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brian: if you are looking for griff jenkins, on the road. the migrant caravan is going global as it heads towards the united states border. jedediah: fox news has a first hand look right outside a shelter you housing thousands hoping to come to or doorstep. griff jenkins joins us on the ground from southern mexico with more. griff, where are you? griff: steve, brian, jed, good morning, i'm 25 north of the mexico border the town at that pointapachula. the word that our borders aropen. catch and release gone global. we have run into migrants from africa, from india, from bangladesh from haiti, from cuba. we have only been here about 24 hours. we spoke to one gentleman from cameroon here is how he got here. this is unbelievable. listen. >> i'm from cameroon to nigeria, from nigeria from caicos colombia. from panama h he had ecuador. take a boat. from colombia i arrived from capagauna i woke in the jungle from panama in the jungle. i walk now from -- i left panama to costa rica u from costa rica to nicaragua. from nicaragua to honduras. from honduras to guatemala. from guatemala to mexico now. griff: the goal is the same for all of them to get to the u.s. now, this just to give you a quk shout here u this is the shelter where, remember, just the end of last week, guys. some 1300 migrants escaped from here because mexico is detaining the migrants in these shelters. it's overcrowded. if you look out here. these are the folks that couldn't even get. in they are sleeping in the streets. it's obviously stellate here. the challenge now is that the makeup of these caravan flows is not just a central americans from honduras, guatemala, el salvador and to lesser extent nicaragua. now just a mix of people from all over the planet and this is obviously why. ice, cbp and others are putting a lot of resources, more resources on the border we are learning to particularly combat that fake family unit. talking to immigration officials here to find out if they are doing anything here in mexico to try and expose fraudulent family units as well. steve, brian, jed? brian: united nations there, griff, were you surprised by what you saw and what you heard? >> >> i was surprised. absolutely. but even more so, brian, the mexican officials here, we spoke for a long time off camera to one of the immigration officials here and they said listen, we really haven't seen this kind of flow there is a heavy presence of cubans and that is significant because they have had cubans for years and years and years but not in these numbers right now. and there are no more visas. before you could get a visa for a year or particularly more so recently for about 20 days to try and go apply for asylum. they pretty much try to cancel that right now because so many are coming and keep them here in the southern part of mexico. and it doesn't seem by any indication that the migrants have an interest in staying here. steve: man o man. griff thank you very much. great reporting today. it is given that that the president of the united states last night the white house released a memo and the whole idea is he is asking the attorney general and the acting secretary of the department of homeland security to propose regulations within the next three months that would change the way asylum cases are handled. the reason asylum cases are so tricky is because it's hard to handle the families. because when there are children involved, there are different rules. jedediah: that memo from the president reads quote our immigration and asylum system is in crisis a consequence of the mass migrantmigration of aliens acros out southern border. safeguard our system against ramp pants abuse of our asylum process. brian: i love he is not doing comprehensive because that doesn't go anywhere u this is called governing as opposed to politics. here did you go, fees for asylum applicants. i don't know how much cash these men and women have when they cross the border but they better have one now. steve: the first one is a problem. brian: address all asylum applications within 180 days. i don't know how do you that we don't have enough judges now. i guess we have to go through a different process. streamline court proceedings u okay. predict illegal border crossers from receiving work permits and revoke work authorization for illegal aliens and order deportation. if you want to work visa or work ethic how much we have a need in this country you have to do it the right way. steve: once again, these rules regarding work impact the people who are in the country illegally. there is nothing there to impact the people in this country who hire the people who work i will lye legally in this country. so, in other words, people come across our southern border and they get jobs here u. jedediah: i really admire the attempt on the part of the president. everyone always talks about comprehensive immigration reform which accomplishes nothing u. brian: never get a vote on it never agree. jedediah: addresses all asylum applications in 180 days. in order to accomplish these goals there needs to be a better infrastructure in place behind. this you need more judges. you need some things to be happening same mull takennously with this. although it is practical measures have been outlined. this whole system needs to be revamped through and through even though make this possible these measures. steve: it's aspirational. right now 800,000 cases pending. of the wait time is currently almost two years. while the white house can put out this memorandum. there is going to be a swift, legal challenge and this is going to wind up being litigated in the courts u mark morgan, who worked as a border patrol chief during the obama administration said it's all about regarding these family units, it's all about them being able to figure out our laws and the loopholes in our laws. >> they know you grab a kid because of our broken laws you are in. they also fully understand the rewards and the shielding and protection they get from these sanctuary cities. congress has failed the united states of america. congress has failed to do their job. they could fix this in 15 mention. all they have to do is legislate a fix for the flores agreement tppa catch and release ends and 85% of the humanitarian crisis goes away. this is absolutely at congress' feet u. brian: look, as you saw sixth mings and "new york times" liberal columnists senator cory booker, senator dick durbin and more than a handful now of democrats have said it's a crisis u my hope is when leadership gets together at the white house they talk about infrastructure. they keep the doors closed and segue right to this. they make a joints announcement. don't give nibble credit or discredit and go ahead and solve this problem. that's my hope. my fingers are crossed. meanwhile 8 minutes after the hour. let's talk about plixz. we will