -- the company said we look forward to proposed trial and to protect people from the mosquito and from the diseases they spread. do they need to be doing ghoerm. >> who? >> the company pushing the mosquito -- >> i think what they're doing is a great thing. i think it's not experimental but it's kind of new to us. i think we need options. so i think this is really important. we need to be looking at our option. >> in the meantime, until mosquitos take hold across the country, use a lot of bug spray. >> use a lot of bug spray and be careful where you travel. go to cdc.gov that has ton of information on this. base it on fact, not fiction. >> thank you very much for making a couch call today. >> good to see you. >> i feel better about it now that we know. >> 20 minutes after the hour on a sunday morning. well, a doctor gets fired for berating an uber driver. >> oh, yeah. >> let him go. >> call 911. call 911. go home. oh, uh-oh, seriously? >> yeah, get some help. >> was her employer right to send her packing? the debate coming up. nothing like the high octane thrill seeking world of monster truck racing. i'm getting behind the wheel coming up. (vo) on the trane tes, you learn what makes our heating and cooling systems so reliable. if there's a breaking point, we'll find it. it's hard to stop a trane. really hard. we've got some quick headlines for you. an urgent safety issue that affects more than 150 airplanes worldwide. the engines are being urged to be replaced in the dreamliners up because of an icing problem. they have until october to complete that work. and 500 pounds of extremely dangerous fireworks being recovered after being nabbed in the midwest train heist. investigators say a tip led them to recover 30 out of 32 cases on wednesday. the trade was headed to detroit from chicago. it was believed they were stolen while the train was stopped in ohio. authorities are trying to find the two missing cases. there's nothing like the high octane thrill seeking world of monster truck racing, right, anna? >> that's right. monster jam was back in new jersey last night. but before the competition kicked off, i got the chance to get the inside look. so start your engine, boys, here we go. it's monster jam here at metlife stadium. 4,000 tons of dirt were brought in for 400 different going around the truck and maybe jumping a few cars. 11th time world champion is attempting a new world, propelling his 10,000 pound truck through the air and jumping over six monster trucks. how big is this thing? >> ten foot tall. 12 foot tall. 5 1/2 foot tall tires. it's a huge leap. it will be over 35 foot off the ground in order to make it happen. >> how fast can it go? >> it will go up to 80 miles per hour. >> do you ever go 80 miles an hour? >> absolutely. it may not sound like it's that's that fast, but when hitting a side of car it's fast. >> i have a need for speed, can i get up in the air have a lesson? >> absolutely. i think you can have a lesson. but i'm thinking of a different outfit. >> you don't like this? i wore my sequins just for you. >> i love the sequins, but not while driving a truck. >> all right. >> turn the power on. it has 1500 horsepower. an average car has an 130. so -- >> an average car has 130 horsepower and how much does this? >> 1500. >> i don't know if you know me, but i like to get in trouble from time to time. i have absolutely driven a monster truck one time before. remember this? steve dared me to defy instructions and crash. >> they will not let me even graze -- >> you're driving it. >> i'm really looking forward to this. >> oops, see? already getting into trouble. i attempted to do the whole track, but they hit my kill switch and told me to back up and stay on one end. >> whoo! all right. how did i do? >> perfect. you did fantastic. >> after you see this amazing job i just did, do you think i can do the stunt? >> everybody in the building wants to see a huge jump. you know what -- >> they would love for me to do it instead of you. can i hold you to it? >> not quite yet. you need more practice. >> so if tom couldn't let me try the stunt, how does it do it? clear. he did it. so when you saw me get in trouble a few years ago after you egged me on -- >> seemed like the thing to do. >> my producer was on damage control. >> they wouldn't let me get anywhere near them. you guys have ruined this. i did -- i did eight shots. like look at that beautiful monster truck. i couldn't get anywhere near them. >> wrecking it for the whole network. >> do you drive like that at home? >> i don't have a car anymore. probably a good thing. if you want catch monster jam it's headed to nashville, tennessee, on june the 18th and fox grove, massachusetts, on the 25th of june. >> get your motor running. 29 minutes after the hour. one family's surprise announcement doesn't go as planned. >> you are a great friend. >> do you want spinach? >> the video going viral in morning. plus, ted cruz picked up a big chunk of delegates this week, but trump is on track for big wins on tuesday. is the contested convention inevitable? our political panel will debate that coming up next. good morning, ladies, and gentleman. you focus on making great burgers, or building the best houses in town. or becoming the next highly-unlikely dotcom superstar. and us, we'll be right there with you, helping with the questions you need answered to get your brand new business started. we're legalzoom and we've already partnered with over a million new business owners to do just that. check us out today to see how you can become one of them. legalzoom. legal help is here. lyin' ted cruz has absolutely no way he can win. he's lyin' ted. he lies. and kasich has no -- he's 1 for 38. i mean, he's running. i'm just running. why you run? i don't know. this is crooked hillary clinton. >> donald trump his campaign said he'd be acting presidential. maybe that's what it looks like. our political panel joins us this morning to break down that and everything else that's going on in the political world. jessica tarlov and boris epstein. great to see you all and caitlyn, what -- >> what is that? >> from the trump campaign, paul manafort -- >> are you surprise? >> not at all. but i love the fact that trump says this is what i'm doing. i'm going to act presidential later. >> here's the thing, he's running two separate campaigns right now. one, talking to members of the rnc trying to pitch him as the presidential candidate and he knows his supporters will be irked by the idea he's talking to rnc members. he's playing the game. so he's keeping up the public persona. he said before and carson has said before there are two different donald trumps. the public persona and the behind the scenes kind of guy. >> those of us covering politics have to rewrite what bewe know about -- what we know about it. there are five primaries on tuesday and it looks like he'll sweep him. >> that's right. i have not enjoyed him more than in the last few weeks. he said this is totally rigged. i can talk this way and i can talk this way that i can manipulate the entire system here. >> if he's doing something different, he's not fooling people. he's saying this is a trick. i'm telling you right there's kind of a transparency about it. boris, hillary clinton gets out there and she's like i really believe this when you know she doesn't. trump says i don't believe it, but you kind of assess it. >> she's a robot and he's the opposite of it and people are attracted to it. she said i don't enjoy trump more -- >> excuse me. >> if you look at what's going to happen on tuesday he's up by over 20 in most of the states. connecticut, delaware, up by 14 in pennsylvania. going to do well in rhode island, maryland. he'll have a huge day, a huge day on tuesday. then up by eight in indiana. that was a personal surprise to me. 37 in california. >> and yet, caitlyn, we just did a story a second ago that ted cruz has won all the delegates. i don't remember any elections in the past two days. >> well, so, this has changed in the past week. ted cruz is now mathematically eliminated from winning the nomination outright, so donald trump has a point. these guys are running to keep me from the nomination. i think he'll get some traction out of that. even as ted cruz is well organized. i think he'll pick up delegates from here on out. i'm not sure it's enough to persuade people against him. >> right. not a democratic system. >> but we were talking about this. it's going on on the right and the left. the sanders campaign, they started to talk about flipping super delegates, things that jeff weaver said, we'd never do that. now, lo and behold we want to play with the system. ted cruz too. it feels really inauthentic and undemocratic to have the campaigns that are just running to deny someone the nomination. if it's the will of the people and it seems to be for donald trump and for hillary clinton right now, what's gong here? >> there's no question about it. it's stopping trump the way. there was a big piece on cruz in the journal, talking about how cruz is turning to the establishment. this guy spent his career throwing bombs at the establishment. now i'm mr. establishment. stop it and get out of the race. >> hillary clinton said she's happy to release her transcripts to goldman sachs and other banks. as soon as everyone else does. who is everyone else? >> it's certainly not bernie sanders. and i think he gets a lot of mileage out of the argument. that's why he's getting support and people contributing to his campaign. you see that on the republican side too. kind of this, you know, populist sentiment in that. >> so jessica, i know a number of democrats who support hillary unlike you. but who say privately what in the world was she thinking? >> and publicly. >> she knew she was running for the president, she has to release the transcripts. >> i think she's waiting for the general. donald trump has done things for business interest and ted cruz and anybody on the right. she does want to create greater contrast between her and bernie sanders. i think she thought they'd get lucky on the tax return issue. bernie sanders, where's your tax returns? i'll get it to you tomorrow and he said it was the world's most boring tax returns. >> and he's the worldest poorest senate member. >> especially since his wife stopped working and you won't win that argument to make him out to be a money gruber. >> this is about corruption. no reason to pay hillary clinton unless you were hoping to influence government. >> no question about it. i make the comparison that the show like "veep" they're like the "house of cards." you may be right, she may be holding out until the general. the bernie supporters don't like it now, they won't like it then. >> if she's the nominee -- >> well, will they support her in the general, i think a lot of them will be so disgusted by her they'll come out -- >> you may be right. you're coming back later on in the program. have a great breakfast. see you in a bit. >> maybe they'll take our order. i'll some i thinks over easy. 39 minutes after the hour. this story is making headlines, an ohio community remains rattled after a family is executed inside their home. for the first time we are hearing the chilling 911 calls made in the moments after the bodies were found. >> the whole -- there's blood all over the house. >> stay out of the house. don't let anybody go in there, okay? >> yeah. >> all right. we have deputies on the way, okay? >> thank you. >> you're welcome. >> in total, eight members of the rhoden family were murdered execution style at several locations across pike county on friday. these are some of the victims' pictures. police are urging other family members and residents to lock their doors after the killer or killers remain on the loose. after dozens of interview, there are still no leads as to a possible motive. the governor of maine is calling out the cruz campaign for betraying the voters of his state. in a facebook post, lepage said they had attempted to put up a unity pledge and he took all the state delegates. lepage is now calling on the cruz campaign to condemn its dirty tricks. the mother of three is left in tears after being investigated by child and family services. the agency unexpectedly showed up at her house earlier this month for allowing her kids to play in her own backyard in canada. she says that she lets her kids play outside after school adding she's always outside with them or watching from the living room. well, the worker with the cfs insisted she was obligated to investigate and now serious questions about their private lives. kendrick has not heard back from the agent since then. and a pair of soon to be great-grandparents failed miserably at guessing the in -- in the game. >> you are a great -- you -- >> do you want spinach? >> you are great grandparents. what? great grandparents? we are great grandparents? >> well -- >> she still doesn't know. the grandmother is oblivious to the news. as she continues to play the game, they both jump up in excitement and hug their granddaughter. people are getting so creative. i like the bun in the oven. when the daughter put an actual roll in the oven? >> i want spinach. i'm hungry now. time for some weather. and rick has that outside. >> hey, guys, big weather coming up this week including really hot temperatures. let me show you what i'm talking about. take a look at all the readings across areas of the south and southeast. i mean, we're going to be into the 80s and 90s in texas. same story across the southeast. northern tier between cooler and warmer. each day that's going on and on. we have the threat for severe weather today. across the plains. nothing big tomorrow, but around the chicago area over towards detroit. look at what happens on tuesday. big severe weather outbreak likely with some tornadoes. back to you inside. well, coming up next, most schools are finding ways to keep guns off campus. but one opened up a shooting range indoors. meet the man behind this brilliant idea. and the commonwealth of virginia made it legal for convicted voters to vote. who will that help? and did the white house get on board? we will report and you will decide. if time is infinite, why is ta john deere 1 family tractor can give you more time for what you love. because with our quick-attach features, it takes less work to do more work. nothing runs like a deere. when they thought they should westart saving for retirement.le then we asked some older people when they actually did start saving. this gap between when we should start saving and when we actually do is one of the reasons why too many of us aren't prepared for retirement. just start as early as you can. it's going to pay off in the future. if we all start saving a little more today, we'll all be better prepared tomorrow. prudential. bring your challenges. test test test test test ♪ we built our factories here because of a huge natural resource. not the land. the water. or power sources. it's the people. american workers. they build world-class products. and that builds communities. and a better future. for all of us. because making something in america means so much, to so many. weathertech. proudly made in america. real is touching a ray. amazing is moving like one. real is making new friends. amazing is getting this close. real is an animal rescue. amazing is over twenty-seven thousand of them. there is only one place where real and amazing live. seaworld. real. amazing time for some quick consumer headlines on a sunday morning. attention customers, it may cost you more to be a member of costco. oh, no. analysts are predicting the annual fees will be jacked up early next year. regular members expect to pay $60 instead of $55 and executive members $120 up from $110. meanwhile, at&t trying to close the so-called digital divide offering people who are already on food stamps discounted wi-fi. some plans as cheap as 5 bucks a month meant for kids or adults who need the internet for school or to apply for jobs. it's part of at&t's recent merger with directv which we have many people watching us on right now. thank you. >> we love direct tv. and amazing story out of the commonwealth of virginia. terry mcauliffe, maybe the best friends of the clinton, issued an executive order allowing 200,000 convicted felons to vote in the state of virginia. many are drawing the obvious connection between 200,000 new voters and a presidential election coming up in november in which one of his best friends will be running. >> a big chunk of those -- >> sorry to be cynical. >> are expected to be democrat. >> he's a very good friend of hillary clinton? >> possibly the best friend. >> could that help? >> in fact, hillary clinton tweeted, she said i'm proud of my friend, governor of virginia, for continuing to break down barriers to voting. hillary. >> well, the president himself addressed the issue yesterday in his weekly internet address. watch this. >> that's why we have been working to make our criminal justice system smarter, fairer, less expensive and more effective. every year more than 600,000 people are released from prison. we need to ensure they're prepared to re-enter society and become productive, contributing members of their families and communities and maybe even role models. >> there's the same argument that the governor is making that these people have paid their time, debt to society. now they should be able to vote. >> not a crazy argument. you to reintegrate people into society. but can they make good votes and they haven't had their gun rights restored which are guaranteed under the constitution. they're not allowed to go hunting but we're trusting them to pick the next president. how does that work? >> if you look at the margin between obama and mitt romney -- how many was it? >> was it fewer than 300,000. >> i think so. >> so you add 200,000 new voters most of whom are certain to vote democratic, you have an advantage. >> what do you think? is this racial justice or is this some sort of thumb on the scale to help -- >> why is it racial at all? the idea that thisinsane. >> the reason i say that because advocates say it's a way of promoting racial justice as african-americans are convicted of crimes and sent to prison at twice the rate. >> mcauliffe said that. still speaking of hillary, she's tired of talking about her wall street speeches and transcripts. the "new york times" has come to hillary's rescue. one high school just opened up a shooting range inside. meet the man behind the idea. ♪ if you have moderate to severe plaque psoriasis isn't it time to let the real you shine through? introducing otezla, apremilast. otezla is not an injection, or a cream. it's a pill that treats plaque psoriasis differently. some people who took otezla saw 75% clearer skin after 4 months. and otezla's prescribing information has no requirement for routine lab monitoring. don't take otezla if you are allergic to any of its ingredients. otezla may increase the risk of depression. tell your doctor if you have a history of depression or suicidal thoughts, or if these feelings develop. some people taking otezla reported weight loss. your doctor should monitor your weight and may stop treatment. side effects may include diarrhea, nausea, upper respiratory tract infection, and headache. tell your doctor about all the medicines you take, and if you're pregnant or planning to be. ask your dermatologist about otezla today. otezla. show more of you. youto get the help you'refar looking for. that's why at xfinity we're opening up more stores closer to you. where you can use all of our latest products and technology. and find out how to get the most out of your service. so when you get home, all you have to do is enjoy it. we're doing everything we can to give you the best experience possible. because we should fit into your life. not the other way around. a lot of schools around the country are looking at ways to keep guns off campus. in one north carolina community they are welcoming them by building a shooting range inside the high school. smithfield selma senior high school built this facility on their campus for members of their junior reserve officer training corps program. here to tell us more about it is the instructor at the school. commander, good morning to you. >> good morning, steve. >> okay. so it looks like from what i could see, it looks like you had a greenhouse and you converted it, right? >> yeah, exactly. it was an old greenhouse. pretty dilapidated. >> you took out the glass panels and put in metal and wood. did the kids help with you this? >> they did. yeah. they helped a tremendous amount. in fact they did about 75% of the labor. the other 25% we hired out. we didn't want them up on the roof putting that metal roof on. we hired that out. we hired a company to come in and pour some concrete on the inside and we hired an electrician. >> looks very nice and very useful. not anybody can go in there and start shooting. you have to qualify? >> exactly. there's a pretty rigorous qualification process that all the students have to and i say students, the stew deudent cade to get in there. if their grades aren't right they don't get in there. that's carrot. >> commander, what does this do for the students who are part of this program? >> it does a great deal, steve. for one thing, really it gives them an opportunity to participate in a program that is available to all navy jr. rotc units across the country. unfortunately, we had sort of a logistics nightmare trying to figure out how to get to the national guard armory and get our shooting set up over there. so we were looking for a way to just do it easier on campus but specifically what the kids -- what the students get is they get to learn a little bit about self-control, self-discipline. what i'm seeing is a tremendous amount of responsibility that these students are taking. a lot of concentration, attention to detail. teamwork. it's just awesome to watch. >> and the end result is awesome as well. commander thank you very much for joining us today from raleigh. very nicely done. >> my pleasure. >> what do you think about that? 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"saturday night live" even paid tribute to the late musician but r by devoting the entire show him to. >> people may have performed more frequently but there was something different with a prince performance. it was special. it was an event. it was prince. >> never before seen clips was also shown of prince performing "let's "let's go crazy." >> president obama just arrived in germany for a controversial visit. he was attempting to complete a transatlantic trade pact with chancellor angela merkel. the proposed deal driving 30,000 germans to the streets in protest. they said it would lower wages and environmental standards. those in favor of the deal say it would give the economy a much needed boost. the president is expected to give a speech at the trade fair tomorrow. and high point university fraternity gifted a north carolina veteran a brand new wheelchair. he lost a leg six years ago while serving in afghanistan. a nonprofit organization gave him a track chair years ago but it had been worn out. the fraternity teamed up with the same group to raise money to buy him a new chair while raising over $26,000 for the charity. that's terrific. >> they are cool. >> they are indeed. really they change the lives of people who receive them. all right. so just 15 more primaries until the republican convention and senator ted cruz is not making things easier for the front-runner donald trump. >> cruz crushed trump in what turned out the be a delegate landslide this weekend. no election but he won a ton of delegates. we go live to washington to explain how that happens. >> reporter: good morning. there are now two battles going on in the republican race one for the actual delegates and the other for who those delegation will be. donald trump is winning the first battle by a lot but if he doesn't reach the 1237 delegates needed to win the nomination, there will be a contested convention. that's where it matters who these delegates are. because after the first ballot at the convention most of the delegates can vote for whoever they want. this weekend 94 delegates from a handful of states were selected and according to politico at least 65 of the 94 delegates are supporters of ted cruz who would support him at a contested convention. in maine cruz won 19. in minnesota where marco rubio won the primary cruz picked up nine seats and picked up another in south carolina. his biggest score was in utah where he picked up 36 of 37 seats available. none of these behind-the-scenes victories will matter if donald trump does indeed reach the 1237 delegates needed to secure the nomination outright. right now you can see he's under 400 delegates away from doing that. >> thank you very much. let's talk politics. donald trump is one of the guys who has been brought on a professional to make sure things are more professional heading towards the big convention, paul manafort said last week donald trump is evolving as a personality. he'll start toeng things down. donald trump was in connecticut last night in waterbury and bridgeport. he's not toeng it down because people go there to see the guy who is ginned up, not toned down. >> being presidential is easy. much easier than what i have to do. i have to ran and rave and keep you people going otherwise you'll fall asleep on me. presidential is easy. you know what presidential is. i walk on. [ laughter ] if i was presidential first of all i'd have a teleprompter. ever see crooked hillary clinton. she walks in. good afternoon bridgeport. how are you? this is crooked hillary clinton. >> he's an entertainer. can't take your eyes off the screen. it's worked for him so far. his top adviser told heavy weights he's turning it down. >> he's in bridgeport and waterbury. these are towns hit hard by economic changes in this country. these are towns with a ton of struggling people. that really is the whole point of the trump campaign. a lot of this country is poor. it tells you why he's doing well. >> his message is jobs. and there in particular. if you heard that donald trump was coming to your town, and there's a venue that seats 10,000 people and it was going be the dull donald trump are you going to stand in line 12 hours or see the exciting donald trump who does the impersonations like that. i got a feeling he's not going to evolve to the more presidential until after california. >> he talks about jobs. >> yeah. >> he's not talking about global warming or bike lanes. these are the obsessions of the elite left. he's talking about putting people back to work. that's what people talk about. >> he's off script. he's not using a teleprompter. senator cruz is amplifying his attacks on trump too calling him houdini, a master illusionist. the gloves are coming off on both sides. >> there's a town hall tonight on the channel and i do believe tucker carlson en route home to washington, d.c. might actually be dropping by. >> yes i will. i'll be there. role unknown. >> let's talk a little bit about this. hillary clinton has been getting a lot of bad pr because bernie sanders says come on let's see those transcripts of those speeches you've given to the wall street fat cats. she said i won't do it until everybody else does. you had a great point. who everybody is else? it's not bernie sanders because he's never given those speeches. >> when you release your speech to sagoldman sachs she will too. >> "new york times" is coming to her rescue and changing the subject. when you're in a pickle you want somebody to change the subject. >> so when we share this information with you, tim kaine, mark warner, deval patrick, thomas perez, elizabeth warren for vice president possibility. >> changing the subject from where are the transcript to who might be her vice president. >> dana perino was on yesterday. she said i'm not buying this. >> they are changing the subject and shifting responsibility. here's a quote from the piece. this is clinton's team. a complicated question like what if the united states is ready for an all female ticket. the country is so backward and retrograde and medieval they are not ready for two women on the ticket. that's insane. it doesn't matter who she picks. she's hillary clinton. >> don't you think by putting that tantalizing te ining tidbi there, can you imagine her teaming up with elizabeth warren. >> it won't happen ever. >> it would being a great to have two women. >> the whole point of her campaign is i'm a woman. vote for me. >> and shifting the conversation back to her only campaign theme. >> we're not talking about the transcripts we're talk -- >> we will ask questions you want answers to. >> it is time to check in with rick who i do believe is outdoors. >> reporter: these are the only questions what people want ans to. the weather. you would like to it be warmer outside. about 20 degrees. a little bit chilly. people want to know what will happen on tuesday with election, across the states across the northeast and mid-atlantic. there's a storm system in the area. a little bit problematic. not a wash out really for anybody. but you are going to have to dodge a few showers. you see the showers start today especially over towards connecticut and rhode island. your afternoon is look better. northern areas of pennsylvania looking better in the afternoon. but southern areas of pennsylvania and then down towards maryland and delaware i think we might see a few thunderstorms in there. not talking about big severe weather but we're going see scattered showers and few pop up thunderstorms. so bring an umbrella and make sure you get out there. not anything to cause people not to go out. we have to deal with that. the next day or so beautiful all across the eastern part of the country. the southeast spectacular for a lot of this coming week. there's the storm we're watching. you see that rotation that will bring us severe weather later today across the central plains. >> we'll go back inside a little bit. do us a favor and go into oknei cavuto's office. break his desk and bring out kindling. >> it will burn for weeks. >> up next two days away from the next super tuesday showdown. five contests in play. our next guest says one candidate could be in real trouble. >> self driving cars have gone to the dogs. a hilarious video you should see. ♪ nothing unleashes power... quite like the human foot. introducing the 255 horsepower lexus is 300 all-wheel-drive. with twenty-five percent more base horsepower. once driven, there's no going back. (toilet flush) if you need an opioid to manage your chronic pain, you may be sooo constipated it feels like everyone can go ...except you. tried many things? still struggling to find relief? you may have opioid-induced constipation, oic. it's different and may need a different approach. opioids block pain signals, but can also block activity in the bowel. which is why it can feel like your opioid pain med is slowing your insides to a crawl. longing for a change? have the conversation with your doctor about oic, and ask about prescription treatment options. made on behalf of those living with chronic pain and struggling with oic. another big series of electoral contest this week in two days as voters they'd the polls in tuesday in states of rhode island, connecticut, delaware, maryland and pennsylvania. hundreds of delegates up for grabs. will the elections have an effect on the nomination process? we talk with executive director of politics. thomas great to see you. how meaningful is this series of contests on tuesday? >> well, i mean i think it's going to be important for trump to continue to do well. all the polls suggest he'll have another big day on tuesday and get him one step closer to the nomination if he's able to perform as well as the polls show that he's going to do. >> it seems like we're moving towards a crisis of some kind. so you have expectations are trump will sweep, win all five. i don't know if that will happen. pollsters predict it. the cruz campaign amass large numbers of delegates outside of the electoral process. do you think that's likely and do you think you'll see some kind of reaction from republican voters? >> i think we have seen, tucker, 60%, 70% of republicans are saying in polls and exit polls that the person who has the most votes should be the nominee. yeah, we could potentially be heading to a crisis. if trump doesn't get the number, doesn't get close enough to 1237 and can win it on the first ballot he'll be in big trouble and could you have a situation like that. indiana will be key not this tuesday but next tuesday. that's sort of a situation where trump may be able to -- cruz may able to stop trump's momentum and shift this race one more time. in terms of this coming tuesday, trump will keep rolling. >> what's the role of kasich in all of this? he has 148 delegates amass sod far. to trump's 845. he's long eliminated mathematically from the possibility of winning on the first ballot. does he stay in and if so why? >> that's a great question. no one knows what john kasich is thinking, what his strategy is other than going to cleveland and hoping for a miracle and to say if trump can't win on the first ballot and cruz can't win on the second or third ballot, john kasich is standing there. i'm not sure that's a possible scenario depending how the rules committee works out. nobody understands what john kasich is doing opinion his status in this race, he's serving as a spoiler. >> right. he also is sending a message from many republican establishment figures we just don't care about voters, we're not interested in the results of these elections, we have another plan. isn't there a cost to that message? >> right. absolutely. the further this race goes on, tucker the worse it becomes for republicans in terms of the final outcome and what the options are. if trump is the nominee you'll have a certain slice of republicans who are goi home won't vote for trump, will vote for hillary. if it's cruz trump supporters are upset and say this race was rigged and stolen from him. if it's somebody other than trump or cruz then you have 80%, 90% of the base who voted for these folks who will be upset and that's not a good outcome. they will leave the convention a divided party. >> your going? >> sure, i'll thereabout. >> i'll see threw. high drama in cleveland. well coming up next a fight for faith in the medical field. a doctor said he was fired after his employers found out about sermons he gave as a pastor. he joins us next with his story. then she's a big bernie sanders supporter. wait until you hear whor ros rosario dawson is supporting. and 6 essential nutrients. ever see a peanut take a day off? i don't think so. harness the hardworking power of the peanut. incredible blnow comes with protection an incredible double your money back guarantee. always discreet is for bladder leaks and it's drier than poise. try it, love it or get double your money back. always discreet. my lineage was the vecchios and zuccolis. through ancestry, through dna i found out that i was only 16% italian. he was 34% eastern european. so i went onto ancestry, soon learned that one of our ancestors we thought was italian was eastern european. this is my ancestor who i didn't know about. he looks a little bit like me, yes. ancestry has many paths to discovering your story. get started for free at ancestry.com great time for a shiny floor wax, no? not if you just put the finishing touches on your latest masterpiece. timing's important. comcast business knows that. that's why you can schedule an installation at a time that works for you. even late at night, or on the weekend, if that's what you need. because you have enough to worry about. i did not see that coming. don't deal with disruptions. get better internet installed on your schedule. comcast business. built for business. hi, friends. good morning. 