see. jedediah: immigration a hot topic leading into 2020. president trump has wasted no time on this issue. joe biden also wasting no time coming out hitting that campaign trail. here he is talking about the middle class, the economy and trump in pittsburgh, pennsylvania. take a listen. >> i believe that pittsburgh and my native town of scranton and my hometown of wilmington and claimant, they represent the cities and towns that make up hard-working little class americans who are the backbone of this nation. that's no hyperbole. i think we have to re-think how we define what constitutes a successful economy. i plan ti'm referred to as middle class gentlemen. everybody knows. [chanting middle class joe] >> if i'm going to beat donald trump in 2020 it's going to happen here. [cheers] steve: so there he was in front of 600 at the teamster's local 249 in lawrenceville. he made very clear that he cannot win without the union members. in fact, they were really rolled out the red carpeting. they gave the union members special red wrist bands. they had a special door members of the united steelworks u american federation of you recall workers. international firefighters which earlier nut day had actually endorsed him. this all caught the attention of the president. jedediah: sure did. biden is out there saying the middle class is hurting. middle class is hurting. president trump responded in a tweet pittsburgh jobless rate lowest point since the 1970s, maybe even better than that sleepy joe just had his first rally there in fact is, every economic aspect of our country is the best it has ever been. that's the interesting point that joe biden is out there talking about people struggling. bottom line is either they are actually struggling or they are not. you can't tell people they're struggling. you can't talk oh, you are struggling you need me. either they have more money in their pockets or they don't. either they are keeping hard earned cash or open up small businesses because of deregulation or not. reality is going to strike people that's how they are going to vote not on what a guy says on the campaign trail u. brian: 6'7" brad parscale is donald trump's campaign manager. he said i thought it was interesting that he picked pennsylvania. he told that to laura last night. >> pennsylvania, i think, clearly still recognize what trump has done for steel and aluminum there, what he has done for the economy and lowest unemployment in 51 years, i believe, in pennsylvania. overall, every metric the president is doing better than obama and biden did during 8 years u i mean, 40 years of biden i guess has been in government. he has never done anything that's helped peaz anywhere like trump has done. brian: he did grow up there. he needs pennsylvania. just because he has also got delaware. obviously close. my thing is it's going to be this. we know union leadership is going to go for joe biden or a democrat. but what about the union members? and for example, the firefighter union president that hopped on with us yesterday and said you know what? we're putting our money on joe biden. i can't tell you how many emails i got going well, that's not me. i just hosted an event in new york for firefighters for a benefit i feel not only trump rally i felt i was trump family. this is new york. i think a lot of people can get caught up in saying well why is the union going for a democrat? steve: they always have. brian: that's union leadership u i think trump is still open for union members going with him. i think he got a lot last time too. steve: leaders get to pick where the money goes. brian: they do what they want when it comes to voting. steve: indeed. jedediah: time to hear from carley shimkus who is here. carley: california synagogue shooter is due in court today. his parents now disavowing the senseless and deadly passover attack. in a statement saying he is, quote: part of the history of evil that has been perpetrated on jewish people for centuries. meantime hundreds gathering the life of victim kaye. witnesses say she died a hero shielding her rabbi from gunfire. an army veteran is in jail without bond pledging allegiance to isis. investigators say he finalized plans to attack a white supremacist event as revenge for the new zealand mosque attacks. >> this is a case in which law enforcement was able to identify a man consumed with hate and bent on mass murder and stop him before he could carry out his attack. carley: afghan war vet recently converted to islam and spoke about killing jewish people and police officers. boeing find ago brand new south ware problem in 737 max jets. the company says the glitch prevented some safety alerts from functioning properly by failing pilots disagreeing sensors on the plane's nose. this is the first time we are hearing about this software glitch from boeing or the faa. problems on the max jets put in the spotlight following two deadly crashes that killed nearly 400 people overseas and those, guys, are your headlines. wow that boeing story is insane. steve: something else they have got to fix. meanwhile at 10:30 this morning house democrats will host their first ever hearing on medicare for all. jedediah: congressman michael burgess is a doctor and also will be there. he calls it a prescription for disaster and he joins us live coming up next. ♪trelegy. ♪the power of 1-2-3. ♪trelegy 1-2-3 trelegy. with trelegy and the power of 1 2 3, i'm breathing better. trelegy works 3 ways to... ...open airways,... ...keep them open... ...and reduce inflammation... ...for 24 hours of better breathing. trelegy won't replace a rescue inhaler for sudden breathing problems. trelegy is not for asthma. tell your doctor if you have a heart condition or high blood pressure before taking it. do not take trelegy more than prescribed. trelegy may increase your risk of thrush, pneumonia, and osteoporosis. call your doctor if worsened breathing, chest pain, mouth or tongue swelling ...problems urinating, vision changes, or eye pain occur. think your copd medicine is doing enough? 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not again. limu that's your reflection. only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty, liberty, liberty, liberty ♪ ♪ ♪ this simple banana peel represents a bold idea: a way to create energy from household trash. it not only saves about 80% in carbon emissions... it helps reduce landfill waste. that's why bp is partnering with a california company: fulcrum bioenergy. to turn garbage into jet fuel. because we can't let any good ideas go to waste. at bp, we see possibilities everywhere. to help the world keep advancing. >> be able to buy into a public option plan for medicare. >> we are going to pass a medicare for all single pair program. >> we need to have medicare for all. >> i think medicare for all is one of the possible paths. >> we figure out how to do medicare for all. >> i believe the best way to get there is having medicare for all. steve: medicare for all obviously a hot topic on the campaign trail. democrats are bringing into congress leading a hearing in just about four hours from right now here with his take texas congressman michael burgess also a medical doctor and be at that hearing today. doctor, good morning to you. >> good morning. thanks for having me on. steve: when you hear medicare for all sounds good. everybody in the country is going to get medicare and medical coverage healthcare coverage. what's the fine print? what's the downside? >> well, you know, just think back to the good old days like if you like your doctor, can you keep your doctor. in this consideration you get to keep nothing. all health insurance, all private health insurance as we know it is gone. medicare as we know it is gone. medicare advantage is gone. the -- it's just absolutely stunning when you read through and it's not terribly long bill when you read through the aspirational document that we'll have in the rules committee today, it is stunning because everything will be taken over by the federal government. never been tried before on this scale. look, if i have a new treatment that i want to offer a patient, i have to do randomized clinical trial. i have to show it's not going to kill too many people when i administer it. none of that is required with this. just by congressional fiat we are going to change healthcare in this country. here's the other thing. look, why don't we celebrate stuff that's working. since donald trump was inaugurated, 2.5 million people, not just are working, but they have employer sponsored insurance. people that didn't have it before. this is a great success of the trump administration. i don't know why we don't talk about it more. steve: congressman. the democrats feel emboldened because they feel like they won bass back the house on their. when you look at priorities of voters about a month ago. the kaiser forum foundation had a survey. 68% of the people in the country would like to lower the cost of prescription. only 31% like the used of medicare for all. does that surprise you? >> no, it doesn't. cost and complexity of our system sure those are issues number one. do people think they cost too much, yes they do. do they think it's too complicated when you go to the doctor and take your kid, yeah, they do. steve: no kidding. simplification would be great. see what happens in your meeting today. dr. burgess thank you very much for making a studio cawnchts right. thank you. steve: 6:20 now in new york city an incredible story of heroism from the deadly synagogue shooting in california. an iraq war veteran ran toward the gunman when he opened fire. he will tell us how his military training kicked in when he joins us for his first national interview and that's next. biopharmaceutical researchers. driven each day to pursue life-changing cures... in a country built on fostering innovation. here, they find breakthroughs... like a way to fight cancer by arming a patient's own t-cells... and a new therapy that gives the blind a working gene so they can see again. because it's not just about the next breakthrough... it's all the ones after that. we humans are strange creatures. other species avoid pain and struggle. we actually... seek it out. other species do difficult things because they have to. we do difficult things. because we like to. we think it's... fun. introducing the all-new 2019 ford ranger built for the strangest of all creatures. ♪ brian: all right. from the horrific synagogue shooting in california comes stories of heroes. heroes like the combat veteran who ran toward the veteran. here is rabbi goldstein hailing his actions. >> oscar stuart, a former soldier, jumped into action. he tried to tackle down the gunman. the gunman just exited right ran away. got into his car. brian: joining us now for his first national interview is that veteran that was just referred to by the rabbi oscar stuart. oscar, great to see you. i'm reading this story watching some of your comments on camera. i can not believe you had the composure to do it. if you wouldn't mind, bring us back to that moment when you realized the whole congregation is in peril. >> i didn't think about that. i heard the gunshots. i knew what gunshots were unfortunately. i stood up and going to run like everyone else. i took maybe one, two steps and at the last, you know, and i don't know why, i turned around and i ran towards the gunfire. when i exited the sanctuary of the synagogue. he weighs in the lobby. he discharged his firearm twice. i saw the muzzle flashes. and as i ran towards him i yelled out as loud as i could, every inch of my body mustered this noise. he looked at me and had a look of like fear. he dropped his weapon to his side. he had a tactical sling so it didn't fall to the ground. he turned around and he ran out of the building. i continued to chase him. instinctively i believe i was maintaining my distance. i was trained that if a person has a rifle and you are within a certain number of feet, they can't deploy the rifle against you. i didn't think about that. i just instinctively knew that i believe. i kept a pursuit. as soon as he jumps in his car he raises his rifle. i punched the car as hard as i could and he puts it back down. he starts the car and in this moment i hear in the background i have a gun, clear out. get back. i fall back. and jonathan morales of the border patrol agent opens up with five rounds into the car. it was still parked. i want to make that clear. i am told he did something wrong. he didn't. he shot at a parked car and we were trying to keep the guy from going anywhere that's what i believe he was doing. and my whole job of trying to -- point of trying to get him out of his vehicle he wouldn't go anywhere else. i remember the christ church shootings where a guy went from one mosque to another there was a church next door. there is a grocery store down the street with people just all the time. i didn't think about that. i think my instinct kept me from -- wanted to keep that from happening. brian: couple of things, oscar. number one, did i not know that if you get within five feet of somebody with a rifle, you are okay. they can't discharge it. number two, what about your instinct to scream and yell? was that adrenaline? was that training? >> he can shoot at you for from five feet. you have a very good chance of getting to him and preventing film using his weapon. can you grab the muzzle and. i don't want people to go out and start chasing people down with guns. that's not what i want people to do. my instinct. i think it was a combination of training and instinct or just anger, maybe. because you want to intimidate your enemy. i was always taught that that was ongoing thing. you want to intimidate the enemy. you want to be a hard target. you want to be stronger than