24 minutes after the hour. airplane headlines. around the world in three days and without fuel. this isn't science fiction. solar powered plane landed in california overnight marking the end of a historic journey over the pacific ocean. the solar impulse 2 took off from hawaii on thursday and crossed over san francisco's golden state bridge overnight. the faa now ordering to repair or replace engines of boeing 787 dream liners. due to icing problems. airlines have to the first week in october to complete the work. fired for faith. a renowned public health official dr. eric walsh filing a lawsuit against the state of georgia and their department of public health alleging he was fired as his role of district health because of sermons he gave ranging from evolution to same-sex marriage. the health department said they rescinded their offer for other reasons not because of the sermons. they join us now live from l.a. gentlemen, good morning to you. >> good morning, steve. >> good morning. >> doctor, let's start with you. were you fired for sermons? >> i believe so. i was asked to submit sermons. i submitted those sermons and shortly after i was fired from the position. >> eric, let me ask you this. if you were fired forgoi going church and giving a sermon that opens a whole range of things that many other people could be terminated for, done it? >> absolutely it does. >> jeremy -- okay you're filing suit against the georgia department of health. why? >> well, we believe in this country and we put this kind of thing at first liberty.org quite often because no one in america ought to be fired for something they said in their sermons. if what has happened to dr. walsh is permitted to stand it set aster bill precedent pretty soon the notes you take this morning in church or that sunday school lesson you prepared becomes fair game for your annual review. no one in this country should be terminated from their job because of what they preached in a sermon. >> dr. walsh, what were some of the topics of some of the sermons that might have rankled the state of georgia? >> i don't know. i wasn't told what might have rankled them. i talked a lot on different topics. i was raised by a single mother. faith is one of the strong reasons why i was able to become successful and have two doctoral degrees and so, you know, i believe in my private faith life that my faith ought to influence most aspects of my life and i spoke that way. so, honestly i don't know because i was never told that. but i'm a strong believer in faith. >> i can see that. and also other people can because there are a number of your sermons online, on youtube and things like that and apparently some people in that department looked at, before they hired you, they looked through them. is that what you're saying, jeremy that some of the staff members looked through, saw some of the sermons were bothered by what he said and said we can't, in fact -- here it is. i have an assignment for several of us. we have to listen to his sermons on youtube tonight. if we take a couple hours each we should cover our bases. you're suggesting, jeremy, they found something they didn't like and said you know what? you don't get the job. >> it sure seems that way. that's what the evidence will show is they asked dr. walsh for his sermons. they made this assignment. the day after they watched these sermons dr. walsh was terminated. i want view towers understand how remarkable this is. you got state officials on state time sitting around dividing up sermons that dr. walsh has preached and then going line by line through those sermons to determine a way to able to terminate dr. walsh. that sort of thing ought to send chills down the spine of every freedom loving american. it was nothing he wasn't doing on his job. he was an adviser to two separate presidential administrations on hiv and aids. he formed a denial clinic for hiv patients. dr. walsh was not terminated for his job performance or lack of credentials. he was terminated because of something he said in a sermon. that's illegal. >> absolutely should be. we reached out to the georgia department of health, told them we were doing this segment and this said this. they said dr. walsh was offered a conditional offer end employment. during the background check he failed to disclose outside employment of his previous employer in violation of california law. dr. walsh disclosed his religious beliefs to them. his religious beliefs had nothing to do with the decision to withdraw the offer of employment. dr. walsh, what do you say to that? >> i'll let my attorney answer that question. >> it's remarkable to think about that given that -- the department of public health is now trying to change facts. they can't manipulate the facts to suit their own needs. the cold hard reality is this. the state of georgia asked for dr. walsh's sermons. they assigned their staff to review dr. walsh's sermons. the very next day theater my natd dr. walsh. that's illegal in this country. no one should be fired from their job for something that they said in a sermon. >> amen to that. all right. jeremy with first liberty and dr. eric walsh, please keep us posted with this case. it's fascinating. what do you think about that? please e-mail us. a routine call turned into an ambush. two officers shot outside of a walmart. we'll have an update on their conditions. behind this photo of a couch is an amazing living room make over. we'll have the big reveal coming up. if you need advice for your business, legalzoom has your back. our trusted network of attorneys has provided guidance to over 100,000 people just like you. visit legalzoom today. the legal help you can count on. legalzoom. legal help is here. fight heartburn fast. with tums chewy delights. the mouthwatering soft chew that goes to work in seconds to conquer heartburn fast. tum tum tum tum. chewy delights. only from tums. type 2 diabetes doesn't care who you are. man. woman. or where you're from. city. country. we're just everyday people fighting high blood sugar. ♪ i am everyday people, yea, yea. ♪ farxiga may help in that fight every day. along with diet and exercise, farxiga helps lower blood sugar in adults with type 2 diabetes. one pill a day helps lower your a1c. and, although it's not a weight-loss or blood-pressure drug, farxiga may help you lose weight and may even lower systolic blood pressure when used with metformin. do not take if allergic to farxiga or its ingredients. symptoms of a serious allergic reaction include rash, swelling, or difficulty breathing or swallowing. if you have any of these symptoms stop taking farxiga and seek medical help right away. do not take farxiga if you have severe kidney problems, are on dialysis, or have bladder cancer. tell your doctor right away if you have blood or red color in your urine or pain while you urinate. farxiga can cause serious side effects, including dehydration, genital yeast infections in women and men, serious urinary tract infections, low blood sugar and kidney problems. stop taking farxiga and call your doctor right away if you have signs of ketoacidosis, which can be serious or life threatening. farxiga. we are everyday people. ♪ i am everyday people, yea, yea. ♪ ask your doctor if farxiga is right for you and visit farxiga.com to learn how you can get it for free. top gun graduate, aide to two u.s. presidents, commanding officer and harvard national security fellow. i'd say buying a car, uh, can make you as nervous as landing on an aircraft carrier. but usaa car buying service mitigates those fears. uh, they make it a very easy experience for you. find the right car, save money. it's that easy. usaa car buying service, powered by truecar. exclusively for usaa members. real is touching a ray. amazing is moving like one. real is making new friends. amazing is getting this close. real is an animal rescue. amazing is over twenty-seven thousand of them. there is only one place where real and amazing live. seaworld. real. amazing good morning, my friends. >> live from new york city, you know on sunday a lot of people do go out shopping, a lot of people will go to target. did you realize the american family association started a pledge a couple of days ago and they are upset with target's transgender bathroom solution where -- here's how it goes. they say customers can use rest rooms and dressing rooms that match their gender identity. >> so a petition has been started by the organization, 340,000 people last check signed it. here's what target said. every team member, guest in every community deserves to be protected from discrimination to use the restroom or dressing room that fits with their gender identity. >> this was a problem to be solved. was there rampant discrimination in bathroom? this is a way to make people feel inferior. >> look what's going on in north carolina. hundreds of jobs. boss not showing up for a concert there. >> businesswise, if you know that 340,000 americans are going to boy got your business you're thinking maybe that wasn't a good idea to do. the american family association then said, issued a statement and said this means a man can simply say he feels like a woman today and enter the women's restroom even if young girls and women are already in there. >> it's a denial of the biological reality of gender but more than that it's a way for rich people to feel virtuous. this has no effect on any normal person in america. it's a theoretical issue that doesn't affect anybody's life and allows the privilege to say i'm a good person. >> very small portion of the population but it does affect them. if your child fits in that category you want them not to be discriminated. >> no one stops you at the bathroom to check your gender. >> i didn't realize it was a problem. >> the group, the family group is asking for how about a separate facility somebody could use by themselves, you know, just a unisex bathroom. >> how many have faced discrimination at the bathroom. told you can't come in here because you're the wrong gender. maybe a few. i don't think you should discriminate against anybody. there's not a problem that needs this kind of draconian solution. >> it's political and people are talking about it and ted cruz wanted to discuss it. you know how he feels. he brought up donald trump regarding this and hillary clinton. worked them all together. watch this. >> a women's restroom should noted be used drive a political point by the pc police. let me make things real simple. even if donald trump dresses up as hillary clinton -- [ laughter ] -- he shouldn't be using the girls restroom. by the way i apologize that image it will haunt you at night as you sleep. donald in a bright blue pant suit. >> good line. 47% of americans can't come up with $400 on a day's notice. they don't have enough money to do that. if you're not talking about that kind of stuff and talking about transgender, you're missing the point in my opinion. >> what do you think about that. are you for this boycott against target? do you think it's a good idea? bad idea? e-mail us and we'll share some of your comments on facebook and twitter as well. >> look forward to hear from you. we'll switch gears. tell you what's making headlines. an offer is shot in an ambush. a walmart employee recognized the homeless man who was asked to stop trespassing several times but officers approached him. he pulled out a gun. the suspect was killed after cops returned fire. one officer was shot in the face and is still in the icu. the other has been released from the hospital. an actress, rosario dawson is with monica lewinsky. that's what she said at a bernie sanders rally while calling out hillary clinton for attacking his campaign. >> i'm with monica lewinsky with this. bullying is bad. she's dedicated her life now to talk about that. and now as campaign strategy we're being bullied. >> lewinsky as become an anti-bullying activist and give speeches following her own affair with president bill clinton. this was an issue bernie has not talked about. golden retriever prefers to drive. take a look. you got to see this. the pooch effortless backs the car out of the garage. his own standing by recording it. as impressive as this sounds the dog was behind the wheel of a self-driving tesla car. all he had to do was sit there and enjoy the ride. those are your headlines. i would get behind one of those. >> you would do great. there you are steve. thank you very much. we're going to take your house from drab to fab before you have company over. easier than you might think. here are some easy do it yourself tips from founder and designer of society social along with her brother. good morning to both of you. what are we doing here today >> my brother and i grew up in a home that loves to celebrate. >> a party house. >> yes. we believe you should decorate to entertain. >> we'll show you three tips you can do no matter your budget. starting with the sofa. >> start with the sofa. you want to show us how it turns out. >> fix it up for spring. >> ready? >> whoa. >> that's the same couch but you added what? >> same exact sofa, that gray sofa but we added this fresh crisp slip cover. you have two sofas in one. >> looks very pretty but i got this problem with people who do a lot with pillows. there's no place to set. >> they are pretty. the good thing is they come right off. >> another cool tip they are machine washable. you have pets, parties, kids, they are perfect for that type of situation. >> what does this cost a couple hundred bucks? >> slip covers range from $75 on up. slip covers that cost $75 don't fit as well. this was made for our company. so it fits nicely. sneezier than buying a whole new set. >> exactly. >> you can always doll up your sofa with cute end tables. >> right. >> you buy them like that or did you do any of the handy craft. >> i did do the handy craft but i designed them. this is a nice little touch. >> you might want to spruce up your home for spring with fancy colors. >> right. nothing says spring like a spring floral and, you know, your home and decorating don't know where to start. start with a colorful print and play off the colors and you'll end up with a cohesive look. >> what about the ottoman. did you slip cover the ottoman. >> no but you can do that. we did some dyis for you. that's decorative tape. we took these generic vases that you have lying around-the-house and wrap it in a pattern. you have these spruced up flower bases for spring. >> we have a couple more for you. let's prepare to entertain. >> let's head over. >> wow. >> look we have one for you. >> that's right. >> thank you very much for doing this. great idea. >> socialsociety.com. >> can we get a sponge for ana? >> still ahead a doctor gets fired for berating an uber driver. >> oh, yeah. >> let him go. >> call 911. >> can you get fired? we'll debate it. recommended x use dulcolax tablets for gentle overnight relief suppositories for relief in minutes and stool softeners for comfortable relief of hard stools. dulcolax, designed for dependable relief ♪ ♪ . . the new 2016 nissan altima. built to stand out. at our retirement plan today. not now! i'm cleaning the oven! yeah, i'm cleaning the gutters! well i'm learning snapchamp! chat. chat! changing the oil... 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(vo) but with nationwide it's no big deal. okay, your retirement plan is all set. nationwide? awesome. nice neighborhood. ♪ nationwide is on your side nationwide is the exclusive insurance partner of plenti. a miami doctor is now out of a job after she was caught on camera here hitting and berating a uber driver back in january. >> oh, yeah. call 911. i bought this shirt and i want to go home. seriously? >> yeah. get some help. >> after the video went viral the fourth year neurology resident, a doctor was placed on administrative leave. now although she was fired from jackson health system she's still entitled to an appeal. the big question, could she win after this damning evidence? >> wow with us now is defense attorney. it's great to see you this morning. this woman is just absolutely ferocious. should she have been fired for this? it's not directly germain to her job. >> exactly. that's my point. i think this firing was a little bit heavy handed if you ask me. this happened in her private life and there's no evidence to suggest that this situation would hinder her in her ability to do her job. from what we know, we don't know of any other misconduct in her time as a doctor doing her residency for four years so we don't know of any blemishes on her record to suggest she would act out violently in her professional capacity or towards patients. it's a little bit heavy handed. >> could the hospital argue that this video is out there, it's gone viral, people have seen it, and potential patients may not want to have her serving them. >> absolutely. and they would be justified in doing so. i think nowadays with everything going viral, people recording things on their iphone and uploading them, if this situation was never record and just reported say in a newspaper it wouldn't be as bad. but when you see the situation unfold as it did on video, absolutely it makes things so much worse. she's got an uphill battle but i would definitely appeal just because it didn't happen when she was actually performing her job. this was in her private life. we can all say we've all done things -- i'm hoping she wasn't intoxicated when she did this. it was caught on tape and unfortunately just out there for everyone to see. >> but also at the same time, while that was captured and it was inappropriate behavior sometimes inappropriate language is caught whether somebody said something racist or, you know, insensitive, those people wine up getting drummed out of their jobs for the same thing. off campus activities and their lives are wrecked. >> absolutely. and that's a whole other issue there. recently there was a story about a doctor out in miami who falsified patient falsified patient records and he still kept his license. >> that's crazy. >> that is crazy. i think this is just a move that the hospital is making in terms of it's all about optics, this looks bad. we don't want to keep her on after she's treated somebody like this. >> she's got a career as a body guard or ufc fighter. >> she has alternatives, absolutely. meanwhile, say hello to the best thing you're going to see all day. ♪ hello from the outside >> this 11-year-old boy is wowing the internet with his voice. he's here and you got to hear the story. >> come on in. hey, bud. >> hey. ♪ ot bad, my doctor prescribed medication-an opioid. it really helped! but it came with some baggage: opioid-induced constipation-oic. sooo awkward... you sound like you're ready for the movantalk! opioids block pain signals. but they can also block activity in the bowel, causing constipation. movantik can help reduce constipation caused by opioid pain medications. do not take movantik if you have a bowel blockage or a history of them. serious side effects may include a tear in your stomach or intestine. and can also include symptoms of opioid withdrawal. common side effects include stomach pain, diarrhea, nausea, gas, vomiting, and headache. tell your doctor about any side effects and about medicines you take as movantik may interact with them causing side effects. i'm so glad i had the movantalk with my doctor! constipated by your prescription opioid pain medication? ask your doctor if movantik is right for you. if you can't afford your medication, astrazeneca may be able to help. ♪ ♪ at least i can say that i've tried ♪ >> you have chills? we do. an 11-year-old boy wows the internet with his rendition of adele's "hello". >> join us in saying hello to tristan who joins us this morning. good morning to you, young man. how does that big voice come out of that little body? >> i have no idea. >> but it is a very big voice. >> that's what most people say. some people say it gets annoying. >> who says it gets annoying? >> my brother. >> brothers are like that. >> how many times did you sing that song before it was recorded and it went viral? you love adele? >> yes. i probably sang it about five times before i sang it in front of everybody. >> what did you think when it went viral and people all over the world are watching? >> at first, i thought she was messing around with me. she was like saying just to play around with me. when she showed me the phone and it had over 100 million, i was like, okay, this is crazy. >> especially given the fact you were born prematurely, diminished lung capacity. when you grow up, what do you want to do? >> sing. >>? the g who? who's your favorite performer? >> michael jackson. >> but you like adele obviously. have you heard from her? >> no. i bet you will. that's my prediction for you. >> my mom thinks it's got out to her but she hasn't said anything about the video. >> we are looking forward to hearing you sing, do a big performance later in the show. but can you sing a few bars, sing us out? you want to sing "hello"? >> sure. ♪ hello from the other side ♪ i must have called a thousand times ♪ >> whoa. very, very nicely done. he's going to sing the whole song in the next hour on "fox & friends." >> be right back. tired of working for peanuts? well what if i told you that peanuts can work for you? that's right. i'm talking full time delivery of 7 grams of protein and 6 essential nutrients. ever see a peanut take a day off? i don't think so. harness the hardworking power of the peanut. here's the plan. you grow up wanting to be a lawyer, because your dad's a lawyer. and you land a job with a 401k and meet your wife. you're surprised how much you both want kids, and equally surprised you can't have them. so together, you adopt a little boy... and then his two brothers... and you up your life insurance because four people depend on you now. then, one weekend, when everyone has a cold and you've spent the whole day watching tv, you realize that you didn't plan for any of this, but you wouldn't have done it any other way. with the right financial partner, progress is possible. you're down with crestor. alright! now there's a way you can get crestor for $3. adding crestor, along with diet, lowers bad cholesterol. crestor is not for people with liver disease, or women who are nursing,pregnant, or may become pregnant. tell your doctor all medicines you take. call your doctor if you have muscle pain or weakness; feel unusually tired; have loss of appetite, upper belly pain, dark urine or yellowing of skin or eyes. these could be signs of serious side effects. ask for the crestor $3 card. ask your doctor about crestor. george. it is sunday, the 24th of april. a gunman shoots up a high school prom with a rifle. three people hurt, and the motive still unknown. breaking details from overnight. and so much for the pledge to act more presidential. >> lying ted cruz, there's absolutely no way he can win. and kasich has no -- he's one for 38. he's running. i'm just running. >> reporter: maybe trump's just redefining what it means to be presidential. either way, he's back in true form. ted cruz pulls closer in the delegate race. >> and guess which scandal just came back to haunt hillary. >> i did not have sexual relations with that woman, ms. lewinsky. >> could monica lewinsky actually help hand bernie sanders a victory. what's that about? you'll find out live from new york city on this sunday morning. you're watching "fox & friends." ♪ here's the part i just don't quite get. it's drone racing. it is super fast. it could be super dangerous if you didn't know what you're doing. and it's super popular. >> it's a sign of the times. what these folks will do is rent out nfl stadiums that aren't being used. i don't know how fast they're going. they can really hurt somebody. it's not a spectator sport yet. >> you should mix drone racing with sporting, where you get to shoot the drones, that would be fun. >> a drone, you would never describe donald trump as somebody who drones on. not in a million years. when you go to his rallies, he has got people so whipped into a frenzy. that is why what he did yesterday was interesting. he's going to evolve, tone things down. yesterday in connecticut, donald trump made it very clear, he ain't toning it down yet. >> you know, being presidential's easy. much easier than what i have to do. here i have to rant and rave, i have to keep you people going, otherwise you're going to fall asleep on me. you know what presidential is, i walk on -- [ laughter ] if i was presidential, first of all, i'd have a tele prompter. you ever see crooked hillary clinton? she walks in, good afternoon bridgeport, how are you. this is crooked hillary clinton. >> seems like this -- >> not presidential. >> same tactics he's used before, it's gotten him this far. i'm wondering if one of his new advisors is telling the heavy hitters in florida he's going to act more presidential. is this donald trump not listening to his advisors. >> trump's telling you what he's doing as he's doing it. it's almost like a magician saying what he's going to do. i'm acting this way for a reason. >> can you imagine if he would have gone to bridgeport yesterday and he was presidential. all the headlines today would be donald trump was like a dial tone. he was so boring. >> our standards have changed. >> they have, indeed. >> politicians are accused of pandering to voters, hillary clinton was accused of doing that last week on a hip-hop radio show. >> she may. >> you're right. recently she was in skron tcran pennsylvania, on friday and she said this. >> i know how important gun ownership and particularly hunting is here in northeastern pennsylvania. and i want you to know that we can't ignore the second amendment and we can't ignore the 33,000 people a year die from gun violence. and i think -- i think we are smart enough to figure out how to do that. >> well, forget about the fact that number appears to be high. she cited 33,000. let's just -- >> it includes suicide. >> it absolutely does. suicides by gun. let's examine the fact that hillary clinton who was educated in one of the finest law schools of america thinks that hunting is in the second amendment. >> her daughter admitted in public that if elected she's going to pack the supreme court with justices that take away the individual right to carry firearms. >> remember what she said about obama care and illegal immigrants not too long ago? >> we're going to give $5,000 to every illegal alien. >> this goes to confirm how much hillary clinton needs pennsylvania. she's been very clear about guns in the past. suddenly, it's like, look, i know a lot of you are hunters, and i'm on your side. >> she's not getting anywhere near scranton. that's my prediction. there was a surrogate by the name of danny glover. he was on the stump in maryland for bernie sanders. see how many mistakes you can spot in this single 15-second danny glover sound bite. >> that's the king with -- the great french philosopher. tomorrow, here in maryland, here in maryland, a state that seceded from the union. >> i think dante was an italian poet. >> and of course maryland never seceded from the union. really nice guy in person. not a brilliant historian. >> he's there to energize the crowd. >> he's an actor. >> and he gave people some things to talk about today. the bernie people are talking about you need free college. danny glover actually went to college. >> where he learned about dante, the famous greek architect. row rosario dawson brought up monica lewinsky. listen. >> we are literally under attack for not just supporting the other candidate. now, i'm with monica lewinsky with this. bullying is bad. she's actually dedicated her life now to talking about that. and now as a campaign strategy we are being bullied. and somehow that is okay and not being talked about. >> and there have been rumblings about pressure growing on the sanders campaign. >> that's the bullying. >> can we agree among the three of us, bernie has the best surrogates? >> and you would expect the republicans to go after hillary regarding -- >> there's monica lieu ski. >> now it's them on them. it's surrogate on dem. she went there. ms. dawson went there and brought up the lewinsky word. >> why shouldn't she? hillary clinton is running an entirely campaign, i'm for women. here's an actual woman whose life you helped destroy. hillary was one of the architects of let's call monica lewinsky a psycho stalker. >> she's an actress. >> and a truth teller. >> i don't think she's been in anything for a while. >> well, i support her. >> topic has stayed away from. anyways. we're going to switch gears now and tell you what else is making news headlines on your sunday morning. three people are injured after a shooting at a wisconsin prom. they showed up outside of the high school with a rifle around 11:00 and opened fire. two students were shot as they were leaving the building. >> our officers were on scene already, doing a walk-through of the area. we took the subject into custody. at this point, we feel that we have the subject in custody that was a threat. the community's safe at this point. >> it is unclear if there was a relationship between the victims and the shooter. all students inside the building were escorted out. a routine call at an arizona walmart ends with an ambush on officers. chandler police say a store employee recognized a homeless man who was asked to stop trespassing several times. he pulled out a gun and fired. one office was hit in the face and still in the icu. and a man who claims to have been prince's drug dealer is speaking out alleging the pop star was highly addicted to opiates. ♪ this is what it sounds like when doves cry ♪ >> the man told the daily mail that he gave prince prescription drugs like fentanyl starting in the 1980s up until 2008. he said the singer used the drugs to cope with anxiety and stage fright. he would spend as much as $40,000 at a time for a six-month supply of painkillers. and good news to report. "peop "people" magazine reporting that kelly ripa and michael strahan are working things out. a move ripa was reportedly blind sided by. she took off from the show every day since. at one point,fused to go back on air until he was on. >> the interesting thing about that, there are a bunch of stories that say their on tv relationship is just a sham. >> they speak to each other through their reps. >> people going forward are going to think, wow, they're good actors. >> no direct contact please. contact my agent. rick is over yonder. he's next to where we did the rehab segment. >> reporter: the rehab segment. >> absolutely. >> they were remodeling. >> i saw you eyeballing the champagne. >> there's a number of bottles of half open champagne here. hey, guys, a lot going on weather-wise. not a bad day today for really almost everybody. show you what's going on. here's your temperatures. you see that warm stretch across the central plains. and the little cold air behind it. we have a system back there moving on in and bringing some trouble. the eastern part of the country, tons of sunshine. it's going to be beautiful up and down the coast. now, you see a little bit of rain across south texas and that snow across parts of wyoming and montana. that's the system that's going to dive into the central plains today and bring the threat for severe weather. we're certainly going to see some very large hail, especially across eastern nebraska and kansas. tomorrow, just a light chance for stronger storms around the chicago area. take a look at tuesday. tuesday is going to be potentially a really big severe weather day. potentially some large destructive tornados. so people across the plains, watch it. a lot going on this week people need to be prepared for. >> thanks. donald trump's back in true form despite promises from his campaign staff to appear more presidential. cries wallace live from d.c. on that next. >> we now know why hillary clinton won't fly with her press pool on the same plane. before it was used for politics, there was something a lot weirder going on on board. >> that's inside hillary's plane. she wasn't there, but they were. ♪ hey america, still not sure whether to stay or go? ♪ when it's go, the new choice privileges gets you there faster. and now, stay two times and you can earn a free night. book now at choicehotels.com a john deere 1 familywhy is tractorever enough of it? with quik-park lets you attach and go. imatch quick-hitch gives you more time for what you love. so it takes less work to do more work. autoconnect drive-over mower deck? done. they're not making any more land. but there's plenty of time if you know where to look. now you can own a one e sub-compact tractor for just 99 dollars a month learn more at your john deere dealer. everhas a number.olicy but not every insurance company understands the life behind it. for those who've served and the families that have supported them, we offer our best service in return. usaa. we know what it means to serve. get an insurance quote and see why 92% of our members plan to stay for life. you know what presidential is? i walk on -- [ laughter ] if i acted presidential, i guarantee you that this morning i wouldn't be here. and somebody else would be here, not in a big room like this. somebody else would be here and they'd be talking to you. >> donald trump in rare form, true form that is to say, weighing in on what it's like to act presidentially despite prior promises that he would tone it down. >> chris wallace joins us now. have you ever seen a candidate pull back the screen and reveal what he's projecting? >> like everything else like donald trump you've never seen it before. his new campaign team saying we're going to manage him and he's going to be more presidential and he's going to make policy speeches with tell prompters. he's saying, no, i'll be me. cory lewandowski who has been his campaign manager for a long time says it's a little bit like dealing with american pharoah. you're a jockey, hang on for dear life. >> chris, in the primary season, people on the right generally stay way to the right. and then during the general, they move to the center. people on the left stay to the left until the general, they move to the center. his strategy from the get go has been to have these big wild events to get as much free media as possible to get the nomination, and then i would imagine the idea is then to become a little more presidential and more palatable to some people that didn't like what he was doing. >> that's what i think what his advisors would like. but nobody tells donald trump what to do. on tuesday night, after that sweeping victory in new york, he gets up and says senator cruz, and everybody's writing the next day, he's so presidential. he goes out on wednesday to indianapolis and he's talking about lying ted again. it's like the movie "dirty dancing," don't put donald trump in a corner. >> a lot of people have talked about the shift that he's going to have becoming more presidential and even hiring these new advisors to move him in that direction and work on the ground game, which ted cruz has been so good at. do you think we're going to see any of that? >> he's hired the new advisors and we're going to have an exclusive interview at the top of the hour with the man in charge of the trump campaign under donald trump. that's paul man na fort. a long-time republican operative that i have known since the reagan white house. we'll see. managing donald trump may be an objectioncy mo oxymoron. trump does what trump wants. >> all right. so paul manafort and debbie wasser man schultz. >> thank you for joining us on sunday, steve. >> why should you be the only one who works on sunday? >> welcome to the weekend shift. >> we'll be watching. coming up on our show, two teenagers were lost at sea nine months ago, this morning a new discovery. then the obama administration skips climate and joins a climate agreement. remember when they told us about armadillos being in danger? all wrong. 2016 lexus es and es hybrid. ♪ hey, there. how you feeling? quick headlines on this sunday morning. more problems for the troubled boeing dreamliner. and your gent icing issue can cause the plane's issue to shut down during flight. the faa is forcing them to have their ge motors repaired or replaced. airlines have until the first week in october to complete that work. and 500 pounds of extremely dangerous fireworks nearly all row covered after being nabbed in a midwest train heist. it's believed the cases were stolen from the train was stopped in ohio while en route from detroit to chicago. steve, over to you. >> thank you, anna. this past friday, the obama administration bypassed docongrs and signed a u.n. treaty on climate change. many hailing the decision are the same people who swore doomsday was upon us decades a goe. many of those scenario never came true. we have the film maker behind "climate hustle". >> thank you vefor having me. >> it's show and tell. you brought along. >> watch your fingers. >> it's an armadillo. >> this is significant when you talk about failed predictions of the past. the armadillo is the only animal used as a mascot for global cooling in the 1970s. it's now a mascot for global warming. they're claiming the armadillo is migrating north to get out of the heat to cool off. now it's the global warming stepchi stepchild. it just goes to prove and climate goes in cycles. we cooled in the '70s. they were worried about it becoming ice age. >> the feeling was it's going to get colder and colder and colder. none of that actually happened. there was just hysteria. >> if you go back to the first earth day, you had a whole bunch of predictions. we should be starving? >> why would we be starving? >> and of course the opposite's happened. and one of the things they learned, they made all these predictions and of course they were proven wrong. with global warming, they have a learning curve. they're trying to go much further in the future. >> the predictions are not only coming from people aligned with the political left in the scientific community, but there are some actual famous royal people out there. here's prince charles. >> be it no doubt that unless greenhouse gas emissions reach their peak in about 100 months, just 100 months, it may well be too late to stop temperatures rising. the grim reality is that our planet has reached a point of crisis and we have only seven years before we lose the levers of control. we now have only 86 months left. we are running out of time. how many times have i found myself saying this over recent years? >> that's like jack bower on "24". >> this happens repeatedly. >> it's tactic. >> it's a tactic of a doomsday street preacher on the corner. now it's the mainstream. we have a lead scientist at nasa giving us deadlines they pass. it's silliness. >> so you've looked through the scientific evidence regarding global climate change. what have you found out? >> the great climate catastrophe that has been predicted has been canceled. we feature nobel prize winning scientists. the scientists that turned against the u.n. this movie will turn everything on its head because it shows you that the co2 is not the control nobo knob. there are hundreds of factors that control the climate. >> if you would like to check it out, is it climatehustlemovie? >> climatehustle.com. >> you going to take him home? >> yes, thank you. meanwhile, a raging inferno in the desert. three cops now in the hospital. an apartment complex turned to ash. the latest details coming up shortly. plus, the sport of the future is now. drone racing is taking flight across the country. we have an exclusive behind the scenes look coming up. ♪ poor mouth breather. allergies? stuffy nose? can't sleep? take that. a breathe right nasal strip instantly opens your nose up to 38% more than allergy medicine alone. shut your mouth and say goodnight, mouthbreathers. breathe right. what would help is simply being able to recognize a fair price. truecar has pricing data on every make and model, so all you have to do is search for the car you want, there it is. now you're an expert in less than a minute. this is truecar. (toilet flush) if you need an opioid to manage your chronic pain, you may be sooo constipated it feels like everyone can go ...except you. tried many things? still struggling to find relief? you may have opioid-induced constipation, oic. it's different and may need a different approach. opioids block pain signals, but can also block activity in the bowel. which is why it can feel like your opioid pain med is slowing your insides to a crawl. longing for a change? have the conversation with your doctor about oic, and ask about prescription treatment options. made on behalf of those living with chronic pain and struggling with oic. real is touching a ray. amazing is moving like one. real is making new friends. amazing is getting this close. real is an animal rescue. amazing is over twenty-seven thousand of them. there is only one place where real and amazing live. seaworld. real. amazing ♪ >> sonogram or jesus christ super star? you're looking at a sonogram that appears to have the image of a krccrue crucifix on it. you don't want to miss the story. >> it looks just like the crucifix that hung on our wall growing up. >> we'll talk to her in just a bit. >> so she had the baby? >> this woman? >> immaculate conception. >> you're going to find out. >> it's a sign. her family feels it is a sign from god that everything's going to be great. we'll start with this fox news alert. firefighters injured after a massive fire engulfed a three-story apartment complex in arizona. flames ripped through seven buildings, all of which are under construction. families in gilbert forced to evacuate their homes. more than 120 fire crews called to battle the five-alarm inferno. no word on how it started. >> new clues this morning for two florida teenagers lost at sea. he and perry cohen went missing back in july after setting sail from jupiter, florida, on a fishing trip. their boat was found in march and just identified by its serial number. the teenagers' family hoping the iphone can be restored to recover more clues into their disappearance. reports say hundreds of staffers are expected to be laid off between mid-august and november. one reason is to keep up with all the changes in the business. the times is working with their union to come up with a deal. more than 100 staffers were cut last year in layoffs or buyouts. and watch out hillary clinton, that nice private jet your press team has been using is not only used for politics. the jet's tail matches the one registered to a famous poker player. from the looks of photos he posted on instagram, he had quite a few wild parties on board. the jet appears on episode 11 of "the circus". >> are those flight attendants? >> i've never seen anything like that on any politician's plane i've ever been on. >> you've been on a plane like that? >> i'd take that duty. the sun is -- it's staring me in the face right now. >> it's coming. this is that time of year where the sun starts to come down the roads here and heat things up and make us a little blind for a little bit. it's a good time here. take a look at the weather map. we have a severe weather threat on tuesday and it's going to be a big one. we could be looking at a major tornado outbreak. some of these tornados could be large and long-lasting. it's right along tornado alley from wichita down to oklahoma city over towards tulsa and joplin and down towards dallas. want to show you what temperatures do the next number of days. we're really heating up across the eastern part of the country. not so much the northeast. the heat has to go sm. and this time it's going to the southeast. we see a lot of readings in the 80s there. real quickly, tuesday, election day across the northeast. take a look at all the states here. there you go. rain and thunderstorms. not a perfect day unfortunately out there at the voting booths. bring your umbrellas and get out there and vote. nascar may have to watch its back. we've got an exclusive look at what could be the next big thing in racing. kurt the cyber guy joins us now. >> i wasn't a racer, but i was there right up front as they were in this hollowed out mall near the airport in los angeles. what i got to see is what everybody in technology and hollywood and sports is also seeing. the future in racing is about to change. it's unlike any sport you've seen before. drones racing up to speeds of 80 miles per hour through a 2-mile course. drone racing combines technology and speed to create an insanely competitive environment. >> it's fast, exciting, you have people piloting crafts. what it adds to it is three dimensionality. >> the same adrenaline rush from the founder's previous extreme sport creation, tough mudder. the competition on 10-mile muddy obstacle course started small and now pulls in thousands of fans. drone racing will attract an even larger fan base. >> here in a gutted shopping mall, the drl is kicking off its second competition of the 2016 season. the l.a. race brings together the 12 best drone pilots in the world hoping to qualify for the winner take all championship next fall. how you master it, it takes some learning. >> they can see exactly what's going on. >> whoa. >> it's exactly how they navigate the race track. >> unbelievable. >> this is the second day of a three-day competition and only the four best pilots move onto the final round. unlike other sports, crashing is a major part of the race. the league's motto, if you're not crashing, you're not racing hard enough. as for the pilots, the sky's the limit. they span from age 11 to 60 and everything in between. like conrad miller, racing since 2014, he's excited to lead the charge in sport's next big thing. >> it's the spirit of competition