him and overwhelm him and that's what i did. brian: wow. oscar, not only that you had the composure along with others to memorize the license plate. that was unbelievable. then did you go inside. and you find lori gilbert kaye. what did you see? >> as soon as i ran inside, i saw the rabbi and i asked him are you okay? he says don't worry about me. i'm fine. and he goes -- he said take care of somebody else. that was amazing to me. in intrretrospect. i sigh lori down on the ground somebody help me flip her over so we can start doing cpr. at this point a doctor i'm so embarrassed about that i call him gill. we flip her over. he starts doing chest compressions and i start doing breaths. at some point he gets tired. i start doing both the compressions and the breath. and doctor kaye, her husband, harold, he comes and he begins to do the compressions. he didn't realize that it was his wife. his compressions were slower than i thought. i took the opportunities to go up and get aed. we started to apply when he couldn't get a pulse. i have got check the pulse. at this point he puts his hand on his wife's throat and he faints. he must have realized that was his wife. behind site everyone says he didn't know he was doing compressions on his wife. he fangtsed and at this point the sheriff's deputies come in and take over the cpr for us. brian: incredible series of events and composure under fire that you experienced. do you think you would have done the same thing without the military training, without that year or so in iraq? >> i don't know. your speak -- i hadn't thought about that to much. i think i probably would have done the same thing but i don't know if the outcome would have been the same. brian: when you looked at the shooter, you they had -- i thought i saw you quoted you knew this guy didn't have much experience shooting a gun. do you remember the look in his eye? >> he was very scared when he heard me it must have sounded like thunder. people in the congregation that were still in the sanctuary they said it sounded like four men were screaming in unison. the priest at the church across the street said he heard me when he was doing his service. he heard the scream. so it must have been -- he was pretty -- and then he sees this guy barreling down on him yelling obscenities and telling him is he going to kill him. he just dropped his weapon u and he didn't know what he was doing. his muzzle flashes were very sporadic. you saw that he was not -- he was not a stable shooter. he didn't have a lot of experience. he was holding the weapon. in a manner that he didn't have control of it. and so i -- i remember that clearly because i kept an eye on the weapon. i was looking at the barrel making sure, you know, making sure i was not in its way. brian: oscar we only have 20 seconds left. wondering how you are doing. >> i'm doing great. brian: the detail in which you memorized everything is amazing. i'm wondering emotionally, are you okay? >> yeah. i'm okay. my wife is actually stressing out more than i am. i get a lot of phone calls. and she says that -- i think it's becoming -- my wife is a widow from her first husband that was lost. and she -- what's you call it when she said i'm so glad nothing happened to you. she is pretty stressed out. brian: oscar stewart, america is proud of you. i'm proud of what you did. oscar stewart, thank you very much. >> you are welcome. thank you very much. brian: more "fox & friends" in a moment. - anncr: thankfully, prevagen helps your brain and improves memory. - dad's got all the answers. - anncr: prevagen is now the number-one-selling brain health supplement in drug stores nationwide. - she outsmarts me every single time. - checkmate! you wanna play again? - anncr: prevagen. healthier brain. better life. >> tech: at safelite autoglass, we every chip will crack.. this daughter was home visiting when mom saw a chip in her windshield. >> mom: honey is that a chip? >> tech: they wanted it fixed fast so they brought it to us. >> mom: hi. >> tech: with our in-shop chip repair service, we can fix it the same day... guaranteed. plus with most insurance a safelite chip repair is no cost to you. >> mom: really? drive safely. all right. ♪ acoustic music >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, ♪ safelite replace. repair the enamel on a daily basis. with the new pronamel repair toothpaste we can help actively repair enamel in its weakened state. it's innovative. my go-to toothpaste is going to be pronamel repair. ♪ don't bring me down ♪ no, no, no, no, no. brian: 120 people in elo. have you ever seen that stage how crowded it is. steve: very big show. excellent interview with that man. jedediah: fantastic. brian: the president i think, he has got to invite him to the white house. that courage that comes for everyday americans. steve: between oscar and the border patrol agent who had the gun and got the shots off. that is really something. meanwhile, yesterday was a big day in presidential politics. we told you that joe biden was in the pittsburgh area where he officially launched in the union hall. pete buttigieg was here in new york city. he had lunch with al sharpton at sylvia's up in harlem. a million people taking pictures of the two of them. they talked about the issues of the day. then mayor pete went to the daily show. jedediah: he sure did. he talked about what he would do on day one. take a listen to what he said. >> day one you launch a package of voter reforms. making registration easier. making it easier to gets to the polls. launching a reform to the electoral college based on the idea that you might -- [applause] >> launching a commission to de -- propose measures that would depoliticize the supreme court. every other issue so urgent from climate, income ininequality. immigration, gun reform you name it very hard to deal with if we still have such warping of our democratic system itself. brian: fantastic. that's going to be great in iowa and new hampshire when you tell everyone to get rid of the electoral college because that means that these candidates now stay in the major cities and the bigger states. jedediah: i said it on this show first a few weeks ago. is he very smooth. very smart. appeals to a large audience. he comes off as an intellectual who is talking practical policy. he is a hard left guy. and if you look at the stuff he supports he is very, very far left. when you come out of the gate fog about replacing the electoral college. attacking the supreme court. always pay attention to what people are saying on the issues. even if it's glossed over it sounds great. he is a very likeable guy. how he is going to actually act as president is what you need to be focused on. steve: he made very clear. climate change at the top of his list. brian: beto o'rourke rolled out his climate change plan as we see 20 plus candidates. jedediah: joe biden watching to see where he