and also it's a budding sport, we're like kind of on the ground floor, and we all want to make our mark. so we're all just trying to breakthrough and be the best at this. >> now he's introducing it to the next generation, starting with his 12-year-old son. >> it's definitely brought us closer together for sure. we've had a lot of late nights kitchen table building and fixing, just spending time together. >> the late night practice, the speed, the crashes. but what's the hardest part? >> nerves. nerves for sure. [ cheers and applause ] >> boy, and you feel those nerves when you're out there in person. for all of the people, especially the moms complaining that husbands and kids are out front messing around with the drone they got last christmas, think again. this could be is career in the future for somebody to get really good at drone flying and then you become a drone racer. they're different than the ones you and i buy at the store. tucker, who's a pro racer, he'd do quite well there. >> we had the guys on the start -- a couple months ago. they said it's not a spectator sport because these things are going so fast. >> when we were there, what you saw was the beginnings of that. they had a whole audience area with gigantic video panels and it requires that. it's happening so fast through such a huge amount of space that you need video monitors to see the action. >> what could go wrong? >> i will say safety was really paramount there. they have lots of nets to keep them from flying into the public. >> some of them crash into the walls. >> they're meant to. that's part of the fun. hillary clinton has a message for all you criminals out there. >> joining a gang is like having a family. it's feeling like you're part of something bigger than yourself. >> yeah, it's just like that. just like joining a family. eboni williams reacts coming up. >> a mom to be sees a cross in her ultrasound. meet the woman who says it's a message from above. ♪ i served 20 years as a marine aviator, top gun graduate, aide to two u.s. presidents, commanding officer and harvard national security fellow. i'd say buying a car, uh, can make you as nervous as landing on an aircraft carrier. but usaa car buying service mitigates those fears. uh, they make it a very easy experience for you. find the right car, save money. it's that easy. usaa car buying service, powered by truecar. exclusively for usaa members. whyto learn, right?e? so you can get a good job and you're not working for peanuts. well what if i told you that peanuts can work for you? while you guys are busy napping, peanuts are delivering 7 grams of protein and 6 essential nutrients right to your mouth. you ever see a peanut take a day off? no. peanuts don't even get casual khaki fridays. because peanuts take their job seriously. so unless you want a life of skimming wifi off the neighbors, you'll harness the hardworking power of the peanut. (cheering) hillary clinton breaking into dorm room sociology and sparking outrage after saying this in connecticut this week. >> joining a gang is like having a family. it's feeling like you're part of something bigger than yourself. so we're either going to have gangs that murder and rob and do the things that are so destructive to the danggang mem the community or we're going to have positive gangs, positive alternatives for young people. >> what does that even mean? does she have any idea? here to discuss it, eboni williams. >> great to see you. >> joining a gang is just like joining a family. >> here's the problem. hillary clinton has gone on the campaign trail and said how she's not a natural politician. that shows us exactly what she's talking about. i think she's trying to do damage control when she talked about black people being super predators. to me, this is kind of similar. you have good gangs and bad gangs, but ultimately she's saying black people belong to a gang community. i was a criminal defense lawyer. there's sentiment that she's speaking to that's valid. some of them did join those gangs because they didn't have stable family lives. but that's not the only paradigm. that really feels short sided, patronizing, inaccurate. trust me, i don't belong in any gangs. so again, i think the secretary of state is just misguided. she's trying so hard to correct some of the mistakes she's made in the past and still getting it wrong. >> imagine if she had said that to a group of students where her own daughter went. >> and president obama. >> joining a gang is like joining a family. no. because she has higher expectations for the students at this school. >> there's not a presumptions talking to the white community or asian community. i don't know what her intention is. but i know that in the spirit of trying to connect with black society, for many of us, we feel very disconnected. like she's on the outside looking in and getting it still very wrong. >> and also very stilted and stiff. it seems like she's searching for words. she seems uncomfortable even as she's saying that. yet she is winning overwhelming majority of black democrats. why is that? >> i think historically many in the black community have said, they still be in closest proximity to power. they'll look at bernie sanders and say, he can't get it done. they still believe -- when you talk younger, it starts to shift. but the older demographic of the black community still feel like the clintons are the power source and the best ticket to getting access to that power dynamic. >> they're probably making a correct assessment on the power, but this idea that she understands is weird to me. >> it's not a dormant issue. i got to tell you, i look at my facebook friends, it's a diverse community. this is a real conversation in the black community. >> yes. >> on which side do we now view the clintons. you have the crime act of 1994 from bill which disproportionately incarcerated black men. the problem is on the gop side, where are the articulated solutions. i would say she's winning by default. >> eboni williams, great to see you this morning. just when you think you've heard absolutely everything, there's this. >> let me make things real simple. even if donald trump dresses up as hillary clinton, he shouldn't be using the girls' restroom. >> wait. is donald trump planning to dress up like hillary and use the lady's room? ted cruz explaining his stance on the latest issue of the day. and meet the mom who spotted a cross in her baby's ultrasound. she joins us in just a moment. stay tuned. ♪ i'd like to make a dep-- vo: it happens so often, you almost get used to it. we got this. vo: which is why being put first takes some getting used to. ♪ nationwide is on your side nationwide is the exclusive insurance partner of plenti. my school could be bad.ing fast. could be a blast. can't find a single thing to wear. will they be looking at my hair? won't be the same without you bro. ♪ when it's go, the new choice privileges gets you there faster. and now, stay two times and you can earn a free night. book now at choicehotels.com thanks for being with us. mom to be's sonogram is going viral. take a look at this photo. it appears to show an image of christ on the cross. the expectant mom is taking the image as a message from above. here to tell us more is aley meye meyers. what was that moment like when you're taking a look at the sonogram trying to figure out if it's a boy or girl and you see this? >> it was very overwhelming. my best friend's mom pointed it out at my baby shower. >> so you didn't even see it first. >> no. it was like a week after the ultrasound before i noticed. >> now, you have some medical conditions that have caused some concerns throughout the pregnancy for you. and this helped to put your mind at ease. what's that been like for you? >> yeah, i've had crohn's disease for about seven years now. so i've been on a number of medications that are worry some to be on. it's been on my mind a lot. i felt like it was a sign that's everything's going to be okay. >> what about your family members and friends? what are they saying about the discovery that you think you saw on the sonogram? >> as soon as they looked at it, they could tell what it was. they were all just in shock as i was. >> have you had any critics going, oh, this is like the lady who thinks she saw jesus in her grilled cheese or something like that? has anybody, you know, acted like you're off your rocker? >> oh, yeah. there's definitely been some critics, as there is with anything. mostly positive remarks, but there's been some negative. >> are you having a boy or a girl and when is he or she due? >> it's a boy and he's due june 8th. >> congratulations. we wish you a happy and healthy pregnancy. appreciate your time, alley myers. thank you. we're just getting word of this. the white house ready to make a decision on the top secret report that implicates saudi arabia and the 9/11 attacks. there's a plan this morning to release it. more on that coming up. this clean was like, pow! it added this other level of clean to it. it just kinda like wiped everything clean. my teeth are glowing. they are so white. i actually really like the two steps. everytime i use this together it felt like leaving the dentist's office. crest hd, 6x cleaning, 6x whitening. i would switch to crest hd over what i was using before. type 2 diabetes doesn't care who you are. man. woman. or where you're from. city. country. we're just everyday people fighting high blood sugar. ♪ i am everyday people, yea, yea. ♪ farxiga may help in that fight every day. along with diet and exercise, farxiga helps lower blood sugar in adults with type 2 diabetes. one pill a day helps lower your a1c. and, although it's not a weight-loss or blood-pressure drug, farxiga may help you lose weight and may even lower systolic blood pressure when used with metformin. do not take if allergic to farxiga or its ingredients. symptoms of a serious allergic reaction include rash, swelling, or difficulty breathing or swallowing. if you have any of these symptoms stop taking farxiga and seek medical help right away. do not take farxiga if you have severe kidney problems, are on dialysis, or have bladder cancer. tell your doctor right away if you have blood or red color in your urine or pain while you urinate. farxiga can cause serious side effects, including dehydration, genital yeast infections in women and men, serious urinary tract infections, low blood sugar and kidney problems. stop taking farxiga and call your doctor right away if you have signs of ketoacidosis, which can be serious or life threatening. farxiga. we are everyday people. ♪ i am everyday people, yea, yea. ♪ ask your doctor if farxiga is right for you and visit farxiga.com to learn how you can get it for free. hi, friends, and good morning. it's sunday, the 24th of april. i'm an na kooiman. the house ready to make a decision on the top secret reports that implicate saudi arabia in the 9/11 attacks. there's a plan this morning to release it. and would you describe this as toning it down? >> lying ted cruz, there's absolutely no way he can win. he's lying ted. he lies. and kasich, he's 1 for 38. i'm just running. >> trump campaign said they're going to be acting presidential. maybe this is presidential in 2016. meanwhile, ted cruz pulls even closer in the delegate race. we'll bring you the latest on that. and one mega retailer causing outrage with some of their customers after saying anybody can use whatever bathroom or dressing room they want. will a boycott of hundreds of thousands of poem change target's course. live from new york city, and the concrete canyon, this is "fox & friends" for sunday. ♪ >> who's that behind the wheel? >> yes, that is you. >> will she hit anything? >> yes. >> you're going to have to stay tuned to find out. the destruction by anna. >> i got to go behind the wheel and go around some of the track and obstacles. >> as you can see, we are outside once again this segment. if you're in the neighborhood, drop on by. >> i -- and bring us a scarf. >> here's the problem. we're doing every other segment indoor, outdoor. at the top of the 9:00 hour, 15 seconds, tucker was at least 45 seconds away from the set. >> i was. >> i have never seen you run at that capacity and you were a little winded to be honest. >> i'm an older man, steve. i was just telling one of the guests which scones are the tastiest. i'm not making that up. >> it's good to be here on this sunday morning. we start this hour with a fox news alert. we may soon learn if there really was a saudi arabia connection to the 9/11 terror attacks. the obama administration likely to release part of that 28-page top secret chapter over the next several weeks. we already know that 15 of the 19 september 11th terrorists were citizens of saudi arabia. what we don't know is whether the saudi government helped them in any way. right now, those pages, which come from a much larger investigation, are locked up in a secure room beneath the capital on orders from president george w. bush. also, there is legislation on capitol hill that would change the law which would make it possible for victims' families to sue the saudi government. at this suggestion right now, it is simply that they would release some of the super secret 9/11 report. they ought to. >> what do you think the fallout could be? >> i think it's a dangerous game. i think you can trace most acts of sunni terrorism around the world to saudi. but it's different from saying the royal family is directly behind it. if the government of saudi arabia were destabilized to fall, you're talking about a disaster. if that country were to fall into the hands of lunatics, you could see the world destabilize. i think our interest in the end is to keep that regime stable. undermining them is dangerous. >> i get that. if somebody in the government -- if people close to the royal family were involved, whether it was financing or some sort of support, we ought to know. >> i'm all for knowing. i've watched the u.s. government under obama and the previous administration destabilize countries that became black holes and a bigger threat to us. >> i understand that. saudi arabia will for a couple more years still be our main gas station. that suggests the cooperation. how much of it are they going to release? stay tuned. let's switch gears. donald trump, one of his newest advisors was down in florida last week and told some republican heavy hitters at a conference there that he was going to be toning it down and acting more presidential. so what do you think happened at his rally yesterday? take a listen. you decide if he's toning it down. >> being presidential's easy. much easier than what i have to do. here i have to rant and rave and keep you people going. i sort of don't like toning it down. presidential's easy. you know what presidential is? i walk on -- [ laughter ] if i was presidential, first of all, i'd have a tele prompter. you ever see crooked hillary clinton? she walks in, good afternoon, bridgeport, how are you. this is crooked hillary clinton. >> it could working for him -- >> by the way, no, that's not presidential. we have a president who doesn't act very presidential in my opinion. is this less presidential than attacking our allies, trying to completely change the country because he's dissatisfied with the population as our current president does? i don't know. >> because paul manafort, did say that, was trump planning to act for presidential? he's like, no, i don't want to be boring. is he kind of going rogue from his advisors. >> the advisor spilled the beans and said donald trump is evolving. it's going to take a couple more weeks. i bet the evolution doesn't complete until the day after california casts their vote. >> my theory is, he's just enjoying it. he just can't stop himself. i'm not endorsing him. this is a guy having a good time, though, i think. >> the people who go to the events seem to love it. they're allowing convicted felons to vote, a couple hundred thousand of them, making legislation that will loi that to happen. coincidentally, hillary clinton put out there, proud of my friend. the governor's reasoning is he said, these people have paid their debt to associate, they're reformed, this should be part of the process, and let them vote. >> well, the cynic might say, okay, in the commonwealth of virginia now, 200 former convicted felons eligible to vote. gee, would that have made a difference in the election? mitt romney was beaten by barack obama by less than -- >> a couple hundred thousand. >> less than 200,000. if you wanted to do the math, is he trying to help his long-time family friend hillary clinton clench the purple state of virginia? >> it's totally political. i know some decent former felons who should be re-integrated. these people don't have the legal right to go duck hunting, but they're now going to help choose our next president. explain why that is intellectually consistent. it's not. >> are we learning this election season rules within both parties that we've never really known before? >> yes. that's right. will they really be choosing the next president or the committees be doing that? >> another topic, target has come out and said that the customers of target can use restrooms and dressing rooms that match your gender identity. in other words, do you identify with something contrary to how you were born. what's happened since then, the american family association started a boycott. and so far, 340,000 people have signed the pledge not to go to target anymore because they don't like the idea. >> all my neighbors feel very virtuous because they're on the side of target here. here's what they don't care about. the fact that one-fifth of american households don't have any wage at all. the country is getting poorer, and gyet the leets are focusing on bathrooms. where's the evidence a lot of people are being discriminated against at target bathrooms? >> a man can simply say he feels like a woman today, even if young girls or women are already in there. you have lit up the e-mail machine. >> marjorie says i'm a woman, and if this is target's new policy, i will not shop there. >> target really did outdo themselves. they should be boycotted by the entire decent population. >> all right. what do you think about that? you can e-mail us, you can facebook us, you can tweet us, you can walk down to 48th and 6th avenue and yell at us. >> we'll take anything. >> others have done that, by the way. >> in fact, you just got yelled at -- >> i had a non-fan. i have a very large non-fan club. >> this non-fan said i haven't liked you since you were wearing a bow tie. >> i've hated you for decades, he said. he was totally sincere. >> which should give him some good scones. we need to tell you the rest of your headlines this morning. three people are injured after a wisconsin prom. someone showed up outside of the high school with a rifle and opened fire. two students were shot as they were leaving the building. >> our ourselves were on scene already doing a walk-through of the area. we took the subject into custody. at this point, we feel that we have the subject in custody that was a threat. the community's safe at this point. >> it is unclear if there was a relationship between the victims and the shooter. all students inside the building were escorted out. an arizona walmart ends in an ambush and officers injured and the suspect shot dead. when officers approached a homeless man, he pulled out a gun and fired, but was killed after officers shot back. and a man who claims to have been prince's drug dealer is speaking out alleging the pop star was highly addicted to opiates. ♪ this is what it sounds like when doves cry ♪ >> the man referred to as dr. d told the daily mail he gave prince prescription drugs like fentanyl starting in the 1980s. dr. d. says prince would spend as much as $40,000 at a time for a six-month supply of painkillers. and those are your headlines. >> all right. >> trying to thaw in the sun. >> we are in the shade. >> rick is in the sun where it is 25 degrees warmer. >> the sun feels good this morning doesn't it? there's a lot of georgia out here. >> there you go, welcome. welcome, georgia. you're going to have a really nice day in georgia, but you're here. take a look at the weather map, show you what's going on. 63 in atlanta right now. tons of sunshine. you see where the warmth is across the central plains, that's going to be our trouble spot today. northeast, mid-atlantic, temperatures a little bit cooler than yesterday, but overall looking pretty good. down to the southeast, take a look at georgia. sunny skies all day long. the only real trouble spot is across southeast texas. and finally, scattered showers this morning across parts of minnesota into the u.p. of michigan. and later on in the day, severe weather across parts of nebraska and kansas. back over to you. forget those pesky wall street speeches. hillary clinton wants to talk about something more exciting, her vice president picks. we'll have the very latest coming up. >> let's run back inside where it's warm. >> let's get some scones! ♪ go ahead... leave the competition behind. lexus gs 350 and 200 turbo. there's no going back. thope to see you again soon.. whoa, whoa, i got this. just gotta get the check. almost there. i can't reach it. if you have alligator arms, you avoid picking up the check. what? it's what you do. i got this. thanks, dennis! if you want to save fifteen percent or more on car insurance, you switch to geico. growwwlph. it's what you do. oh that is good crispy duck. wrely on the us postal service? because when they ship with us, their business becomes our business. that's why we make more e-commerce deliveries to homes than anyone else in the country. here, there, everywhere. united states postal service priority: you now, there's a new request to release transcripts of speeches that have been given. when everybody agrees to do that, i will as well. i think it's important we all abide by the same standard. >> hillary clinton still dodging questions on the release of her wall street transcripts. this time claiming it wouldn't be fair unless everybody else do the same thing. almost all of the 82 wall street firms that paid her have u.s. government interests. fox news contributor and political editor guy benson joins us with reaction. i said 82 wall street firms. i don't think it was wall street firms. 82 firms in all paid her a lot of money for her speeches and wound up doing business with the government. there's no connection there is there? >> this is an associated press report showing that virtually all of those firms across a bunch of different industries and sectors of our economy had interest for the u.s. government, trying to gain contracts and work with the government, including some of them at the state department, some of them who personally lobbied and went after hillary clinton herself. this will raise more questions about her commitment to transparency which she shockingly touts from time to time because she will not release the transcripts of those speeches, particularly the ones to wall street. >> isn't she talking about bernie sanders? he doesn't have any, so it's kind of a crazy argument. >> he's like, i am prepared now to do exactly that. i will release all of my transcripts to wall street. he said it's very easy because there are none. hillary clinton knew exactly what she was doing. in between her time at the state department and running for president, and everyone knew she was going to run for president, including her, which is why i think her speaking fee was what it was. she was asking for $225,000 at least per speech. wouldn't you know it, all sorts of organizations and firms and companies that thought it might be useful to curry favor with this woman, they ponied up and shelled out and she became very, very rich. >> they had to fly some of her staff members out three days earlier to stay in luxury hotels and stuff like this. but a part of her rider was the fact that the company that she hired then also had to spend $1,000 to hire a stenographer to write down what she said. what's interesting -- the company then turned it over to her. she's in the control of this. what would have been a lot cheaper would have been just to have somebody videotape it. >> youtube. >> she probably doesn't want to be on video saying the things she said. >> that's exactly right. you ran through some of those checklist items she would ask for. she want add certain size of gi gulfstream jet. look, the one that you narrowed in on, if you were demanding that your host pay $1,000 to have someone transcribe your remarks, it is awfully ironic that now she is hoarding those very transcripts and refusing to put them out. why it matters, steve, at a recent presidential debate, late 2015, she was challenged on this by bernie sanders, and she said, when i spoke to wall street, don't you worry, i told those bankers to clean up their act. okay. if we're to believe that, which does string credulity. if she in fact did those things and was speaking truth to power, she has the evidence. let's see the evidence. >> exactly. mrs. clinton, tear down that wall, that stone wall, that is. guy benson, thank you for joining us. >> of course, steve. coming up, talking about a former clinton scandal, monica lewinsky's name comes up at a bernie sanders rally, next. ♪ there is only one place where real and amazing live. seaworld. real. amazing the wheel. ♪ >> it's monster jam here at metlife stadium. 4,000 tons of dirt have been brought in for 20 different trucks going around this track, maybe even jump a few cars. 11-time world champion is attempting a new record propelling his 10,000 pound truck through the air jumping over six monster trucks. how big is this thing? >> 10 foot tall, 12 foot wide, 5 1/2 foot tall tires. it's a huge leap. over 35 foot off the ground in order to make it happen. >> how fast can it go? >> it will go up to 80 miles per hour. >> do you ever go up to 80 miles per hour? >> absolutely. >> all right. i've got a need for speed and i love to get up in the air. can i have a lesson? >> you know what, absolutely, i think you can have a lesson. i'm thinking a little bit of a different outfit. >> you don't like this. i wore my sequins just for you. let's go for a ride. >> let's do it, anna. >> i'm in. >> turn the power on. >> pull it out? >> yeah. >> gas? >> yes, ma'am. >> 1,500 horsepower. an average car has about 130. >> how much does this have? >> 5,100. >> i don't know if you know me. but i like to get into some trouble from time to time. i've driven a monster truck one time before. remember this? steve dared me to destruction. and crash. >> you're driving it. >> i'm really looking forward to this. see? already getting into trouble. i attempted to do the whole track, but i hit kill switch and told me to back up and stay on one end. ♪ ♪ >> all right. how did i do? >> perfect. you did fantastic. >> after you've seen this amazing job i just did, do you think i could do a stunt? >> everybody in the building wants to see a huge jump. >> they'd love for me to do it instead of you. >> that would be fantastic. >> can i hold you to it? >> a little more practice. >> if tom wouldn't let me try the stunt, how did he do? >> now, why didn't you do that? >> he wouldn't let me do it. >> i think after what happened back in 2013 when you were egging me on -- >> what could happen? anna behind the wheel of a monster truck. >> our segment producer was doing damage control. >> tom, way to go. for fans who want to catch the show, monster jam is in nashville on june 18th. >> good job. >> thank you. donald trump taking on his opponents again despite promising to be more presidential. >> lying ted cruz has absolutely no way he can win. he's lying ted. he lies. and kasich has no -- he's one for 38. >> that's donald trump unfiltered. is it working for him? our political panel outside on the plaza. we'll talk to them in a minute. plus, one family's surprise announcement doesn't go as planned. >> you are great grandparents. >> do you want spinach? >> the adorable video going viral this morning. ♪ if you're running a business, legalzoom has your back. over the last 10 years we've helped one million business owners get started. visit legalzoom today for the legal help you need to start and run your business. legalzoom. legal help is here. lying ted cruz, there's absolutely no way he can win. he's lying ted. and kasich has no -- he's one for 38. he's running. i'm just running. why are you running? i don't know. this is crooked hillary clinton. >> well, that was donald trump, the gop frontrunner taking on his opponents once again in l k language that not many would describe as presidential. how is it working? we have a terrific political panel seated outside on the couch. political reporter for real politics and republican strategist. great to see you all. boris, i don't think i've ever seen a candidate enjoy himself more than donald trump clearly does. i mean, nobody would ever tell him to do this. no consultant would recommend he do this. >> not only is he enjoying it, his supporters are enjoying it. how many trump supporters? [ cheers and applause ] he's bringing out supporters in droves. people are joining the republican party. he's bringing out people that were bernie supporters, not going for hillary. so he's really changing the game. the rest of the gop has to get in line and manke sure we beat hillary in november. >> maybe there's a lesson for hillary. the only moment i found her appealing during the whole campaign is when she barked. why doesn't she look at trump and say, a little bit of that might go a long way for her? >> i wouldn't be surprise if her campaign consultants weren't taking heed of this. you say what consultants would advise him to do this, there's no way roger stone hasn't told him it's a good idea. >> this is who he is. >> we shouldn't be acting like trump is operating in a vacuum here. think about this, for instance. last week, there was a leak of an internal memo of the campaign with the talking points. you know what was missing, banning muslims. there's no way they didn't tell him tone it down on the banning muslims. >> maybe you're right. at what point -- truthfully, the presidency is the most significant job in the world, in world history, actually. and at some point, you do need to seem like you're equal to the complexity of the job. do you think trump does change tone at some point? >> i don't think he can help himself. he has the campaign that you just talked about which is his paul manafort and others talking to the rnc, trying to pitch this new candidate of candidate. and then you have trump back to his old ways. i've talked to a lot of republicans who say, if trump's the nominee, once he starts going after hillary clinton, that could be something that helps to unify the party a little bit. there is the never trump movement, but i think he'll continue this. if he focuses on democrats, i think republicans will be okay with that. >> i like the moments we saw yesterday, rosario dawson comes up and says i'm on monica lewinsky's side. hillary can't run on behalf of women when she's attacked women like monica lewinsky. >> the one time hillary went after him on women, he said how can you do that, your husband is bill clinton. hillary stopped and went back to her corner. >> if he's the nominee, he's going to say that again and again. what she going to say? >> it's a very difficult line for her there. if she does like with bernie sanders, she has sat back. we're going to leave it up to you to decide. but she has a real tough road. >> does she have to apologize at a certain point? >> i think if she's running against donald trump in a general election, we have a pretty good idea of that kind of matchup. that's exactly how it's going to be framed in the fall. >> i hope you'll stay on the couch all morning. >> all day. >> happy birthday, mom, i love you. >> happy birthday, i totally agree with that. back to you, anna. other stories making headlines. one firefighter is injured after a massive fire engulfs a three-story apartment complex in arizona. look at this. flames ripping through seven buildings, all of which are under construction. families in gilbert forced to evacuate their homes. more than 120 fire crews were called into battle the five-alarm inferno. no word yet on how it all started. >> the zoo keeper who was mauled to death broke the safety rules. they say she walked into the big cats' night house while the tigers were still inside. they are still investigating the attack. and a new plan in a fight against the zika virus. this is interesting. florida may release genetically modified mosquitos into the keys to help combat the virus. some residents are questioning whether it's safe. dr. jennifer carl joined us earlier and said the fda is on board with the plan. >> they think it's safe, a relatively safe and unlikely to have harms to communicates, environments and to people and animals. >> 388 travel related cases of zika have been reported nationwide. and great grandparents guessing their pregnancy news. they listen to music to block their ears and try to guess what she's saying. look at this. >> are great grandparents. you -- >> do you want spinach? you are great grandparents. what? we're great grandparents? >> oh, i love this song. >> the grandmother is so out of it there. she continues to play the game. they both eventually realize what's going on and start jumping up and down with excitement and hug their granddaughter. i want to know what's on grandma loves. all right. meanwhile, let's go uptown to rick about 100 feet from where we are right here. >> we're on the sunny side of the street right now. the camera guy said don't squint. how's that going for you? >> trying not to. >> take a look at the weather maps as you are getting outside this mor morning. severe weather today, we have the threat for severe weather. mostly hail, but few tornados. tomorrow, just some scattered showers, maybe a thunderstorm or two around chicago. tuesday's the big day. it could be the worst severe weather day we've had so far this year. get ready for large and potentially destructive tornados, especially where you see that orange color. from manhattan, kansas all the way to dallas. we're going to watch that for your severe weather. all right, guys, who's taking it over now? >> we are. who paid hillary clinton to give those top secret speeches that she won't release the transcripts to? maria bartiromo breaks down the numbers. and say hello to the best thing you will see all day. ♪ hello from the outside ♪ at least i can say that i've tried ♪ >> and he's here on "fox & friends." he's taking the internet by storm and he's back for our performance. don't go anywhere. you're watching "fox & friends." ♪ (war drums beating) welcome back. hillary clinton is still as of this morning refusing to release transcripts of her paid speeches to wall street executives despite being asked to do so many times. >> you were calling for senator sanders to release his tax returns, which he did. you were call were for more . are you going to release your wall street transcripts? >> well, that's a good question. that's a very fair question. let me answer it this way. i have released 33 years of tax returns. now there's a new request to release transcripts of speeches that have been given. when everybody agrees to do that, i will as well. because i think it's important we all abide by the same standards. >> now we're learning that almost all of the wall street firms that paid her have u.s. government interests. maria bartiromo joins us now to react. good morning. >> hey, there. good morning. >> it's a lot of money. >> how do you like this set outside where it is looking directly into the sun? would you like your sunglasses? >> i think it's really interesting. it's not just wall street firms. when you look at the other companies that hillary clinton spoke to in terms of giving speeches, an ap review found that all 82 companies or groups, they all were also involved in trying to lobby or sway the government in a certain way. >> that's got to be a coincidence, right? >> come on, steve. this is all about influence. that's why bernie sanders keeps complaining about it. he's trying to make the connection that, look, if somebody pays you upwards of $2 million collectively to make speeches, then how is she going to be tough on them and have independence when it comes to policy. if all of these groups were lobbying the government, it's a fair question. >> how unwise is it to do it in the first place? why didn't anyone say, you're running for president, this is going to look terrible. just forego the paycheck for once? >> i don't have an answer for that. she really picked up the pace and started doing speeches aggressively. in her mind, she's thinking, i'm no longer secretary of state, i'm going to start making some money here. you know she had hopes of running for presidency. at that time, she should have said to herself, look, how will this look. now they want to see the speeches. you can only imagine what's in those speeches. having to curry favor or votes from wall street or any other group, probably they were favorable to that group. >> reported that her staff was -- would take the cell phones of people in the audience to make sure that nothing ended up on video. it sounds like the only way we're going to know is if we get the transcripts. >> she keeps thinking, too, look, when everybody else releases their speeches -- >> who is everybody else? >> let's start with tax returns. whatever she can do to keep this at bay, she is going to do. i think it will be damaging. that's why she doesn't want to release it. she doesn't want the rest of the country to hear what she really feels about policy as it relates to wall street. i would eveventure to guess it' not as aggressive. >> i'm so sorry you have to live under those regulations. can you imagine how horrible it's going to be? >> i don't know if she will have to release these speeches before the election. we'll see about that. obviously the upcoming elections on tuesday are going to be a big focus this is going to be as well. because people want to see an independent candidate. they want to feel like there's not going to be any sway. all of these groups, they will obviously follow clinton if in fact she does become president. >> folks, she's going to be on right after our show. how about a round of applause for maria bartiromo? [ cheers and applause ] >> thank you so much. all right. i like it out here. >> we're going to talk about connecticut, what connecticut voters want and the tax story is in there. >> ready to rumble. he woied the internet with his cover of adele's "hello." he's back for a "fox & friends" encore. that's next. ♪ hello from the other side ♪ i must have called a though times ♪ . introducing otezla, apremilast. otezla is not an injection, or a cream. it's a pill that treats plaque psoriasis differently. some people who took otezla saw 75% clearer skin after 4 months. and otezla's prescribing information has no requirement for routine lab monitoring. don't take otezla if you are allergic to any of its ingredients. otezla may increase the risk of depression. tell your doctor if you have a history of depression or suicidal thoughts, or if these feelings develop. some people taking otezla reported weight loss. your doctor should monitor your weight and may stop treatment. side effects may include diarrhea, nausea, upper respiratory tract infection, and headache. tell your doctor about all the medicines you take, and if you're pregnant or planning to be. ask your dermatologist about otezla today. otezla. show more of you. ♪ no, you're not ♪ yogonna watch it! ♪tch it! ♪ ♪ we can't let you download on the goooooo! ♪ ♪ you'll just have to miss it! ♪ yeah, you'll just have to miss it! ♪ ♪ we can't let you download... uh, no thanks. i have x1 from xfinity so... don't fall for directv. xfinity lets you download your shows from anywhere. i used to like that song. capacity? >> yeah, i don't know the story, but i know that i was premature. >> you're building it up even more. >> yeah. >> we would love for you to sing adele's hello for us. take it away. . ♪ hello from the other side. i must have called a thousand times to tell you i'm story for everything that i've done, but when i call you never seem to be home. ♪ hello from the outside ♪ at least i can say that i've tried ♪ it don't matter doesn't tier you apart anymore speith hello, how are you? ♪ it's so is typical of me to talk about myself, i'm sorry ♪ i hope that you're well. ♪ did you you ever it out of that town where nothing happen ever happens? ♪ it's no secrete that the both of us are running out of time ♪ so hello from the other side ♪ i must have called a thousand times ♪ to tell you i'm sorry for everything that i've done ♪ f but when i call you.