will fit into this. that stage is going to be come stage. steve: stages. they have to do it in shifts. jedediah: multiple levels for all these people. steve: meanwhile politics to news of the day. and carley joins us right now from upstairs. carley: we begin with a fox news alert. venezuela's opposition leader juan guaido calling for marital uprising. a politician posting a on twitter air base activists lopez. it shows him standing in front of soldiers claiming he started his quote final save to oust disputed president nicolas maduro from power. an heroic school resource officer credited for stopping a potential shooting by sixth graders. police say the officer heard a rumor that two students had a list of peers they wanted to kill at an elementary school west of knoxville, tennessee. investigators didn't find a list or guns but they did discover a hand-drawn map and a plot to hide weapons at the school. the students are charged with conspiracy to commit murder. remember this woman the teen who claimed he didn't know right from wrong is back in jail. tonya couch is the woman failing a mandatory drug test as part of her bond release. she has been back to jail twice since her arrest in 2015 when she ran away to mexico with her son ethan. he went to trial for killing four people while driving drunk in 2013. he was let off when a judge ruled he was too rich to know better. and could this whalen be a russian spy? that is the question of the morning. that's what norwegian marine experts think. finding this wearing harness some kind of mount for a camera or weapon. had a label equipment of st. petersburg. the fisherman says the whalen was tame and seemed use to interacting with humans. a look at your headlines, guys. there is something very fishy about that story. brian: ha ha. steve: you are saying it was including with humans? [sigh] brian: people of norway are very worried about the russians. saw "60 minutes" on sunday. i didn't think they were coming with a whalen. i thought it would be a submarine. steve: 20 minutes before the top of the hour. janice dean we're celebrating today 100 years of hostess. janice: 100 years of hostess snacks. to celebrate george duran and twinkie the kid is here. tell us what you did with the twinkies? >> a big birthday celebration. 100 years ago hostess launched the hostess chocolate cupcake. classic chocolate cupcake that everybody loves. number one cupcake in america? guess what? 100 years ago and today we are actually celebrating the hostess sentinel and celebrating it with the birthday cupcake. janice: that's brand new. >> brand new, gorgeous. has sprinkles on it same delicious flavor and frosting it is beauty. this is what i have done actual hostess twinkie and taken the twinkies and turned it into a cake. everybody can do this. almost like building blocks. make your own hostess twinkie cake. isn't that nice? beauty of the twinkies. the hostess drinkies you can build whatever you. the letter of your son's first name. whatever it is. build 100 and yesterday we launched a big tour throughout this country the hostess centennial tour. janice: twinkie van. >> it's not edible. janice: are you okay with me eating some of this? >> this cake? what else are you going to do? of course you are going to eat it that's why america loves twinkies so much they taste so good. janice: happy birthday twinkies happy birthday hostess. breakfast of champions right here. there is a lot out here if you want to come. steve: indeed. every day of grade school my mom would put either a hostess twinkie or cupcake in my lunch. jedediah: me too. and birthday cupcakes look delicious. i display to steal one of those. brian: another successful american story. we are the ones that pioneered edible sponge. steve: happy birthday anniversary hostess. bring those, in j.d. brian: where no one smiles, congressman nadler threatening to subpoena attorney general william barr if he doesn't show up for a hearing on thursday? can he do that? judge napolitano is on the case. he is in the studio and next on "fox & friends." can they do that? ♪ i don't want to play ♪ i just want to bang on the drum all day ♪ with advil liqui-gels, you'll ask... what stiff joints? what bad back? advil is... relief that's fast. strength that lasts. you'll ask... what pain? with advil liqui-gels. -keith used to be great to road-trip with. but since he bought his house... are you going 45? -uh, yes. 55 is a suggestion. -...it's kind of like driving with his dad. -what a sign, huh? terry, can you take a selfie of me? -take a selfie of you? -yeah. can you make it look like i'm holding it? -he did show us how to bundle home and auto at progressive.com and save a bunch of money. -oh, a plaque. "he later navigated northward, leaving... progressive can't protect you from becoming your parents. but we can protect your home and auto when you bundle with us. jedediah: we are back with a fox news alert. isis leader al baghdadi seen on video for the first time in five years. steve: caught a lot of people off guard. the terror leader acknowledging the group's loss of territory but claiming isis is still very much alive. benjamin hall is live in london with more on what he said. benjamin? >> brian, steve and jedediah, good morning, this video comes at a critical time for the terror group. comes as they are transitioning from a territorial caliphate to ideological. attacks but not direct them. he appears in good health if not slightly aged. and despite numerous reports over the years that he had been killed or injured. he says the territorial defeat of isis will be avenged and he praises the recent sri lanka bombings saying they were revenge for the loss of the caliphate. he also calls on all isis followers to launch more attacks, specifically naming france as a target and africa as a base for other affiliates. baghdad hasn't been seen since 2014 when isis was at its peak. since then he has gone under ground and thought he was hiding somewhere in the vast dessert regions of eastern syria or western iraq. 25-million-dollar bounty on his head. intelligence agencies searching for him desperately. brian: they had him dead a few times but turns out he is not. benjamin hall, thanks. 