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Transcripts For FOXNEWSW Americas Newsroom With Bill Hemmer And Sandra Smith 20180821 13:00:00

succeeded where others failed. >> we have a president who really wants to fight for the american people and he wants to make sure that the rule of law is followed. and so when you have a case like this where in 2004 this individual is told that he is no longer a u.s. citizen and must be deported and consecutive administrations ignores that it tears down the rule of law. it takes somebody like the president to say this is a decision. he is no longer a united states citizen. we want him out. >> sandra: brian yenis joins us in new york. what more do we know about how this former nazi guard managed to get into the united states? >> look, this nazi guard has been living here since 1949 as a war refugee. he lied to u.s. immigration officials telling them he spent world war ii working on his father's farm in his hometown of what was poland, present day ukraine and said he worked in a farming down of brooklyn, a close knit community of 1500 residents. it has been weeks where that community has come together. law enforcement officials both local and federal have been searching for this missing girl who was last seen while she was jogging. we have had her father on this program on multiple occasions. her brother, her boyfriend have all been part of this search. he had just recently in the past day or so reluctantly returned, her dad, returned back to where he lives in california as the search continued. he said very reluctantly i'm being told i need to do this as the search continued. now this news this morning two sources telling fox news that her body has been found. mollie tibbetts, the 20-year-old rising sophomore at the university of iowa. her disappearance was completely out of character for her. she had been staying at her boyfriend's home while he had been traveling. he was working on construction about 100 miles away from that home. she was dog sitting at the time, her boyfriend said. matt finn has been on the story from the beginning. matt, what are you learning? >> sandra, this morning two separate sources telling fox news that mollie's body was found near iowa. we don't know exactly where or the circumstances. just a tragic ending to the story. mollie tibbetts father just returned to california. he was closing the door being on the ground in iowa. his heart was still there and now unfortunately he is probably being called back, sandra. >> sandra: authorities had really encouraged this search to continue both locally and the surrounding areas as we know. again, matt, this news just coming. we don't know where about her body has been found. a local hog farmer had been interviewed on multiple occasions. he had turned down a lie detector test and then agreed to one. he passed that. are you getting any indication whatsoever, matt, about where her body has been found or how wide the search had been at this point? >> well, you know, when we were on the ground as we were leaving iowa there were a couple key areas being identified that investigators were honing in on. one was a car wash where she was close to where she was last seen jogging. another area was a truck stop which is right off the exit of i-80 for brooklyn. as the investigation expanded and mollie could be anywhere investigators were closing in on an area. they didn't tell us why, the truck stop because so many people would have been getting on and off the interstate. sources not identifying where her body was found but one law enforcement source saying that it's in iowa. we don't know the nature of her body or what exactly happened. the reward was inching closer to $400,000. i'm told now that the motivation behind the reward will turn on a dime and use it to try to find who did this to mollie. >> sandra: it was an unusual search in that we didn't get a lot of updates from authorities on the ground there. they would schedule a news conference and then cancel it. it happened on multiple occasions. we still don't know why that was. there was speculation that the person of interest was so close. authorities had even suggested that the person who took mollie was searching amongst them, was attending the candlelight vigils. but the bottom line is there was really no persons of interest as this investigation continues, i should say, while her body has been found, the investigation surely continues, matt. >> there was a lot of frustration on the ground. police were being so tight lipped. we all know if investigators release any information it can be used against them. so for quite some time people were pleading, give us more information, maybe we can help you identify a suspect. investigators never did that or let on if they had suspects or were completely at a loss for information. >> sandra: matt finn reporting on mollie tibbetts. two sources telling fox news her body has been found dead. we'll have more on this as we get it. thank you. >> eric: sad news for the tibbetts family. meanwhile president trump back in washington addressing the russia probe. in a new interview with reuters the president says he is worried about a potential perjury trap should he sit down and have an interview with the team of special counsel robert mueller. the president also talking about the ability, he says, to control the investigation saying i could run it if i want but i decided to stay out. i'm totally allowed to be involved if i wanted to be. so far i haven't chosen to be involved. what does it mean? hugo gurdon is from "the washington examiner". as they say, anything you say when you sit down can be used against you in a court of law. the miranda spiel. does the president have a point in claiming a potential perjury trap if he sits down with investigators? >> sure he does. it's part of a negotiating employ. he and his lawyer want to limit the scope of the mueller questioning so it's useful for them to make this point. at the same time the president talks in a very undisciplined way sometimes and it wouldn't be very difficult for a trained lawyers, plenty on the mueller team, to catch him in inaccuracies whether they were deliberate deceipts or bravado. so yeah, it's legitimate but also convenient. >> eric: how about those who say you don't have anything to worry about in a perjury trap if you just tell the truth? >> that's true. but just take for example what the president said about being able to run the mueller investigation if he wanted. that was -- i took that as a joke of bravado. it is an extension of the legal advice he has that he has lots of flexibility. he says things which get him into trouble and people take seriously. he is not the kind of witness that giuliani would like to put on the stand. >> eric: he also said if i say something that he, comey, says something and it's my word against his and he is best friends with mueller so mueller might say well, i believe comey, maybe even if i'm telling the truth it makes me a liar, it is no good. >> eric: the one man jury is robert mueller. >> sandra: he can believe whatever he wishes to believe. president trump puts things in a blunt way. the contrast between himself and comey. comey being mueller's friend is a good way of setting it up in front of the public saying it's a real problem. i don't know robert mueller would do such a thing. i kind of doubt it. >> eric: more on this throughout the hour. >> sandra: president trump ramping up rhetoric against the u.s. intelligence community. what he is saying about james clapper amid his growing feud are former c.i.a. director john brennan. senator james lankford joins us live. >> eric: iran reveals a fighter jet that they say is capable of carrying a variety of weapons. we'll discuss that and more with former governor mike huckabee. >> sandra: and a stunning development in a triple murder. we have got new details on this shocking confession from the husband just ahead. >> i just -- my god, who could do that to two little girls? >> it will be a one-sided story A look at the day's news and headlines. security clearance after they left the last administration. security clearance isn't a forever institution. it has to be renewed frequently and there for a purpose to have access to classified information when you need it. they don't need that classified information at this point. they aren't in the administration any longer or have a need to know on this. so it is very different. so for brennan to be able to step out and say the president is treasonous and attack him every day the president is simply responding with this person is irrational and doesn't need to have security clearance anymore. seems like a straight forward response. >> sandra: now the president and legal team saying bring it on if you want to take legal action, go ahead and do it. the president wrote this in another tweet yesterday. i hope john brennan brings a lawsuit. it will then be easy to get all his records, texts, emails and documents and show how he was evolved with the mueller rigged witch hunt. sort of a taunting by the president. >> it's the president's style. not my style in any way. the president is pushing back on brennan and the president should rise above it and be able to say that previous administration with an axe to grind. they handed materials to president obama. i think he can step out and be able to stand above it and move on. the more he talks about it, the more he gives brennan the microphone. >> sandra: the big picture discussion here is the importance of the security clearances and who should have them. the president also said this everybody wants to keep their security clearance it's worth prestige, dollars and board seats. brennan is a political hack. last word on that and move on to something else. go ahead. >> my last word on that is secure clearance is not some asset you can monetize. you have a security clearance to serve the american people. if you plan to monetize that after the fact it's a very different issue. the president has every right to be able to pull that away from somebody and he has exercised that right. end of the day the president can rise above. see the president of the united states. >> sandra: now this news. new evidence that there are foreign actors trying to infiltrate our election system senator lankford. microsoft is saying it discovered a shut down a russian operation aimed at hacking the senate and target conservative think tanks. that these attacks were thwarted last week. microsoft's president brad smith said this in a "new york times" interview we're seeing another uptick in attacks. what is particular in this instance is the broadening of the type of websites they're going for, the russians are seeking to disrupt and divide. what do you know about this, senator? >> the russians are not just focused on elections. a lot of our conversation in the last two years has been fair focus around the 2016 election. they were engaged in 2014 trying to find ways to divide. the russians had more activity online trying to divide americans after at the election of 2016 than leading up to 2016. they've not stopped. there is two different issues here. one is trying to get out and put out their version of propaganda to try to divide americans every way they can on social media, news. try to find ways to infiltrate and then the other one is break in, hack and steal. microsoft said they're trying to hack and steal information from think tanks which they did before the 2016 election and they're trying to do it again or trying to break into the senate and steal things. people forget the russians were able to break into the dnc with a phishing attack to pretend it was a legitimate site. john podesta typed in the password and gave them the password by hitting a phishing scam. they are trying to do the same thing hacking into different systems now. >> sandra: senator james lankford. thank you for your time. nice to see you. >> eric: word on the tragic and heartbreaking end apparently in the search for mollie tibbetts. the 20-year-old university of iowa student who has been missing for just over the month. they're learning the sheriff's department in brooklyn, iowa, will hold a news conference at 5:00 p.m. eastern time tonight. this news conference coming as our own matt finn broke the news that mollie's body has been found in iowa. no other details at the moment. we'll get more on this story as it comes in. chicago police say it will take more than officers on the streets to try and stem that horrendous violence in the city that is under siege. 58 people shot over this weekend just alone. no signs that it will end. garry mccarthy running for mayor against rahm emanuel will join us to talk about how to stem the carnage in chicago coming up on the fox news channel. do you need the most trusted battery in your wireless mouse? maybe not. maybe you can trust that during your fantasy draft, the computer won't autodraft a kicker in the 7th round. or... you could just trust duracell. friday night until monday morning. seven of them killed despite the deployment of more than 600 additional police officers to neighborhoods hardest hit by this violence. garry mccarthy a former chicago superintendent of police is now also running for mayor against rahm emanuel. he joins us now and welcome back to the program. as you know, i'm born and raised in chicago, hate to see this happening. you hear gunfire in some of the nicest neighborhoods. what is happening? what are we doing about it? we've reached out to rahm emanuel's office for comment and haven't gotten a response. your thoughts this morning? >> you know what we're missing and you heard it said, we can't put a police officer on every corner. crime reduction is not about putting a police officer on every corner. chicago has more officers per capita than just about any large city in the country. in fact, we rank number three behind places like baltimore and newark, new jersey. as far as officers per capita. crime induction is about who, when and where crime is committed and intercepting that from happening. it is not just about deployment. i'm not sure that's being done. the crime strategy we put together was considered the gold standard in the country. people were coming from all over the country and internationally to look at our gang violence reduction strategy created in conjunction with some of the brightest minds in the country like charlie beck from l.a. who recently retired, helped us put together the whole concept of stopping the next shooting by deploying where the next shooting was supposed to happen, not everybody responding to the scene of the shooting. it is the same gun laws that were in effect three years ago when we had record lows. we had 50 year lows in the murder rate when i was superintendent. and at the end of the day, that plan -- i don't believe that's being followed today. >> sandra: that seems to be the direction rahm emanuel has gone. we tried to dig up the last time he spoke publicly. his office hasn't issued a statement publicly that we can see since the weekend. he said who provides a 13-year-old a gun? why does a 13-year-old go to a basketball game with a gun when kids are having fun? he said that on monday. so he is going that route. but you clearly hear a very frustrated police superintendent eddie johnson in all of this acknowledging that the department can only do so much were his words. he is frustrated, garry. what do you do? what do you do to solve this? >> i don't accept the fact that the police can only do so much. we've already shown -- look at new york, 290 murders in the city three times the size of chicago that had 770 in 2016. policing matters. and at the end of the day there is blueprints out there of how to do this. but chicago refuses to do it. everything that is happening today is a direct result of rahm emanuel's actions in 2015 and 2016 when he drove the murder rate up by 80% by conducting a witch hunt in the department. the officers know that nobody has their back. they are concerned about their pensions, their families, their houses, and they aren't willing to be the next top news story, which is really problematic. these men and women are courageous, hard working. i always joked if you switched a new york city police officer and chicago officer, the only difference would be we have different accents. this can be done but we need leadership, a plan and execution. none of that is happening right now. it's all about the politics. >> sandra: we need to be talking about it. thanks for coming back on the program. >> eric: the jury in the paul manafort trial set to start deliberations moments from now. he is charged with tax and bank fraud as his defense team is expressing optimism that the jury is going into day four but is that really the case? we'll take a look at that deliberation and the trial in a moment. >> sandra: president trump speaking out about the russia probe in a new interview saying if he tells the truth would robert mueller believe him? andrew mccarthy is here to discuss that and more next. you're headed down the highway you do, too, but not in time. hey, no big deal. you've got a good record and liberty mutual won't hold a grudge by raising your rates over one mistake. you hear that, karen? liberty mutual doesn't hold grudges... how mature of them. for drivers with accident forgiveness liberty mutual won't raise their rates because of their first accident. liberty mutual insurance. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty ♪ >> sandra: fox news alert day four of deliberations underway right now in the tax and bank fraud trial of former trump campaign chair paul manafort. manafort's lawyer says the lengthy deliberations could be good for his client. >> is this a good sign for your client? >> we believe so. >> sandra: manafort is charged with 18 counts of tax evasion, bank fraud and hiding foreign bank accounts in the first case brought to trial by special counsel robert mueller. >> eric: the russia investigation now, president trump making headlines yet again in a new interview with reuters saying he could run the russia investigation if he wants to and expressing concern about sitting down for an interview with special counsel robert mueller's team raising the possibility of what his lawyer has warned could be a so-called perjury trap. the president saying even if i'm telling the truth, it makes me a liar, that's no good. let's bring in andrew mccarthy former u.s. attorney and fox news contributor. you were a federal prosecutor and you know how cases are structured. does the president have a reasonable concern? >> of course he does. a lot of people like to say, eric, that the innocent, honest person has nothing to fear by going in to speak to a prosecutor. but that avoids or overlooks the fact that it's the prosecutor, right or wrong, who makes the decision about whether the innocent, honest person is telling the truth or not. and most cases are fairly complicated, especially when you are talking about homing in on somebody's intent, what they meant by the things that they said. there are almost always multiple witnesses with different perceptions and recollections about the same events. and the prosecutor has to sort out whether, when these differences inevitably occur, they are the product of innocent mistakes of recollection or whether somebody is lying. so even if somebody is telling the truth and trying hard to tell the truth, the prosecutor could decide otherwise. we saw that in the case of general flynn where evidently the first people who spoke to him, the agents who were in the room while he made his statements decided he was telling the truth. and then later somebody from mueller's team came in and decided the opposite. so that can happen. it is part of the way the game is. >> eric: as the president you have a witness, so to speak, who says two separate things. one hand he was in the oval office with sergey lavrov and kissingerly yak fired comey because he was a nut job and sits down with lester holt that russia was on his mind when he fired comey but no one tried to stop the investigation. he didn't stop the investigation. i want it done properly. how does mueller pick and choose? you can say on one hand take a and say that shows he is guilty, you take b and shows that the president -- there is no wrongdoing? >> yeah. well, you know, mueller has more information than i do obviously. but i've always thought, eric, that what was going on here was that russia was on the president's mind but it was on his mind in the sense that director comey told him on multiple occasions he was not a suspect and yet director comey then made public statements in congress that suggested that the president was a suspect. and i think russia was on his mind to the extent that there was a misimpression out in the public that he was a suspect in the investigation. that's what he was concerned about, not russia per se but what people thought of their president in connection with that allegation that there was collusion between the kremlin and the campaign. >> eric: why would comey say two different things? >> i would be very concerned about that if i were the president. i think the reason he said two different things was what he said to congress was the way they were carrying the investigation, which was collusion between kremlin elements and people who were attached to the campaign, not necessarily the president. and i think when he spoke to the president privately, he probably had a more descriptive conversation assuring the president that he personally was not a suspect. >> eric: one other factory want to get into, the dynamics in a grand jury. you can't have a defense attorney in. the prosecutors run it. here is kristin davis, the so-called manhattan madam friends with roger stone talking to martha maccallum last night about what she witnessed in the grand jury. take a listen. >> i think they're legitimately investigating whether collusion happened but their attitude is that -- there are prosecutors in a room with a grand jury that they have a relationship with. they've been there for months and seem to be on joking and fun sort of camaraderie in there, which is concerning. there is nobody there to present another set of facts and that also is concerning to me. >> eric: are jurors swayed by their relationships with the prosecutors if there is that connection and are you troubled by that? >> well, i'm not troubled by it because it's the way the grand jury works. but the fact of the matter is when you have the special grand juries i assume this is a special grand jury, they are together for 18 months and there is no defense lawyer. so you can expect that dynamic to take place. >> eric: andrew mccarthy who has done work on terrorism back in 1993 with the world trade center attack, the first one. thank you for joining us. >> thanks. >> sandra: colorado husband and father christopher watts has been formally charged with murdering his pregnant wife and their two daughters as watts claimed his wife killed the girls before he killed her. we have more on this from denver. >> according to the arrest affidavit chris watts is trying to put part of the blame on his pregnant wife, shanann. he is charged with killing her, their two daughters and their unborn child. at a news conference the district attorney announced the charges shanann's father stepped to the mic briefly. >> i am shanann's dad. this is her brother. we would like to thank everyone, the police department and other agencies involved for working so hard to find my daughter, granddaughters and niko. >> that's the name of shanann's unborn son. chris watts told investigators his wife returned from a business trip around 2:00 in the morning august 13th and the two had a conversation about separating. he told law enforcement he had been having an affair and watts says after that conversation with his wife he saw her strangling one of their daughters on the baby monitor. that she had killed both celeste and bella. according to the arrest documents chris said he went into a rage and ultimately strangled shanann to death. chris said he loaded all three bodies into the back seat of his work truck and took them to an oil work site. you will remember chris watts initially told police, his neighbors and the media that his wife and kids disappeared even asking for their safe return, although he did admit there was tension right before they supposedly vanished. >> it was an argument. i'll leave it at that. but i just want them back. i just want them to come back. >> chris watts is expected back in court this morning, sandra. >> sandra: thank you. >> eric: there is new reaction pouring in this morning after iran reveals a new fighter jet that they say is capable of carrying a variety of weapons and president rouhani was actually seen taking a seat inside that jet. we'll discuss what this means with former governor mike huckabee coming up. >> sandra: plus president trump calling ice agents heroes and slamming democrats for being soft on crime. former acting ice director thomas homan is our headliner this morning at the top of the hour. >> president trump: the extremists who attack ice and cbc like to portray themselves as champions of social justice. they are not. to look at me now, you don't see psoriasis. you see clear skin. you see me. but if you saw me before cosentyx... ♪ i was covered. it was awful. but i didn't give up. i kept fighting. i got clear skin with cosentyx. 3 years and counting. clear skin can last. see if cosentyx could make a difference for you. cosentyx is proven to help people with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis find clear skin that can last. don't use if you're allergic to cosentyx. before starting cosentyx, you should be checked for tuberculosis. an increased risk of infections and lowered ability to fight them may occur. tell your doctor if you have an 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yeah, we can't take anything for granted. i can't imagine they could build a fighter that is anywhere near the capability of america's new f-35 that both the u.s. and israel have but you don't want to take the chance. the one thing we've learned throughout history is apiecement never works and we have to play tough with iran. they're dealing with a problem on two fronts. one is the external. the pressure we're putting on them and the sanctions we've reimposed. this is very important. the president is absolutely doing the right thing in pushing for that. but the second issue is the internal. their economy is in tatters. their people are growing angrier by the day and between the two let's hope that something happens that will bring a collapse to this totalitarian regime intent on destroying everyone who isn't a shiite. >> sandra: trump and netanyahu have been closely aligned on their approach to iran since president trump took office. he is consistently looking to put pressure on him and used words like what he has seen a change of behavior regarding its weapons programs, it's destabilizing activities in the region. accusations iran denies. what do you make of this administration's overall approach particularly since you've seen president trump step in? >> i think it's an important alliance that has been rebuilt between the u.s. and israel. let's keep in mind the iranians have openly declare -- i'm not talking about uncovered secret documents from some cache of hidden things. this is openly what they've said in public, on television and at the u.n., that israel is the little satan and america is the great satan and they'll wipe us from the face of the earth. i'll ask you, if somebody said that they were going to kill another person, don't you think we ought to take that seriously especially when they are loading up every gun and bullet they can and stockpiling them? of course we take it seriously. and we would be idiots and very dangerous idiots if we didn't take iran seriously because they've never kept a promise. they've always tried to kill americans and kidnap americans through terror-sponsored activities across the world and it will really come down to there will be a survivor, it will be us or them. i would like to vote for us. >> sandra: what did you make of the optics of that when they rolled out the new fighter jet. the state television showed live pictures of the ceremony they were holding in tehran? the actual jet flew in the presence of president rouhani and this is the day before the country's national defense industry day, governor. >> i think a lot of this is some bluster. the fact is if you really have an effective weapon, you don't have to announce it. it is kind of like having a mad dog in your yard that will protect you. you don't have to put the sign out. you just need to let him be there. the fact they're making such a big deal of what they have tells me it is not that big a deal. but once again i want to emphasize you can't ever let your guard down when you are dealing with murderous thugs like you are dealing with with the iranian government. these are not nice people that want to sit down and negotiate. they want to blast the world back to the seventh century and we can't stand by and let them attempt to do it. they have to be stopped. >> sandra: there is a picture i was referencing with rouhani standing by as they unveiled that new jet. governor mike huckabee. always good to see you. thank you, sir. >> eric: thank you. a new debate over a 3d gun as a judge is set to decide whether to allow the public to have access to blueprints to make those weapons using 3d printers at home. we'll have a live report on that next. thanks to new tena intimates overnight with proskin technology for two times faster absorption so you can have worry free nights, and wake up feeling fresh and free for a free sample visit tena.us whenshe was pregnant,ter failed, in-laws were coming, a little bit of water, it really- 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lawsuit brought by cody wilson, the owner of defense distributed which wants to public a 3d gun codes online. wilson argues that preventing him from publishing is a violation of his free speech rights. the trump administration finally agreed. in issuing the restraining order last month the judge wrote the proliferation of these firearms will be many of the negative impacts on the state level. the issue has sparked protests by gun control groups. the fact is 3d guns are very expensive to make and unreliable at best. the cheapest 3d printer is $5,000. most guns would shoot once before breaking apart and the shooter would be in the most danger. the hearing today is looking down the road when technology will get better and making 3d guns could become widespread. >> eric: thanks so much. >> sandra: we're following the breaking news out of iowa in just a few moments where the body of college student mollie tibbetts has been found dead. more details as police prepare to hold a news conference. plus president trump honoring ice agents at the white house while denouncing a blue wave saying it would mean open borders and more crime. former acting ice director and newly minted fox news contributor thomas homan will be with us next hour at the top of the 10. for the past five years, i've spoken with hundreds of families and visited senior-care communities around the country. and i've got to tell you, today's senior-living communities are better than ever. these days, there are amazing amenities, like movie theaters, exercise rooms and swimming pools, public cafes, bars, and bistros, even pet-care services. and nobody understands your options like the advisers at a place for mom. these are local, expert advisers that will partner with you to find the perfect place and determine the right level of care, whether that's just a helping hand or full-time memory care. best of all, it's a free service. there is never any cost to you. senior living has never been better, and there's never been an easier way to get great advice. call today. a place for mom -- you know your family, we know senior living. together we'll make the right choice. they have found the body of missing mollie tibbetts. bringing a tragic epidemiology -- end to a search for a month. she was last seen jogging in her town of brooklyn, iowa. no details yet of the discovery of her body and we expect a news conference to be held in the 5:00 p.m. local time hour central time. we'll have more on this as it comes in. this is also a fox news alert. the defense team sounding upbeat on day four of jury deliberations in the paul manafort trial. welcome to a new hour of "america's newsroom." good tuesday morning i'm sandra smith. >> eric: i'm eric shawn in for bill hemmer this morning. it looks like it won't be an open and shut case after the jury has had three-piece days of deliberations and no verdict. manafort's lawyer says he thinks it's a good sign for his client. >> they'll continue to deliberate starting tomorrow morning at 9:30. mr. manafort is very happy to hear that and he thinks it was a very good day. >> eric: we're live outside the courthouse. what happened in the last half hour that the jury has been back behind closed doors? >> paul manafort looked as upbeat today as he has on any of the 16 days of this trial so far. he walked into the court and laughing with his legal team, patting them on the back and it's different than what normally happens. manafort enters, takes a seat in the courtroom and behaves in a very reserves way. we only ever see him whispering or passing notes to his lawyers. that's the only thing different about today. the jury affirmed to the judge that they haven't done any homework outside of court about the case which they do every morning and they did head to deliberate a few minutes ago for the fourth day. >> eric: any indication the verdict is being held up because of a hold-out or is it still so early because it's such a complicated case with so many tax, banking and foreign documents? >> we have multiple sources close to the defense side telling us that if the reason that there have been three full days of deliberations that have been quiet and not produced a verdict is because of a problem with a juror, they think that that would be disclosed to reveal at some point today. on the way into court this morning manafort's attorneys said the defendant feels good, which we saw as well. and we understand he is getting at least one briefing from his legal team every day. that's about it in terms of updates for manafort on deliberations. while in the courthouse he is in solitary confinement and totally isolated. the jury has been deliberating for more than 22 hours and no more substantive questions for the judge since the first day since they wanted clarity about the fundamentals of the mueller team's case. redefine reasonable doubt and asked if the judge could help them organize the nearly 400 exhibits that are not numbered. the judge or attorneys didn't help them do that. >> sandra: president trump honoring those who protect our borders in a special ceremony at the white house. the president calling ice and border patrol agents heroes in the battle over illegal immigration. >> president trump: we're here today to salute to incredibly brave patriots who keep america safe. i want to let you know that we love you, we support you, we will always have your back. any politician who puts criminal aliens before american citizens should find a new line of work. i think we'll have much more of a red wave than what you are going to see as a phony blue wave. blue wave means crime, it means open borders. not good. >> sandra: let's bring in former acting ice director and fox news contributor thomas homan. welcome to your family. welcome. >> eric: good morning. >> sandra: first of all, what did you make of the president's honoring of law enforcement and ice officials here calling them heroes? >> they are heroes. i've been saying that for a very long time. i watched the tape this morning and i knew it would be a great event. name another president that does something like this. stand shoulder to shoulder with law enforcement officers put on the line for this country every day. i've been with this president numerous occasions where he met with state and local law enforcement, met with ice officers, border patrol agents. he has their six. i can't say think of another president who has had that position so strongly. this president is -- i said yesterday during an interview he talks the talks but he also walks the walk like a lot don't. this president is proving he has the backs of these american heroes. >> eric: so moving and astounding about yesterday's event the president brought them some of the agents up. they didn't know they were going to talk in the east room in front of the world basically. one officer, border patrol officer, told about how he opened up the back of a truck and found 78 people who were illegals trying to come in and saved their lives. also others who were able to capture ms-13 gang members and take a lot of drugs off the streets and by doing that saves lives. we saw first-hand what these brave men and women of the service do. >> you know, it's -- the sad thing is they do this every day. last year alone border patrol saved over 2,000 people that were going to die if they weren't rescued by these border patrol agents. you don't hear that. they want to vilify these men and women. i stood in back of a tractor trailer with 19 dead aliens and a child. 