14 minutes before the the hour. war of words between william barr and jerry nadler escalating after the a.g.'s planned testimony this week. >> it's not up to the attorney general to tell the committee how to conduct its business or we will decide what the most effective way of asking questions are and that's what our decision is if he doesn't show up on thursday, we have to go to subpoenas. steve: so what's going to happen on thursday? let's talk to the judge. our senior judicial analyst and host of liberty file on fox nation. judge, it doesn't speak very highly of the members of congress that they think they got to bring out their lawyer into query the a.g. >> i don't remember a battle quite like this. the dispute is over who gets to question the attorney general and for how long. 40 members of that committee. so they each get five minutes. you can do the math. then they want another round of half an hour not by committee members. steve: their lawyers. >> but by their lawyers. and the attorney general said look, there is a tradition here attorneys general come up and answer your questions we do so under oath. we answer your questions not staff questions. i don't think this is that big a deal. because there is a tremendous interest this his testimony. lindsey graham who chairs the senate judiciary committee no dispute whatsoever. so we have a preview from that. it will be a far friendlier audience controlled by the republicans. so i think that this testimony will come off. but, just as he gets to decide what portions of the mueller report are redacted, congress doesn't get to decide that. congress gets to decide when the ball is in their court. the procedure for testimony. brian: they could just walk out on the street and get billie jones to do their questioning? having a busy day. they can't be caught up in asking their own questions? >> always a good question. i don't know who billy jones is but it's a good question because they are almost all lawyers. they should all know how to ask questions. it's not a mystery they have staffers. the attorney general has staffers. walk in there with an entourage of people behind him. brian: why do they say we watch these witnesses filibuster for five minutes and leave very few minutes to follow up. what difference if the staff asks it or not? >> the staff would have 30 minutes. so if the witness filibusters, to use their phrase for four minutes, that's one minute left. no way a witness could filibuster for 30 minutes. so they want the staffs to have the follow-up. i honestly don't think the attorney general is going to go up there with the idea of hiding anything. i think he is going to go up there with the intention of doing his duty. which is to answer this question. is he under oath. he has got to answer truthfully. they will work it out. jedediah: they have to work it out. what does the compromise look like any idea? >> all day testimony for him two days. friendly audience. all day before the house on thursday. decidedly unfriendly audience. will anything new come out? who knows. steve: judge napolitano works all day here on the channel. >> pleasurable, guys. jedediah: day two of our we built that series. next guest created a new app. transforming the way we worked. he learned his work ethic from his marine stepfather. you are going to meet him coming up next. ♪ go, go ♪ go, go ♪ go big or go home ♪ go, go ♪ go big or go home ♪ geico makes it easy to get help when you need it. with licensed agents available 24/7. it's not just easy. it's having-a-walrus-in-goal easy! roooaaaar! it's a walrus! ridiculous! yes! nice save, big guy! good job duncan! way to go! [chanting] it's not just easy. it's geico easy. oh, duncan. stay up. no sleepies. ♪ jedediah: it is day two of our week long series we built that highlighting american republicans. and this morning we introduce to you a tech entrepreneur who turned his problem-solving skills into a booming business. joining us now is a co-founder and ceo nicholas. i'm so excited to have you here. i actually knew you from a food company you created that had organic food that i was obsessed with for a while. have you created so many successful businesses. tell us a little bit about your background, your family life and what inspired you to be an entrepreneur. >> yeah. thanks for having me, jed. so, i've had a pretty diverse background. resilience is kind of like the one word that comes to mind when i think about my story. having grown up in hawaii, california, originally born in florida and then once my stepdad retired from the marine corps we moved back to florida. since 2010 i literally quit my advertising job, built out a gnc van and set out on the road four months and started my first company in my van. jedediah: you said your parents actually your dad's work ethic inspired you. at one point your mom was taking finance classes and you were helping her for that and that served as inspiration. >> when i was in middle school i helped my mom pass series six and series seven. my sister is nine years younger than me. as can you imagine single mom two kids one much, much younger and stepdad was off doing whatever. we didn't know where he was half the time because he was on deployments. jedediah: i want to hear about latest app. b notes. work spaces team channels. notes and tag. business intelligence and it's kind of the hub for people to go to within a business, within a company to interconnect and build a team. do i have that right? >> absolutely. serves as a repository for knowledge specifically group knowledge. as you are working through your ideas, thoughts and strategies and collectively bringing those to the table or inside the work space, everyone can collaborate and they can also see there is a lot of transparency. you can write down a thought. give context to that publish it to maybe a marketing channel or meetings channel and everyone within that channel, all your team members can see your notes. jedediah: wow. >> like emailing your notes around after a business meeting. everyone can have access to that and then furthermore close the gap between i have an idea or a thought and here are the results once it is actually launched into a product or service. that's where the intelligence component comes in. jedediah: when i look at entrepreneurs i'm always thinking why couldn't i do that? how could i make that happen? do you have any quick advice and then we have a few seconds here any quick advice to inspiring entrepreneurs? >> yeah. don't be afraid to take the leap. really like siri is biggest blocker. even if you fail it's not that big of a deal. jedediah: don't be afraid. that's my first step. thank you for being here. so inspiring. i'm going to check this app. out. >> cool, thank you so much, jed. jedediah: senator chuck grassley, geraldo rivera and the president's son eric trump are all joining us live coming up. ♪ good morning if you have postmenopausal osteoporosis and a high risk for fracture now might not be the best time to ask yourself are my bones strong? life is full of make or break moments. that's why it's so important to help reduce your risk of fracture with prolia®. only prolia® is proven to help strengthen and protect bones from fracture with 1 shot every 6 months. do not take prolia® if you have low blood calcium, are pregnant, are allergic to it or take xgeva® serious allergic reactions, like low blood pressure trouble breathing; throat tightness; face, lip, or tongue swelling rash; itching; or hives have happened. tell your doctor about dental problems as severe jaw bone problems may happen or new or unusual