19? >> i was the lead investigators to victoria, texas, when there was 19 dead aliens that suffocated in the back of a tractor trailer. >> eric: what was it like when you have to deal with that and you see what the lengths some people go to to try to get into this country? >> it is shocking and sad and why i've been preaching for a year and a half this isn't just about enforcing the law. this is about saving lives. these criminal organizations, that smuggle the people, they don't care about them. they smuggle drugs and guns. i've been preaching to the far left, this isn't just about enforcing law but about saving lives. when you talk about sanctuary cities and abolish ice more people will make the trip and more people will die. not about just enforcing the law which we should do but saving lives of children and women. it's the right thing -- this president has it. he understands it and asks the right questions. the first time i met with him he knew the subject matter like no other president i've worked for. i worked for six of them. no one understands it better than this president. >> sandra: you've been adamant about that and talked about the acting ice director, a man you have known for quite some time. and you fully have the back of him. he was on fox news yesterday afternoon and he was suggesting that unfortunately the american public doesn't see what ice agents do every single day putting themselves on the line. here he is. >> well, most of what cdp does, a lot of what ice does doesn't get seen by the american public and don't realize how valuable we are stopping opioids coming into the country and as we find gang bangers and send them away from the country. those important things are done and unseen by most of america. >> sandra: unfortunately these days unappreciated by some americans. >> it's because of the false narrative from these groups on the far left. you have people like governor cuomo and gillibrand that want to go live for the citizens in new york. i've known ron for 25 years. i hated to walk away from this job. my heart is still there and why i'm hearing continuing to fight for them. if i would leave it to somebody to take over he is the man and ron is doing a great job. >> eric: the heartbreak in the families being separated at the border from babies being separated and children. and ice has had a lot of criticism about that. do you think it's appropriate and fair when you have cynthia nixon calling it a terrorist organization, her words? >> well look, i'm a native new yorker and shame on all those folks in new york. let's understand family separation. the border patrol separated them. it wasn't ice. they had to do it. i don't vilify them for ask. we've asked congress to fix the loophole. if families want to come to this country illegally and claim asylum and see a judge we're for it. see a judge. we don't want them released from facilities never to show up in court or if they show up, not be removed because they'll ignore the judge's order and get into society and disappear. we've got to enforce the laws. if you want to blame somebody for family separations, blame the ninth circuit who said you can't hold family together. blame congress. we told them how to fix it to could keep families together and see a judge. we'll abide by the decision. they want to make it a political issues. politicians and liberal judges want to put politics over public safety and over the sovereignty of the country. guys like me will keep fighting and telling the truth. you won't hear the truth from a lot of places. >> sandra: the president echoed that same sentiment in the tweet talking about the consequences of crossing the border illegally. there are serious, unpleasant consequences to crossing the border into the u.s. illegally. if there weren't our country one overrun with people trying to get in and the system couldn't handle it. he said a blue wave means crime and open borders, a red wave means safety and strength. this is the former nazi labor camp guard in the news this morning removed by ice to germany. they found him, deported him. he had been here since 1949. >> you know, i'm glad you asked the question. one more plug for president trump. when president trump came in office we had 21 countries that would not accept their people back even if they were convicted of serious crimes. they don't want these people back even if they've been ordered removed by the immigration judge. when i left ice we went from 22 to 9 because this president came in and says enough. i'm going to make sure these countries abide by the international treaties and take these people back. he put pressure on the department of justice and put pressure on department of state and department of homeland security and pressure on these countries. this is another example, this president stepping up and saying no, you are going to take this war criminal back and i'll hold you accountable. we've been trying to remove this guy. in 2009 we tried to remove him. this president made it happen along with fine men and women of ice and d.o.j. the president changed this issue and put it on its head. american people need to realize what the president has done for this country. >> sandra: he lied to the d.o.j. and immigration for years about who he was. you've been on it since 2009 and now it happened. >> for these people in new york who want to call ice nazis, we've removed many nazi criminals and people who violated human rights. it's the complete opposite of what these politicians are saying to the american people. >> even after all these decades after the holocaust justice is still getting done. >> yes, sir. >> eric: thank you, tom. hearings on u.s. and russia getting underway this hour. it's happening before the foreign relations committee and the banking committee are looking at the effectiveness on the new sanctions of russia coming amid the big bombshell from microsoft. it uncovered and shut down russian hacking against conservative institutions and think tanks that have been critical of russia. rich edson live from the state department. this seems to be moscow stepping up its interference, rich. >> it is according to this by microsoft saying it created the dummy websites, a group believed to be associated with russian intelligence for the hudson institute and the national republican institutes. these dummy websites you would click on them and the websites would take your personal information and your credentials. microsoft said it shut down that as the senate is focused on these issues. the senate foreign relations committee has just started a hearing on the u.s. policy toward russia to combat issues like this. fox news obtained the opening remarks of assistant secretary. putin wants to break apart the american republic not by including an election or two but systematically inflaming the perceived fault lines that exist within our society. the most dangerous thing we can do is politicize the challenge which in itself would be a gift to putin. mitchell says the administration has sanctioned 217 russian individuals or entities and that they're having some success on that. he says if you are a russian firm and sanctioned by the u.s., your operating revenue has fallen on average by a quarter and asset valuation has fallen by half. senators in both parties say that's reason enough to keep the pressure on moscow. >> the united states should only lift sanctions that have been imposed against russia if there is significant action by russia to either take responsibility for their interference in our last election, to pledge no interference in the next election. >> he says the united states is ready to talk to russia again in putin moves in certain directions and changes the behavior. the democrats criticized the president with his first meeting with putin. >> eric: doesn't seem they've changed their behave area at all. >> sandra: politics taking the stage at another music awards show. >> do not worry because in this game you guys are allowed to kneel. no old white men can stop you. do it. >> sandra: comedian kevin art taking a nasty dig at president trump. should comedians and musicians stick to entertaining? we want to know what you think. >> eric: overseas the surge of violence continues in afghanistan. the taliban launching rockets directly at the presidential palace. what about that cease-fire? >> sandra: president trump laying claim to his power over the mueller investigation. could he really take control of the russia probe and run it himself? former u.s. attorney alberto gonzales has thoughts on that. he'll join us. ♪ ooh, heaven is a place on earth ♪ i didn't believe it. again. ♪ ooh, baby, do you know what that's worth? ♪ i want to believe it. [ claps hands ] ♪ ooh i'm not hearing the confidence. okay, hold the name your price tool. power of options based on your budget! and! ♪ we'll make heaven a place on earth ♪ yeah! oh, my angels! ♪ ooh, heaven is a place on earth ♪ [ sobs quietly ] xfinity mobile. it's simple. easy. awesome. click, call or visit a store today. >> sandra: president trump ramping up his attacks on robert mueller's russia probe saying he has the power to control the investigation himself should he choose to do so. the president telling reuters, quote, i can go in and i could do whatever. i could run it if i want but i decided to stay out of it. i'm totally allowed to be involved in i want to be. so far i haven't chosen to be involved. i'll stay out. time for the a-team. charlie hurt is a senior editor of the washington times and fox news contributor. marie harf is a former state department spokeswoman and co-host of bren son and hart and brian brenberg is executive vice president and chair of business and finance from the kings college. marie, you were having a reaction as we read through the president's comments there. i can run it if i want to but i'll stay out of it. >> that's ridiculous. this is looking into the president, his campaign and family. i don't know legally if what he says actually has any weight but just from a public perspective he keeps saying i didn't do anything wrong, i have nothing to hide. stay out of it. that's why you hear republicans from marco rubio to trey gowdy say let mueller do the investigation. let the mueller probe go forward. what's interesting is this week the president's tweets against mueller went to another level. something hit a nerve with him whether it was the don mcgahn story or other reports about the mueller investigation or manafort trial. something hit a nerve and his tweets went to a 12 in terms of going after mueller and that's not a good thing. he also has a reaction when i say that. >> if you look at the only thing that really matters here, the constitution, you look into article 2, it doesn't say anything about the special counsel provision that is allowed to sort of subvert the powers of the president. of course the president is absolutely right. he can do whatever he wants. he can fire all these people and get involved if he wanted to. the point about it being politically unwise is a fair point. it probably would backfire quite a bit. but -- >> nixonian. >> the end of the statement is i'm going to let it happen. he kept saying i'm going to let it happen. >> is he trolling us? >> we focus on his words. >> sandra: what he won't let happen his legal team is making it clear through rudy giuliani. the interview says the president said, you take a look at what he did in congress he gave, leaked, lied, if he say something he says something and my word against his talking about this being a perjury trap and best friends with mueller. mueller might say well, i believe comey. even if i'm telling the truth it makes me a liar. that's no good. is that a legitimate concern? >> absolutely. i think his lawyers are smart to keep him -- and i get the sense that the president is coming along to that point of view. all along he said i'm dying to testify and he does testify every day on his twitter account by weighing in on absolutely everything but i think the story we saw in the "new york times" last week about don mcgahn testifying, the president did waive executive privilege. that's a very significant thing. >> eric: he weighed down in that article said don mcgahn said he didn't see the president go beyond any legal requirements. that he didn't break the law. >> exactly. it does reveal that i don't think the president is concerned about any real issues. he is concerned about walking into some trap where he says something, you know, unintentionally or intentionally and being misunderstood. >> eric: he is all over the place on what he says on different things in terms of -- >> right. some of that is intentional. >> eric: no, we'll have the investigation. how do they pick and choose what to use if they try to get a case against him? >> i think he is trying to work the rest. no matter what happens bob mueller is not going to be objective and trying to set up a scenario where mueller -- i think there are a couple of things. i think he is working them by saying no matter what happens they're going to try to say that i lied. i don't think bob mueller will automatically believe what jim comey or someone else tells him if the president says something different. >> sandra: where do you stand if you think he should or shouldn't. >> he should. only donald trump can answer them. i think he absolutely should. bill clinton did. he was forced to. there are questions only donald trump can answer. if the goal is to get all the information how can we not interview the person at the center of so many of these questions? >> where is the evidence that suggests that's what's necessary here? that's what i'm not -- there has to be some compelling reason for the president to sit down. we have nothing as far as we know that suggests he needs to do that and he is smart to say i won't sit down without that because indeed this does become a situation where i'm going to get trapped for perjury. i don't want to be a part of that. >> tell the truth. >> what is the truth at suggesting he needs to sit down and be a part of it that mcgahn can't do? >> eric: the meeting with don junior and the russian lawyer where the email said it was the russian government to help your father. mr. president, did you know about that. did your son call you twice in an unregistered phone call. did you know about that? those two questions could be answered. >> that only he can answer. a key component what was going on in terms of russian contacts working with the trump campaign. don't you want the answers? >> there still isn't a crime. >> eric: it could be if it's conspiracy. it could be if they're taking something in that meeting of value from a foreign government. they knew about that. >> sandra: i think the point is there needs to be proof of that before you ask about it. >> a lot of proof of that already. >> sandra: last night the president took another jab at governor andrew cuomo. let's watch that. >> president trump: many politicians get up and say our country was never great. you heard that. i think that's the end of that career. >> sandra: charlie? >> cuomo 2020, no, he is not going to let anybody forget this as much as cuomo might like to rewrite some of it. >> eric: this is not -- i've been a new york reporter for decades and i covered his father. this is about mario cuomo not helping president trump when he was the developer on the riverside yards getting the mortgage when andrew cuomo was the head of hud. they didn't back him and so therefore he had trouble with building the riverside. that's what i think. >> there is a lot of family history here. cuomo clearly flubed what he was trying to do. when was america great? when i couldn't get a credit card without my husband? >> sandra: whoa. you can't remember when america was great? >> i believe america is an exceptional country. when is president trump referring to. when a bunch of the country felt disenfranchised. >> the thing that's unique about america it is always trying to be perfect. the make america great again slogan appeals to the effort to strive for our best selfs. something that mario cuomo would have agreed with. >> eric: former great governor would take some issue with his son. >> statements he made about america never been great is the most divisive statement you can make in this country. he should be careful what he says. >> eric: that's not enough. there is a more. president trump is continuing to step up his attacks against some of those former intelligence officials. what he now says the one-time director of national intelligence, james clapper. he is apparently playing nice. the president has his own views of that. >> sandra: senator sounding the alarm about this alleged isis killer captured in the u.s. why he is up in arms that the suspect being here in the first place. plus. >> eric: stock market, look at that. 69 points, look at the number below. 25,000 plus, why they could mark the return of the american consumer as the bull market rages on. charlie payne will be here in a moment as it continues to go up. ♪ as moms, we send our kids out into the world, full of hope. and we don't want something like meningitis b getting in their way. meningococcal group b disease, or meningitis b, is real. bexsero is a vaccine to help prevent meningitis b in 10-25 year olds. even if meningitis b is uncommon, that's not a chance we're willing to take. meningitis b is different from the meningitis most teens were probably vaccinated against when younger. we're getting the word out against meningitis b. our teens are getting bexsero. bexsero should not be given if you had a severe allergic reaction after a previous dose. most common side effects are pain, redness or hardness at the injection site; muscle pain; fatigue; headache; nausea; and joint pain. bexsero may not protect all individuals. tell your healthcare professional if you're pregnant or if you have received any other meningitis b vaccines. ask your healthcare professional about the risks and benefits of bexsero and if vaccination with bexsero is right for your teen. moms, we can't wait. ♪ at the lowest price... is as easy as dates, deals, done! simply enter your destination and dates... and see all the hotels for your stay! tripadvisor searches over 200 booking sites... to show you the lowest prices... so you can get the best deal on the right hotel for you. dates, deals, done! tripadvisor. visit tripadvisor.com >> eric: heartbreaking news this morning. investigators believe they have found the body of missing 20-year-old university of iowa student mollie tibbetts. tibbetts had been missing for the past five weeks or so. last seen jogging in the evening through her hometown of brooklyn, iowa. law enforcement officials are expected to hold a news conference later this afternoon. we don't have many details now and bring in former prosecutor dan schorr. it is so sad the search ended after a month with her body being found. no details where or what. what do you suspect authorities homeed in on? >> we're waiting for more information. a tragic end to the family and friends holding out hope for a month. it will be a wealth of information from the body. first of all, what's the manner of death and time of death? was she killed a month ago or more recently and the location? who had access to the location where the body is found? was the body killed there or moved and dna and objects from the killer. police are combing through all of that. >> eric: what do you make of the fact she was jogging in the evening? that makes you more vulnerable. >> we don't know when she disappeared. she was jogging one of the last times she was seen. people are generally vulnerable when they're jogging. listening to music and not aware of all the circumstances around them. we've seen other people abducted and killed. >> sandra: authorities during this investigation and search have been tight lipped. it has been hard to get any information out of them. sometimes they had announced news conference and they would cancel them and now scheduled one for this evening at 5:00 p.m. local time, 6:00 p.m. eastern. more information on where they found her body hopefully. but why do you think that is? >> it's a smart investigative strategy. you don't want to give all the information you have out there both to the potential killer. and other people who may come forward with information. are they tailoring the information based on what they said in the news and you don't want to give everything out. the same thing will probably happen now. the types of information they'll find from the body. i would be surprised if they give the information out publicly. >> eric: could they announce an arrest later on this afternoon? >> it's possible. we don't know publicly where the body was found. maybe found in a place that belongs to one person or a small group of people. we'll find that out later today. >> sandra: i'll bring this in because it is brought to our attention into the newsroom now. rob tibbetts, the father of mollie, is telling fox news channel that the body found is indeed his daughter, mollie. we were going off sources telling fox news up until now and he is now confirming it was indeed mollie, his 20-year-old daughter. he said that he will have more comment for us shortly. and remember her father had been on the ground involved with the search since he got that phone call she had gone missing that day in july and he just recently within i believe the last 24 hours or so returned back to his home in california. >> the prosecutor in the private sector dealt with a lot of missing persons cases. when you are working with the family time goes on and people hold out hope hoping their loved one will be found alive. a tragic end. as the family finds out more about how she died there is nothing more painful than that. >> eric: what lessons can we learn when young women jogging who are brutally murdered? >> people jogging are vulnerable. we don't know if she was abducted when she was jogging. police are learning more by looking at the body now and finding out what happened. did she go with someone she knew? was she abducted by a stranger? a lot of information that police are trying to piece together now. >> sandra: the iowa division of criminal investigation has planned this afternoon news conference and we'll a get an update from them. it has been quite a journey for the community there, too, that rallied around this family and supported the father and the mother in the search for their daughter. and now her body has been found, the father just confirming. dan schorr, thank you. we'll have more on that later. meanwhile a suspected isis killer caught in northern california last week and now senate judiciary committee chuck grassley wants to know how he got into the country through a refugee screening process during the obama administration. grassley is pressing the state department and homeland security for any answers. capitol hill senior producer is following the story for us. >> chuck grassley has written to the homeland security secretary and secretary of state of state mike pompeo. he has a lot of questions about this suspect omar amine and what his application for refugee status looked like. he wants this paperwork. grassley said it appears he may have concealed his affiliations with isis and also al qaeda in iraq. this is always the problem with these refugees. their paperwork is not necessarily pristine. how do you vet them? how do you ferret out someone who might have had some ties with questionable organizations? he is accused by the federal government of going with a caravan through isis-controlled territory killing an iraqi police officer in his home and the essence of the question that chuck grassley has for pompeo and nielsen. the pentagon is very concerned about iraqi refugees coming to the united states. it is not the idea that there are too few, there are too many. they have a program set up to bring refugees who work with the federal government and contractors to the united states. a couple years ago they were up to 5100. it fell off to 3,000 last year and only 15 this year. they want to hold that out there as a carrot to bring good people to the united states. in the case of this suspect how do you separate the good from the bad? >> sandra: chad on that story for us. thank you. music at times taking a back seat at the vmas last night on mtv, the awards show targeting president trump with some profane insults. was this out of bounds? >> eric: a controversy over con federal monuments. they knocked down a statue on the campus of a prominent university. the a-team is on deck with both those stories straight ahead. to look at me now, you don't see psoriasis. you see clear skin. you see me. but if you saw me before cosentyx... ♪ i was covered. it was awful. but i didn't give up. i kept fighting. i got clear skin with cosentyx. 3 years and counting. clear skin can last. see if cosentyx could make a difference for you. cosentyx is proven to help people with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis find clear skin that can last. don't use if you're allergic to cosentyx. before starting cosentyx, you should be checked for tuberculosis. an increased risk of infections and lowered ability to fight them may occur. tell your doctor if you have an infection or symptoms. or if you have received a vaccine or plan to. if you have inflammatory bowel disease, tell your doctor if symptoms develop or worsen. serious allergic reactions may occur. see me now. i'm still clear. how sexy are these elbows? get clear skin that can last. ask your dermatologist about cosentyx. existed. when i watched it you had the great music videos with the little thing at the bottom. is it is same channel? >> i think the president should get royalties at these events. he is the center of the entertainment. without him there would be nothing to say for a funny guy like kevin hart. >> it was kind of funny. three lines out of this show. the president likes to go after people and likes to mix it up and comedians like to do the same thing. it is part of the media echo chamber we've created right now. kevin hart went a little far with some comments. this is a video music awards. >> sandra: this wasn't the only moment. there was this moment as well if we can show that t-shirt. ♪ so this is an f the wall t-shirt they brought out and it was a demonstration about i suppose you could characterize it as families separated at the border and an anti-trump message that they don't like what they're seeing. the brought the kids on the stage. do i need to say anymore? >> the strangest part of all is involving kids. i'll be interested to see what the ratings are. who wants to -- >> eric: why is there seemingly growing political messages in some of these award shows? and the language? >> it's innovateed every aspect of everything these days it seems like for better or worse. >> i think people are so fired up by this. the child separation issue galvanized people. they've been immigration by the immigration policies and family separation. free speech in the country. turn it off if you don't like it. it is a platform to advance political beliefs. >> sandra: a platform for profanity? >> what was profane? >> it is not advancing political beliefs. it is vulgar. there is nothing -- >> the kids weren't vulgar. >> that gets lost with the kevin hart, the language there and the offensive language and violent language. >> sandra: we couldn't play what kevin hart said on the open. >> i said it went too far. >> sandra: second of all it was an f the wall shirt was a profanity on the t-shirt. >> people don't like the wall and let's go back to the fact that donald trump is commander-in-chief is a bully, has said incredibly offensive things about people on twitter. >> i do think brian makes an important point. whose minds are being changed by all this? none. >> young voters who will vote in the mid-terms. wait. young voters are fired up over guns and immigration. donald trump says incredibly offensive things on issues. he calls women dogs and says terrible things about people. why don't we ask for standards? >> eric: it's not a compliment. >> are young voters informed? no from the vmas. that's the problem. >> sandra: the university of north carolina and show what happened with another statute brought down. you've been on this story. quite a visual to see the students yet again trying to change the way we're looking back at history in this country. >> it's such a sad thing. i know a lot of these kids think they're part of the civil rights movement. this is not the civil rights movement where you had people sitting on a bus or gathering at a launch counter peacefully trying to and successfully undoing laws that were unconstitutional and disgusting. this is just trying to obliterate history because somebody is offended. this monument is a monument to confederate war dead put up by the wives and the children, the daughters and the widows of people who died in this conflict. these kids, all these spoiled brats should be rounded up, put in jail and forced the pay to repair this thing. if i were the university, i would kick them all out because this is not -- this kind of violent vandalism is not -- >> eric: deeply offend. >> okay, that's an issue. we can debate these things all we want and have debated for a long time and some have come down. it doesn't give right to a mob to go out there and vandalize and tear down something that is very sacred to the people who put that up. >> what i don't like it is always about trying to destroy something if you don't like the narrative. the university had an opportunity here to leave the statue in place because it sparks good conversation about our history. after the story add another monument to the story that fills out the story, why do we have to tear things down? why can't we tell more of the story? >> there is a way to tell the story that doesn't offend people. honoring people like this exalted in the statues for people fighting to defend slavery is very offensive to people. there has to be a process. i lived in charlottesville for the city to talk about how to bring them down. vandalism isn't the way to do it. we need to figure out in this country how we wreckon with this history. you don't see in other countries where they've had -- in germany you don't see people erecting statues to nazi leaders. >> sandra: thank you very much to the a-team. >> eric: charles payne will be here and why he says why the american consumer has returned and look at the market and what it means for all of us as the dow is up, up, up. >> sandra: a big day tomorrow. hi i'm joan lunden. today's senior living communities have never been better, with amazing amenities like movie theaters, exercise rooms and swimming pools, public cafes, bars and bistros even pet care services. and there's never been an easier way to get great advice. a place for mom is a free service that pairs you with a local advisor to help you sort through your options and find a perfect place. a place for mom. you know your family we know senior living. together we'll make the right choice. longest in u.s. history. charles payne host of making money on the fox news network. we've thrown around rallies before and bull markets before. what makes this one different? >> well first of all this is measured by uninterrupted move to the upside without a 20% pullback. that's the definition of a bear market. the bull market has had pullbacks but never to that degree. think there are a couple of things. we were oversold. i think we have to go to the very beginning in march of 2009. that was a classic panic. the market was extremely oversold. values out there back in the day in the 1800s, every time the market got hit they called it a panic. someone said it makes things worse. maybe we should use a different term. they came up with depression. we had the great depression. the bottom line is now what's different is we were oversold and rebounded but now gaining a new strength in the market. yesterday the airline stocks came out of nowhere. today the home builders are doing well. the american consumer. i give most of the credit right now for this leg of the market to the trump administration's policy. the lower regulations, lower taxes. i looked at a couple earnings reports this morning and these companies themselves t.j. maxx said you know what? a lot of this is from the tax cuts but also i just think you get to a point where you start to do extraordinarily well and it is infectious and other people feel it. i tell you what, forget all the polls and the other stuff politically. this is 2/3 of the american economy and it is spreading. >> eric: how long can this go? >> i think we have a long ways to go here. i think the market is becoming undervalued because there has been so much focus on six or seven big tech names. i like it when t.j. maxx is leading the market higher and deere and the dirty fingernail stocks are going higher like caterpillar. those kind of names that you work with your hands. >> sandra: you must not watch "america's newsroom" enough. he talks about those a lot. all right, charles payne. tomorrow could be the big day. >> tomorrow will be a good day. there is a little trepidation. >> sandra: thank you, charles payne. president trump taking his victory lap with running feud with john brennan and taking a dig at one time director of national intelligence james clapper in the process. the president reportedly leaning against an interview with robert mueller. alberto gonzales will weigh in on that and much more next hour on "america's newsroom." admitted it was just speculation but held onto the belief throughout this process that somehow mollie tibbetts was still alive. he just a short time ago as well as two law enforcement sources confirmed to us the body found is indeed that of mollie tibbetts. the search for the missing student investigators are tight lipped. the only information we have that foul play was involved is crimestoppers. they now say the $400,000 reward has now become a reward for information that captures her killer. she vanished on july 18th after going for jog. the next day her boyfriend texted her and didn't receive a response. when she failed to show up for work he reported her missing. the boyfriend was quickly cleared in the case as he was away on a job. information later was developed that she had returned to the house where she was staying after her jog. nearby hog farm was searched, owner questioned, investigators knew she wore a fit bit and cell phone. they remained missing. we don't know if those items were found with the body. we simply have information from investigators that her body was found in a rural part of the county. the briefing mentioned that eric mentioned a short time ago is scheduled for 4:00 p.m. central time. back to you. >> eric: a tragic and heartbreaking end and search for her family and friends and that community. thank you. >> sandra: another fox news alert as president trump seems to be leaning against sitting down for an interview with special counsel robert mueller fearing a perjury trap while also making it clear he could run the russia investigation himself if he wanted to but has made the choice to stay out of it for now. andrew mccarthy, a former u.s. attorney was on "america's newsroom" earlier. >> a lot of people like to say, eric, that the innocent, honest person has nothing to fear by going in to speak to a prosecutor but that avoids or overlooks the fact that it's the prosecutor, right or wrong, who makes the decision about whether the innocent, honest person is telling the truth or not. >> sandra: joining us now alberto gonzales former attorney general and dean of belmont university school of law. thanks for coming on the program and welcome back to the program. >> good morning. >> sandra: first of all, would you be with the president if he veered towards this is not a good idea to sit down even though he said in the past i want to sit down and answer his questions because i want to get it over with? they fear a perjury trap. >> there is always a concern that you misremember something, you don't intend to lie to a prosecutor but you saying something contradicted by other witnesses and that is a concern. but i think it's important for your viewers to understand that i think under current d.o.j. guidance the president cannot be indicted and the president cannot be prosecuted for criminal wrongdoing. bob mueller may ultimately receive information, may ultimately receive testimony from the president and based on that he may conclude that the president is lying and has committed perjury and included it in a report that goes to the deputy attorney general. if the attorney general would receive such a report he would likely forward the report to the congress and congress would have to make a decision whether or not lying to federal prosecutors would constitute grounds for impeachment. there is a danger either way. even though the department may not believe it has the authority to indict and prosecute a sitting president, there is certainly a political danger of impeachment if the president were to be found to commit perjury by the special counsel. >> sandra: the concept of perception of the truth seems to be at the crux of this discussion right now alberto. here is andrew mccarthy expanding on that a few moments ago. >> almost always multiple witnesses with different perceptions and different recollections about the same events. and the prosecutor has to sort out whether, when these differences inevitably occur, even if somebody is telling the truth and trying hard to tell the truth, the prosecutor could decide otherwise. >> sandra: that's to your point, right? >> that's true. it is not solely the prosecutor. the prosecutor has to make a judgment call is there probable cause to move forward? then it falls into the hands of 12 americans. 12 jurors who beyond a reasonable doubt have to reach some level of conclusion based on the evidence presented at trial. but there is no question about it, that humans are infall able. we have different memories about the same event and there is always a risk. you never want to be under investigation by a federal prosecutor particularly one like robert mueller. there is certainly a danger. it is easy to say if you're innocent act like it. what have you got to lose by talking to the prosecutor, but there is a risk but also a down side. i think to some americans if the president does not cooperate they will conclude well, what is he hiding? that's something the president will have to deal with. >> sandra: how did you further perceive the president's comments i could run this if i want to referring to the mueller probe but he is going the stay out of it. >> well, i don't think that any investigation of the white house conducted by the president of the united states would have any credibility, quite frankly in the minds of most americans. having said that the president is in charge of the executive branch. i think as a constitutional matter would have the authority to conduct such an investigation. however, congress has delegated that authority to the attorney general and the department of justice to conduct investigations and prosecute wrongdoing. so as a theoretical matter i think the president certainly could. honestly, speaking i guess in laymen's terms, it would be a dumb idea. >> sandra: if you were to step back from all this today and you look at this investigation as it continues and many feel it has been drawn out. some feel it's necessary that it continue in the manner that it is, where does it go next? does a sit-down eventually happen? >> i don't know, if i had to bet i would say probably the sit-down does not happen. it's possible that perhaps bob mueller will settle for answers to written questions from the president of the united states and so that in fact may happen. i for one believe this investigation should be continued to be completed. one of the main things -- aspects of this is getting more information about how russia interfered with the 2016 election. we're already hearing stories about how they're continuing to interfere and focused on the 2018 election. so i think in terms of the length of this investigation, it's not -- it hasn't been, you know, unreasonably long compared to the length of previous investigations by special counsels. i think we need to let bob mueller complete this investigation so we know exactly what russia did in 2016 and what they intend to do in the future. >> sandra: alberto gonzales, great to get your perspective and thoughts this morning. thank you. >> thanks for having me. >> eric: a former nazi concentration camp guard to lied about getting into the u.s. was arrested this morning and deported to germany after calling our nation home for nearly 70 years. taken a long time for justice but it's been done. we have the latest. >> the last known nazi collaborator in the united states was deported yesterday, 95-year-old jakiw palij a former s.s. nazi guard landed in germany this morning flowing on an air ambulance. ice arrested him in queens, new york yesterday without incident. he arrived in the u.s. in 1949. he lied to u.s. immigration officials telling them he spent world war ii working on his father's farm and also a german factory. they believed him and in 1957 he became a u.s. citizen. but in 2001 he confessed he was really a nazi guard who worked at the traa niki concentration camp. he trained there in 1943 the same year 6,000 jewish men, women and children were shot to death in one day november 3 in one of the largest massacres of the holocaust. according to the department of justice by helping to prevent the escape of these prisoners during his service at the camp he played a role that they later met their fate at the hands of the nazis. he was stripped of his u.s. citizenship and ordered deported in 2004. it took 14 years to expel him. in that time protestors regularly gathered outside his new york home. this morning u.s. ambassador to germany richard grinnell explained why it took so long. >> he had his u.s. citizenship taken away so he technically was without a country. he was stateless. we presented to the german government was they had a moral obligation, not necessarily a legal one, with this individual but a moral obligation because he worked in the name of the then german government. >> he credits president trump for making this issue a priority or making it happen. >> eric: we'll never forget no matter how long it takes. brian, thank you. >> sandra: breaking news at this hour. the trump administration takes swift action to address the nation-wide epipen shortage. in a moment we'll dig into the bold move and how it will impact families across the country. health and services secretary will join us in moments. >> eric: the debate over illegal immigration has been heating up as the president blasts the democrats who oppose the agency ice calling them open border extremists. are they? coming up congressman sean duffy will comment about that. >> sandra: president trump taking aim at james clapper in his feud with john brennan and former intel officials. the latest in the battle straight ahead. >> i think john is sort of like a freight train. he is going to say what's on his mind. but john and his rhetoric have become, i think, an issue in and of itself. 24/7 tech support. yep, thanks guys. i think he might need some support. yes. start them off right, with the school supplies they need at low prices all summer long. like these for only $2 or less at office depot officemax. mom: okay we need to get all your school supplies today. school... grade... done. done. hit the snooze button and get low prices on school supplies all summer long. like these for only $2 or less at office depot officemax. pushing back on brennan making all these statements over and over again attacking the president. i think the president should rise above it. the more he talks about it the more he gives brennan the microphone. >> eric: that is senator james lankford of oklahoma weighing in on the growing feud between president trump and former c.i.a. director john brennan. the president says he welcomes the lawsuit brennan is threatening after the president revoked his security clearance. the president took to twitter saying this about the former director of national intelligence. even james clapper admonished john brennan for having gone off the rails. maybe clapper is being nice to me so he doesn't lose his security clearance for lying to congress. what does it all mean? let's bring in republican congressman chris stewart who serves on the house intelligence committee. what do you make of this back and forth and do you think brennan will actually commence a lawsuit? >> well, i don't know if he will. i don't think it would be successful. i wish we didn't have this continued back and fort honestly. if the president were to leave it alone evidence would convince the american people this is what we know about the former director brennan. the first is he is untrustworthy. we know that from his testimony before congress and the wild accusations he has made with virtually no evidence. the second thing we know is that he is overly political. he politicized the intel community, intelligence work. i have talked to a number of intelligence professionals as i do almost every day. they're embarrassed by this. they understand it isn't good for the american people and the work they do to have a former c.i.a. director be and sound like a political hack. it embarrasses them. >> eric: what would you say to those who think he served this country with distinction and is concerned in his own view of russia interference and russia being threatening to the ten either of our democracy. >> he needs to make that argument in a reasonable and credible way. for him to say for example like he has said with a wink and nod i have the information that other people don't have and i think this president is in the pocket of vladimir putin. for him to say with kind of a wink and nod as if he has information that others don't have. oh my heavens, mr. brennan, if you have the information that would convince mr. mueller or others that this president has committed treason, which you have accused him of doing, then present that information. present that evidence. he hasn't done that. instead as i said he has made these wild accusations in a way that diminishes the intelligence community and the intelligence professionals. intelligence shouldn't be a political endeavor. it should be unbiased, measured, careful in its analysis and conclusions and mr. brennan hasn't done that. >> eric: he did walk back that treasonous comment. do you buy that? >> i don't know. walk it back is helpful but made comments since then. this is a meaningful thing for a former c.i.a. director to make an accusation like that. >> eric: do you think that the president has basically threatened to revoke other national security clearances, susan rice among others. do you think as some say it's a danger to our republic or that it's political hardball and the president really is doing something that he shouldn't do going after people personally and because they are critics? >> i think the president is actually doing the right thing but for the wrong reason in this case. i think that most of these people shouldn't maintain clearances. there is no reason for it. why does hillary clinton have a top secret secure clearance? if there is a case-by-case necessity or if they're being asked to advise the government in certain cases, then let's do a case-by-case review and allow them to maintain it but the blanket policy that allows all these individuals to maintain a top secret clearance. access to some of the most sensitive in the information for u.s. government for no reason other than in most cases it enhances their marketability, it enhances their value and the money they can make. i just think we should be careful in the number of people that we've allowed to keep their clearances. >> eric: others would say it enhances the government aefs ability because they bring advice and experience. we're up against the clock on this, i'm sorry. it will continue. congressman, thank you. >> sandra: a small plane crashes at a major intersection. >> couldn't believe it was happening. is this really happening or doing stunts? no, he ain't messing around. >> sandra: new dash cam video of the plane going down. what caused the crash? >> eric: ice has been coming under fire more and more as illegal immigration especially over the illegal immigrant arrested at the gas station. the report he was rushing his pregnant wife to the hospital when they suddenly took him in? well, as we've been reporting this guy is wanted for murder. >> my dad ain't done nothing. he is innocent. he is a hard worker. he has his own business. he has done nothing. insurance that won't replace the full value of your new car? you'd be better off throwing your money right into the harbor. i'm gonna regret that. with liberty mutual new car replacement we'll replace the full value of your car. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty ♪ lojust use priceline.ls on travel? you can save up to 60% on hotels. that's like $120 a night back in your pocket. go to priceline to get deals you won't find anywhere else. i am going to vote ok, for myself using nothing but this remote and the sound of my own voice! vote for... wait wait, that's not a talent. any xfinity customer with an x1 voice remote can do that. watch this... i want to vote for... obviously not you. ooh that guy... cast your votes during every live show. just say "vote for agt" into the x1 voice remote. >> sandra: the department of health and human services taking swift action to combat the mass shortage of epipens in this country. with the fda saying it will extend the expiration date of the lifesaving medication. we are joined about the breaking news. secretary, this is news that affects a lot of families in this country. what action are you taking? >> it does and this is a very important announcement that we just made minutes ago which is that for certain lots of epipens that have expired or are about to expire, we believe the data supports a four-month extension on the use of that product beyond the expiration date on the package. i would encourage parents or others to go to the fda.gov website to see the announcement and look up the particular lot number of the product you have. this may provide some immediate relief for parents especially as kids are about to go back to school. >> sandra: a shortage of epipens and high cost, hundreds of dollars one of these epipens cost. some families that need them couldn't afford them. why is this action so important and why are you taking it now? >> what we have seen are manufacturing and supply issues regarding the production of this particular epipen and auto injector device. we've been working with the manufacturer on that to help resolve those supply disruptions. i would encourage anybody who needs a pen that milan has an 800 number that you can call to get more information about where product might be available in your area in case the particular pharmacy you are using doesn't have that. we're trying to make sure we have additional product available as well as lower-cost product available so we also very recently just approved the first-ever generic version of that epipen that should be getting on the market soon. >> sandra: any idea what it would cost for the consumer? >> i don't know what they'll price it at. the manufacturer who has been approved hasn't announced what the price would be to my knowledge. i'll have to leave that own. we have always seen when a generic comes into the market and you get robust competition you do see a fairly significant decline in pricing and availability for patients. we very much look forward to that for the benefit of patients. >> sandra: you tweeted out the c change in drug markets. these are just a change. we have plans to deliver on every aspect of the blueprint and market actors who have responded to actions so far can expect reform that aim toward a new patient/friendly system to continue. can you explain that? what do you mean? >> we're today at the 100 day mark in terms of the president's blueprint on drug pricing. he has done more in 100 days than all presidents combined before him in terms of tackling the issue of drug pricing. historic levels of generic drug approvals. we brought savings to senior citizens to the tune of $320 million a year of out-of-pocket spending when they get their drugs. we have banned gag clauses in our medicare program where plans might tell pharmacists that they can't inform a patient what the cheaper alternative is for their drug and the way they could buy their drug cheaper by paying cash to get that drug. we've opened the door to negotiation in medicare for the first time ever to stop paying list price for some of our drugs and the president has opened the dorto importation of drugs where there is provides gouging of these single source drugs in the united states. just a bevy of changes and the result of that has been that we've seen 60% fewer brand name drug price increases since the president announced his blueprint 100 days ago than we did last year. >> sandra: you went further to talk about that competition which families who know the high price of these prescriptions no all too well. it's difficult. and you reference that in this tweet. together these strategies will work to build a new drug pricing system characterized by real competition, lower prices and healthy incentives for innovation. the most significant parts of the president's blueprints are in the works. what is the president's message on this. when you talk to him, what is his priority? >> so the president's priority is getting prices down. he wants lower list prices for drugs, better negotiation in our drug programs and wants to end foreign free riding and increase competition in our program. his objectives are very clear. anybody who basically underestimates his commitment or verb on driving forward this agenda will be sadly mistaken. sandra, you said it right. they have only seen the beginning. we laid out in a very transparent way in the president's blueprint where he is headed and we're driving towards that and it is the tip of the iceberg so far. >> sandra: secretary azar, thank you for sharing this breaking news this morning. appreciate having you here. we'll look for those changes. >> eric: very important move. president trump heading to west virginia for a rally tonight. it's an interesting race. will he stump for joe manchin's opponent even though manchin has embraced some of the president's policies? what can we expect? chris stirewalt will be here to break it all down. er service are critical to business success. like the ones we teach here, every day. the agency again arresting someone indiscriminately, breaking up a family, deporting an otherwise innocent man. in a cruel twist ice forced his pregnant wife to drive herself to the hospital. >> i'm sad and disappointed with this country that they aren't doing their job correctly because my dad ain't done nothing. he is innocent. he is a hard worker. he has his own business. >> that wasn't the whole story, at least the one reported on radio and tv. it's true ice agents picked up the man at the gas station but ice says he wasn't driving, she was and they weren't rushing to the hospital but going in for a scheduled c-section. finally he wasn't just a working dad here illegally but was wanted for murder. >> far from an innocent victim. this person was wanted by foreign authorities for murder. like this arrest most of what ice does in cities and towns is targeted enforcement. >> as the story developed, the media said ice picked up the wrong man, that the attorney said the real target was his brother. this he was the sole provider of five children with no criminal record. not even a traffic ticket. >> we know that under current trump administration that everyone is a priority. when a person is taking his wife having a c-section it could have been handled a lot differently. >> ice confirmed this morning the warrant is legitimate. the man is wanted for murder. many seeing or hearing this story this weekend are likely outraged but not fully informed. context provides a more accurate picture. back to you. >> sandra: william la jeunesse, thank you. >> eric: president trump hits the road again today with a rally in west virginia this evening strufrming for senate candidate state attorney general patrick morrissey. he is challenge senator joe manchin in november. it is one of the red states the president won big. joining us now on what we can expect is chris stirewalt. it is a fascinating dynamic, manchin, conservative democrat has praised the president. president has done the same for manchin. now the president is going on gop on him tonight. >> everything is always better in west virginia, we know that to be true. and i'm not just saying that because i'm a west virginiaian. if you like politics the politics there are perfect because it gets awfully complicated awfully quickly. there will be a lot of ticket splitting this year in west virginia and there will be a lot of people in west virginia who in 2016 voted for donald trump who vote for joe manchin. what we're waiting to see and what we want to find out is, is donald trump coming to attack joe manchin, coming to elevate patrick morrissey or coming to have a campaign rally for himself? those are three different things. >> eric: so what do we expect him to say tonight? he will back morrissey but manchin backed judge gorsuch and other policies of the president. >> and we expect manchin to not only be completely on board with trump on coal but on the supreme court. >> eric: breaking news. have to scoot. we'll see what happens back in your home state. thanks, chris. >> sandra: fox news alert as we alerted you at the top of the hour, we just got word the jury gave the judge a note in the courtroom there on the paul manafort trial and we're now finding out what the note said. it said if we -- if we can't come to consensus, what does that mean for the final verdict? the judge said this is not out of the ordinary for a jury trial. peter doocy is following all this and giving us the news updates from outside the courtroom. peter, what is happening? >> sandra, the jury is deliberating on 18 counts. their question at least the way they framed it pertains to one of the counts. this is something that defense team sources close to the defense team have been telling us they thought they might be hearing today. sources close to the manafort said say they walked in this morning and believed to be a serious looking jury, which they believe indicated that there might be some problems behind the scenes and that if there was a problem, then at some point on the fourth day of deliberations, it would come out. and that's what we just got. they are apparently stuck on one of the counts and the judge told them that it is not exceptional and sent them back in to keep deliberating. this is the first word we heard from the jury in the last two days. they haven't had a lot of questions since the first day of deliberations which was last thursday. now it sounds like they're stuck on at least one of the counts. it is unclear when the next time we'll hear from the jury is. that's what's going on upstairs on the ninth floor now. >> sandra: day four of deliberations and we've been on stand by that a verdict could come down at any moment but the defense has given an indication that they see the timeline here as a positive for their team, for paul manafort. >> and that's obviously something a belief that paul manafort himself shares. he was in very good spirits this morning in court. came in, big smile, laughing with his attorneys and patting each other on the back. they believe -- the word we're getting from the manafort side was that they thought this thing was going to be wrapped up after about two days and at the end of business on friday last week would have been a really big motivator for the jury to wrap things up so they could go home and didn't have to come back. once that happened, the manafort team's perspective on the case changed. yesterday they were describing it to me as though it was similar to the run-up to the 2016 election where they feel like the jury is on the verge of delivering a big surprise. but we don't have any indication of that right now. the only indication that we have is that the jury is stuck on at least one of these counts and it sounds like something else that i've just had handed to me. something else the judge said is the jury can reach a partial verdict. he cited the u.s. versus taylor as an example. that's new. 18 counts, they're stuck on at least one. the judge says they can reach a partial verdict. so we don't know if that's something they're close to. we don't know how many jurors are possibly holding out. and we might not for a couple more hours or a couple more days, sandra. >> sandra: interesting. peter, you are giving some color on paul manafort and his presence in the courtroom this morning appearing upbeat, patting each other on the back. the jury as far as it's been described by catherine herridge remains very serious in their demeanor and very flat. appeared spent. some red faced. this is a long haul. >> it is a long haul and remember, as far as we know, it is entirely possible that none of these jurors are experts on forensic accounting or on tax and bank records. that's what they are sitting in a room surrounded by. just hundreds of exhibits, thousands of pieces of paper that are not numbered sequentially and so the manafort -- the mueller team in this case is accusing paul manafort of violating 18 different charges but when they made this 2 1/2 week long argument they were not specific with you take this piece of paper for count one, this piece of paper for count two. so part of the reason that it could be taking so long is they have a lot of dots they need to collect as they deliberate. >> sandra: if we cannot come to consensus on a single count what does it mean for the final verdict? the judge says it is not exceptional to a jury trial and the jury can reach a partial verdict. we're being told now they're in recess, a five-minute recess. again working under the premise that a verdict could come in at any moment. peter doocy you're there and will bring us the news when it comes in. thank you very much. >> eric: we'll be on stand by for that. if there is a hung jury on one count the federal government can always retry mr. manafort. >> sandra: the judge ellis says this has happened before regarding a partial ruling from a jury. >> eric: they could come in with a partial verdict and could be retried. we'll see what happens. we're on stand by to give you the news when it comes. president trump not backing down when it comes to support for ice. how he is responding to some democrats who have called to abolish the agency. congressman sean duffy will join us next on that. >> president trump: this new wave of anti-borders, anti-law enforcement extremism and shameful, dangerous, horrible in every way and it is going to stop. to look at me now, see if cosentyx could make a difference for you. cosentyx is proven to help people with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis find clear skin that can last. don't use if you're allergic to cosentyx. before starting cosentyx, you should be checked for tuberculosis. an increased risk of infections and lowered ability to fight them may occur. tell your doctor if you have an infection or symptoms. or if you have received a vaccine or plan to. if you have inflammatory bowel disease, tell your doctor if symptoms develop or worsen. serious allergic reactions may occur. see me now. i'm still clear. how sexy are these elbows? get clear skin that can last. ask your dermatologist about cosentyx. >> president trump: we will not stand for the vile smears, the hateful attacks and the vicious assaults on the courageous men and women of ice and border patrol and law enforcement. we will protect those who protect us. >> sandra: president trump supporting federal immigration agents at a white house ceremony yesterday and blasting democrats who want to abolish it as open border extremists who just don't care about crime. joining us now is congressman sean duffy, a member of the freedom caucus. do you agree with the president on this one? >> he is absolutely right. we believe in enforcing our laws in the republican party and we believe in immigration but legal immigration, not illegal immigration. and so for the president to call border patrol agents who have been maligned and demonized by the democrat party to bring them to the white house and say we support what you do. thank you for enforcing our laws and risking your lives to secure our border. i thought it was fantastic. we have democrats who really the cover was pulled away with alexandria ocasio-cortez who said we want to abolish ice. some new york congress folks have called ice nazis. this morning ice is arresting nazis and sending them back to germany. how rich is that? >> sandra: the former director of ice thomas homan on a short time ago and he had this to say and we'll get your response. >> we've asked congress for a year and a half to fix the loophole. if families want to come to this country illegally and claim asylum and want to see a judge we're for it, see a judge. what we don't want is them to be released from our facilities never to show up in court or if they show up in court not be removed because they'll ignore the judge's order and get into society and disappear. we've got to enforce the laws. >> sandra: we have to enforce the laws but his first statement is we've been calling on congress to fix this loophole for a year and a half. >> and he is spot on. catch and release process where if you catch someone who is unlawful and they don't get a hearing for two to three years oftentimes they don't show up. they evaporate into the fabric of america. we have to close that loophole. you know this but we have attempted to pass a number of different bills in the congress especially on the house side and democrats have been in opposition to all of those bills and these are ideas that most democrats agreed with, border security, dealing with the daca kids, dealing with folks who have come here no fault of their own by their parents and the work visa system expansion. we agreed with this and closing the loophole. democrats have been in opposition to all of our efforts because they believe in open borders. and how do you argue with people who don't want to be borders when we say we want to enforce our laws, secure our borders? wouldn't it be great if we could have immigration reform and people would stop crossing the desert and risking their lives and they could come in lawfully. >> eric: it appears the jury in the paul manafort trial is stuck on one of the issues on one count. sending a note to a judge about that. what it means for the verdict. former federal prosecutor andrew mccarthy is here to tell us what we can expect. ok, show me what you got. wait wait, that's not a talent. any xfinity customer with an x1 voice remote can do that. watch this... i want to vote for... obviously not you. ooh that guy... cast your votes during every live show. just say "vote for agt" into the x1 voice remote. >> eric: there appears to be a partial verdict in the paul manafort case. the jury sending out a note telling the judge that quote, we cannot come to consensus on a single count. what does that mean for the final verdict? former u.s. attorney andrew mccarthy joins us on the phone. do you think there is a verdict? what does it mean if they can't agree on all 18 counts? >> well, eric, it's interesting. we don't know what they mean by single. we don't know if there is a single count they can't agree on or there isn't a single count they can't agree on. the judge's move here is usually to tell them to go back and do their best to try to resolve it. if it turns out there are some counts that they've agreed on, they can take -- the importance of that is whatever counts they do resolve on the partial verdict, that's a final verdict. so in other words, if the judge gets them to then go back and deliberate on the counts that they haven't yet agreed on, they cannot reconsider the ones they've already returned as part of the partial verdict. >> eric: there is no partial verdict reached at the moment. we just know as you just said that they apparently have agreed on some counts or have questions on one single count or maybe as you said not a single count. let's say they have reached a verdict and eventually come in with a verdict on some counts, can't the federal government then and prosecutors retry manafort on those counts or count the jury does not agree on? >> yes, on any count where the jury hangs, that is where the jury cannot reach a verdict, the government is permitted to retry the count unless the court decides in a post trial motion that the court believes there was insufficient evidence to support that count. if the court were to make that finding in a post trial motion then the government would be barred. that's a decision on the evidence. but presumptively any count they hang on, the government would be allowed to retry. >> eric: do you think this apparent deadlock is good news or bad news for manafort? >> it's always good news for the defense if the jury can't resolve the case because of the great burden is really on the government to go forward. the government has to evaluate its case and decide whether it's worth trying him for a second time. >> eric: quickly from your long experience as a federal prosecutor four days of a jury with all these complicated tax forms and financial forms, is this quick or is this what you would expect? we've seen juries sometimes go for a week or more on complicated cases. >> it is not unusual. i think the two things that i would bear in mind, eric, are they really didn't organize the exhibits for them for these counts, which has complicated the jury's job. they've had to organize the exhibits to match them up with the counts. i still think they're probably put off by richard gates's plea agreement which tells them that he basically got a walk on something that manafort may have to serve the rest of his life. >> eric: more in a moment.

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>> that is exactly right. bill did a great job laying out the details of these executive actions but under title eight which is the nationality act of the u.s. more than 50 years old as our immigration laws. under that along with title 42 you recall they were able to send people write back is this due process clause to claim asylum this is saying all of those in between ports of entry they have to either be a heightened threshold and i just met the last hour with a white house official there come a heightened threshold of criminal fear in torture otherwise they will be immediately put into removal processes. the last 24 hours cvp says 5100 plus migrant encounters of which more than 3500 crossed illegally between ports of entry. so i said if you've got 3500

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Transcripts for BBCNEWS Breakfast 20240604 05:42:00

against reigning champions south africa. world aquatics will debut a new open category for transgender athletes at the swimming world cup in the limb. last year the world governing body voted to stop transgender athletes from competing tra nsgender athletes from competing in transgender athletes from competing in women's elite races, so the open category will fear —— feature 5100 metre races across all strokes with world aquatics saying that this highlights commitment to inclusivity and we will see how it works this october when the first of the world cup series events takes place in berlin. it cup series events takes place in berlin. , . , cup series events takes place in berlin. , ., , ., berlin. it is great, the summer of sort berlin. it is great, the summer of sport feels _ berlin. it is great, the summer of sport feels fantastic. _ berlin. it is great, the summer of sport feels fantastic. mike, - berlin. it is great, the summer of sport feels fantastic. mike, thankj sport feels fantastic. mike, thank you. sport feels fantastic. mike, thank ou. ~ . h sport feels fantastic. mike, thank ou.. ., �*, ., , sport feels fantastic. mike, thank ou. , , sport feels fantastic. mike, thank ou. , ., you. what's always useful is to hear --eole you. what's always useful is to hear people who — you. what's always useful is to hear people who know — you. what's always useful is to hear people who know what _ you. what's always useful is to hear people who know what they - you. what's always useful is to hear people who know what they are - people who know what they are talking about. always a good thing, generally, so later on, looking ahead, k smith a former lioness, one of england's most ever capped players, she knows what she's talking about.— players, she knows what she's talking about. she made crucial discoveries. _

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Transcripts for CNN CNN Newsroom Live 20240604 08:22:00

army or glodiplomats, adding th president emmanuel macron will not tolerate any protests against france. and the democratically elected president came to show france and the world it has the backing of the government. >> translator: we are here to tell president macron of france that niger belongs to us. what we want, we deal with who we want, how we want. we are support for the army. >> reporter: a sea of peopleal midniger's parliament, denouncing france and some raising flags. as anti-sentiment has grown, many warn russia, long live putin and long live russia. the protesters say demanding that the foreign armies leave the country. france has 5,100 troops in

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Army
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Glodiplomats
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Emmanuel-macron
Volodymyr-zelenskyy
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World

Transcripts for BBCNEWS Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg 20240604 08:48:00

table, is that going to happen? pat cullen recommended the acceptance of the offer. we think the offer is very fair and reasonable, 4% for last year, 5% for this year, plus a cash payment as well. people do not get paid in percentages, they get paid in pounds. when you look at what that means, that is £5,100 extra, £5,100 extra for a band five nurse, which is a typical ward level nurse, which is a typical ward level nurse, plus a cash payment of £2000 into the bank account by the summer. we think it is a very fair and reasonable offer. shill we think it is a very fair and reasonable offer.— we think it is a very fair and reasonable offer. . ., . ._ , reasonable offer. all of that may be the case, reasonable offer. all of that may be the case. but _ reasonable offer. all of that may be the case, but nurses _ reasonable offer. all of that may be the case, but nurses have _ reasonable offer. all of that may be the case, but nurses have said - reasonable offer. all of that may be the case, but nurses have said no. | the case, but nurses have said no. that is the situation we are now. they have said no and they're going to strike again. the government is responsible for trying to manage the situation, so how are you going to fix it? will you put more money on the table? let fix it? will you put more money on the table? . fix it? will you put more money on the table? , . ., the table? let see what the other unions say- _ the table? let see what the other unions say. unison, _ the table? let see what the other unions say. unison, which - the table? let see what the other - unions say. unison, which represents about a third of all of the object of change of staff, accepted the very good pay offer. i have already

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Transcripts for BBCNEWS BBC News 20240604 09:19:00

perhaps the tiniest hint of a bit of wiggle room, greg hands told laura kuenssberg steve backley�*s door is always open. lode kuenssberg steve backley's door is always open-— kuenssberg steve backley's door is alwa soen. ~ ., ., , ., always open. we want to see what the other unions — always open. we want to see what the other unions have _ always open. we want to see what the other unions have to _ always open. we want to see what the other unions have to say, _ always open. we want to see what the other unions have to say, the - always open. we want to see what the other unions have to say, the other i other unions have to say, the other people _ other unions have to say, the other people being — other unions have to say, the other people being balloted _ other unions have to say, the other people being balloted have - other unions have to say, the other people being balloted have to - other unions have to say, the other people being balloted have to say i people being balloted have to say about— people being balloted have to say about this — people being balloted have to say about this very— people being balloted have to say about this very good _ people being balloted have to say about this very good offer. - people being balloted have to say about this very good offer. i - people being balloted have to sayl about this very good offer. i stress again. _ about this very good offer. i stress again. 5.100— about this very good offer. i stress again, £5,100 for— about this very good offer. i stress again, £5,100 for a _ about this very good offer. i stress again, £5,100 for a band _ about this very good offer. i stress again, £5,100 for a band five - about this very good offer. i stress. again, £5,100 for a band five nurse, £2000 _ again, £5,100 for a band five nurse, £2000 into— again, £5,100 for a band five nurse, £2000 into their— again, £5,100 for a band five nurse, £2000 into their account _ again, £5,100 for a band five nurse, £2000 into their account by- again, £5,100 for a band five nurse, £2000 into their account by the - £2000 into their account by the summer. — £2000 into their account by the summer. it _ £2000 into their account by the summer. it is— £2000 into their account by the summer, it is a _ £2000 into their account by the summer, it is a very— £2000 into their account by the summer, it is a very good - £2000 into their account by the| summer, it is a very good offer. labour— summer, it is a very good offer. labour in — summer, it is a very good offer. labour ina— summer, it is a very good offer. labour in a quite _ summer, it is a very good offer. labour in a quite difficult - summer, it is a very good offer. i labour in a quite difficult position on this meanwhile, they have not publicly supported the strikes but have not come out against than either, given their very close and historic links to the unions. the shadow health secretary also out on the airwaves this morning, he repeated something he has been talking about for a few weeks, his concern about the impact on patients. i concern about the impact on atients. . . , concern about the impact on patients-— concern about the impact on atients. ., ., , ., ., patients. i am really worried about it, particularly _ patients. i am really worried about it, particularly the _ patients. i am really worried about it, particularly the decision - patients. i am really worried about it, particularly the decision they i it, particularly the decision they appear— it, particularly the decision they appear to — it, particularly the decision they appear to have taken to remove derogations, the exemptions they put in place _

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Bit
Laura-kuenssberg
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Transcripts for BBCNEWS Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg 20240604 08:52:00

have to say, but the other people balloting have to say about this very good offer. i stress again, £5,100 for a band five nurse, £2000 into their account by the summer. that is a very good offer. what into their account by the summer. that is a very good offer. what has ha--ened that is a very good offer. what has happened to _ that is a very good offer. what has happened to waiting _ that is a very good offer. what has happened to waiting lists - that is a very good offer. what has happened to waiting lists since - happened to waiting lists since rishi sunak made that pledge in january? rishi sunak made that pledge in janua ? , ., _ rishi sunak made that pledge in janua ? ,., rishi sunak made that pledge in janua ? , , ~ rishi sunak made that pledge in janua ? ,., , ,, ., january? obviously be strike action has not helped. _ january? obviously be strike action has not helped. we _ january? obviously be strike action has not helped. we know- january? obviously be strike action has not helped. we know that - january? obviously be strike action has not helped. we know that we | january? obviously be strike action i has not helped. we know that we are dealing with a waiting list problem as a result of the pandemic, which inevitably lead to big delays in the nhs. we are getting to grips with that, the strikes have not helped, but nonetheless there is a real focus that steve barclay, the prime minister personally involved here, making sure that we do what we can to bring down those waiting lists. the strikes might not make that much difference because the waiting list have got longer. 7.2 million people on a waiting list now in february. that is the highest level that it has ever been. how on earth are you going to get to grips with that as there is a dispute with an artist, a dispute with the junior doctors? do you not have to budge on the strikes

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Transcripts for BBCNEWS BBC News 20240604 10:11:00

said in the government have said, this is a full and final offer, they say. except there is perhapsjust the tiniest hint of a little bit of wiggle room. greg hands told laura kuenssberg that steve barclay's door is always open. taste kuenssberg that steve barclay's door is always open-— is always open. we want to see what the other unions _ is always open. we want to see what the other unions have _ is always open. we want to see what the other unions have to _ is always open. we want to see what the other unions have to say, - is always open. we want to see what the other unions have to say, what i the other unions have to say, what the other unions have to say, what the other— the other unions have to say, what the other people _ the other unions have to say, what the other people being _ the other unions have to say, what the other people being balloted i the other unions have to say, what. the other people being balloted have to say— the other people being balloted have to say about — the other people being balloted have to say about this _ the other people being balloted have to say about this very _ the other people being balloted have to say about this very good _ the other people being balloted have to say about this very good offer, - to say about this very good offer, and i_ to say about this very good offer, and i stress — to say about this very good offer, and i stress again, _ to say about this very good offer, and i stress again, £5,100 - to say about this very good offer, and i stress again, £5,100 for- to say about this very good offer, and i stress again, £5,100 for a l and i stress again, £5,100 for a band _ and i stress again, £5,100 for a band five — and i stress again, £5,100 for a band five nurse, _ and i stress again, £5,100 for a band five nurse, £2000 - and i stress again, £5,100 for a band five nurse, £2000 into i and i stress again, £5,100 for a . band five nurse, £2000 into their account— band five nurse, £2000 into their account by— band five nurse, £2000 into their account by the _ band five nurse, £2000 into their account by the summer. - band five nurse, £2000 into their account by the summer. that - band five nurse, £2000 into their account by the summer. that is l band five nurse, £2000 into their account by the summer. that is aj account by the summer. that is a very. _ account by the summer. that is a very. very— account by the summer. that is a very. very good _ account by the summer. that is a very, very good offer. _ account by the summer. that is a very, very good offer.— account by the summer. that is a very, very good offer. labour are in a uuite very, very good offer. labour are in a quite difficult _ very, very good offer. labour are in a quite difficult position _ very, very good offer. labour are in a quite difficult position on - very, very good offer. labour are in a quite difficult position on this, - a quite difficult position on this, meanwhile. they haven't publicly supported the strikes, but haven't come out against them either, given their very close and historic links to the unions. the shadow health secretary, wes streeting, also out on the airwaves this morning, he repeated something that he's been talking about for a few weeks now. his concern about the impact on patients. his concern about the impact on atients. �* . , his concern about the impact on atients. �* ., , ., ., patients. i'm really worried about

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Steve-barclay
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Transcripts for BBCNEWS BBC News 20240604 11:12:00

about this very good offer, and i stress again, £5,100 for a band five nurse, - £2,000 into their- account by the summer. that is a very, very good offer. labour are in a quite difficult position on this, meanwhile. they haven't publicly supported the strikes, but haven't come out against them either, given their very close and historic links to the unions. the shadow health secretary, wes streeting, also out on the airwaves this morning. he repeated something that he's been talking about for a few weeks now. his concern about the impact on patients. i'm really worried about it, particularly the decision they appear to have taken to remove derogations, the exemptions they put in place previously around emergency care, cancer care, i think that is a real risk to patient safety. i hope they don't feel that escalating in that way is necessary. do you hope they don't? i really hope they don't.

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