pain in your hip groin, or thigh, as unusual thigh bone fractures have occurred. speak to your doctor before stopping prolia® as spine and other bone fractures have occurred. prolia® can cause serious side effects, like low blood calcium; serious infections which could need hospitalization; skin problems; and severe bone joint, or muscle pain. are you ready? ask your doctor how prolia® can help strengthen your bones. ♪ ♪ it's just what we do steve: live from the mezzanine level news is what we do here on "fox & friends." welcome aboard, folks. it's tuesday. kind of a dreary day outside. jedediah: kind of dreary outside. brian: that owners from the owners of fgl house. steve: florida georgia line. brian: that sounds like a new song. jedediah: good stuff at 7:00 a.m. steve: thank you very much for joining us today. ainsley is off. jed is in. we start with a fox news alert. first up, the migrant caravan is going global as it heads towards the u.s. border. brian: you have fox news with a firsthand look right outside a shelter housing thousands hoping to come to our doorstep. jedediah: our very own griff jenkins is live on the ground with more griff, how is it going over there? griff: hey, jed, brian and steve. good morning, that message that our borders are open, that due to catch and release can you stay in america has gone global here at this shelter in at that point choula. tapachula. we have migrants in the shelter behind me from nigeria, from cameroon from, india, from bangladesh and a lot from cuba and haiti. we spoke to two of the migrants. one jaafari from india and another from cameroon. they both say they have one goal, that's to get to the u.s. and nets have a message for president trump. listen. >> the president president trump. we just want to plead to him let him know the condition that we, especially african-americans cameroonians are going through >> this shelter is the same one behind me where last week there were about 1300 cubans that got out escaped from. this because mexico is detaining them like a prison because they don't want them to travel freely around the country. they are trying to keep the migrants in the southern state. more than 5,000 migrants. if you look this way. pan over this way our cameraman, people starting to wake up. these are migrants don't want to be seen. not able to get in because there is overcrowding. if you look at me one more time here, you can see vans are pulling up here. taxi vans have been coming all morning long. some are from shelters. some are migrants. many of the cubans have stayed. this looks like it's food that's coming. they are setting up some shelter people here in the streets and they sell coffee and they sell food. we spoke actually to one gentleman here that was out here just a little while ago. he is from cuba. is he a young 27-year-old guy that has his green card. he traveled by himself to the united states from cuba. now his mother and his father are in here. they have been inside this detention facility for a month now. and he is trying to get them out. they are not letting them out. he wants them out. he says because they want to continue on to the united states, guys. steve: that's right. griff, you talked to those two men and they both made it very clear they want to come to the united states for jobs. that's not one of the ways you get in. that's not a valid asylum claim. additionally, isn't that the same place where last week we were talking about how there were 600 escapees who left the detention center? griff: exactly, steve. so this is a facility right here literally you can see behind the gates. they are keeping them in. 1300 migrants, mostly cuban, escaped here last thursday evening. they got about 700 back. 600 remains on the loose and are presumed very likely to have continued on towards the u.s. border north. but you have a thousand miles to get to texas. 2,000 to get to tijuana. but the mexican government, which came in president lopez lobe door. very liberal and very left. be respectful to migrants and give them year long temporary work visas and slowly make their claims to america but it didn't work that way. way too many came. they have canceled that program. you are seeing the situation here where they are holding people in the southern state in the shelter and they don't want them to continue north because they are overburdening and overcrowding the border cities like tijuana, juarez and renosa. the problem, the problem that we have been talking about, president trump is talking about on our u.s. border is now becoming a problem for the mexican population as well and they want results. it's interesting i asked last night one of the immigration officials what is the plan going forward with this swelling tide of migrants which is now global they said well we are working on it there isn't a clear plan at the moment. steve: no kidding. griff jenkins live in at that pointapachula. good job. brian: people are trying to sort their way through series of attacks on places of worship. latest one in san diego at a synagogue it could have been so much worse. sadly one life is lost. few injured when a 19-year-old gunman walked in with no previous record and just started shooting. one of the reasons why this wasn't worse is because of two people, a border patrol agent that stood up and had a gun and oliver stewart who had years of military experience in his back drop. and when he heard the shooting incredibly he went towards it. jedediah: he actually spoke with us last hour. spoke to brian. remember, an army navy vet. he recounted how his instincts kicked in and what made him move. check it out. >> i heard the gunshots and i knew what gunshots were unfortunately. i stood up and i was going to run like everyone else and i took maybe 1, 2 steps and at the last -- and i don't know why, i turned around and i ran towards the gunfire. i kept pursuit. as soon as he jumps in his car he raises his rifle. i punched the car as hard as i could. he starts the car and in this moment i hear from the background i have a gun. clear out. get back. i fall back. and job than morales the border patrol agent openings one five rounds. i remember the christ church shootings where a guy went from one mosque to another. there was a church next door there is a grocery store down the street with people just teeming all the time. i didn't think about that but i think my instinct kept me from -- wanted to keep that from hang. steve: it did. the guy was able to drive away. but he was shortly thereafter detained. brian: they got his license plate. steve: how is he doing after having gone through all of that? brian asked him that. and here's what he said. >> yeah. i'm okay. you know, my wife is actually stressing out more than i am. i get a lot of phone calls and she says, you know, i think it's becoming -- my wife is a widow from her first husband that was lost. and she went to -- she says i'm so glad nothing happened to you. i think she is pretty stressed out. jedediah: i think that's so important too. the impact it has not only on the people involved but their families sitting at home and listening. it's really really hard on them. brian: people have to go to church, synagogue, mosque, wherever you go. maybe today certainly over the weekend if tradition has it. in california the governor is unveiling $15 million plan to boost security at all places of worship. is that what we have to do now? can this be done voluntarily and someone wrote me yesterday if you are a cop or a detective tia or somewhere in law enforcement and did you go in a church. do you your volunteering by providing security? and the discussion came back to me a few times okay are they going tone sure me? if something happens and i shoot somebody assail length and that person sues me or i make a ms. stake is the church going to cover me? they cover me when i'm in uniform. steve: most churches in this area have had discussions with what do we do if there is an active shooter they do have plans but you run up against the law. those are all great questions. meanwhile, let's talk a little bit about what is going to happen in the cabinet room today, 10:30 in the morning. chuck schumer and nancy pelosi are coming back to the white house. remember, the last time they showed up at the white house they asked them for $5.7 billion to build a wall. in the midst of the government shutdown. and that did not go well. he threw up his hands and said i'm out of here nothing is going on. today, reportedly, they want to talk about infrastructure although apparently the president is not going to put an infrastructure package on the line or a suggestion out there and neither are the democrats. brian: great. steve: who are going to show up. brian: read this letter. steve: they did send a letter. jedediah: a letter to trump america's infrastructure needs are massive and bipartisan infrastructure package must meet those needs with stacialg new and real revenue. we look forward to hearing your ideas on how to pay for this package to ensure it is big and bold enough to meet our country's needs. brian: here's the thing. what i'm wondering is there was a report over the weekend when it comes to infrastructure. the president never liked his program gary cohn pretty much authored now gone. he has been replaced you know by larry kudlow. he said he didn't like the idea of a private-public partnership. a lot of republicans tend to like that. i believe president trump as a businessman like you had private-public. i'm not sure where the truth is i n what would be coming. is the federal government supposed to write checks for all of this? we are already in deficit $20 trillion. jedediah: that always becomes the issue especially when democrats and republicans always disagree on how to pay for things that will be. steve: sure. jedediah: will there be any coming together. obviously we saw immigration no meeting in the middle on infrastructure will they be able to come together and work something out to have some discussion of bipartisan out there. steve: listen, the differences are so broad. the environment is so toxic. jim manly who worked for harry reid for years says there is not a snowball's chance in hell that anything is going to happen today. steve: not unless it's televised. jedediah: that's great. let alone great tv. brian: here is why i think something is going to happen. nancy pelosi and chuck schumer have nothing -- mostly nancy pelosi will have no accomplishments at all in the two years in which they are in the house. steve: that's right. brian: they can sit there and go i investigated. so what? what did you do with the power you had? i think they want to get something done and maybe the president says i will do something with you here. you give me a little bit of immigration help. steve: by the same token why would the president want to give them a win he? doesn't want to. jedediah: why we -- when it comes to immigration or things they want to get done they say no and sit back and cross their arms. the question is will he sit back and cross his arms? brian: it would be a win for everybody. steve: take a camera in the cabinet room at 10:30 we want to watch it. brian: are we going to televise carley shimkus newscast? carley: right here. brian: so glad i have cable? carley: me too. tensions rising between nicolas maduro and opposition leader juan guaido. firing tear gas as guaido calls for military uprising and maduro supporters are being summoned to the presidential palace to defend the leader. juan guaido tweeting this video standing in front of soldiers in caracas saying he started his final phase to oust nikolas maduro from power. we are told that president trump has been notified and will have a live report in just a few minutes. well, this morning, 2020 hopeful joe biden releasing a b >> america is an idea. an idea that goes back to our founding that all men are created equal. carley: former vice president heads to the battleground state of iowa today. first official campaign stop in pittsburgh. and those guys are your headlines. steve: unlike the first video we saw from joe biden this one is very uplifts and optimistic. jedediah: that's the difference there. thanks, carley. steve: beto o'rourke rolling out his new deal the price 5 trillion with a t dollars. brian: calls it obama plan it didn't work then and it won't work now zoom out. ♪ don't you steal my sunshine ♪ hmm. exactly. liberty mutual customizes your car insurance, so you only pay for what you need. nice. but, uh... what's up with your... partner? 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had a coach in high school. really helped me up my game. i had a coach. math. ooh. so, why don't traders have coaches? who says they don't? coach mcadoo! you know, at td ameritrade, we offer free access to coaches and a full education curriculum- just to help you improve your skills. boom! mad skills. education to take your trading to the next level. only with td ameritrade. >> we are announcing the most ambitious climate plan in the history of the united states. we will ensure that we are at net zero greenhouse gas emissions by the year 2050. jedediah: 2020 democratic presidential candidate beto o'rourke rolling out his own version of the green new deal with a price tag of a whopping $5 trillion. so what can you expect if beto gets his way? here to weigh in is morning morano editor of climate depot.com and author of politically incorrect guide to climate change. mark, welcome. >> thank you. happy to be here. jedediah: what do you make of this plan. first of all talk about whether it's realistic or not. i want to get your response start cutting pollution, whatever that means. mobilize $5 trillion over 10 years. guarantee net zero emissions by 2050. defend communities preparing for and fighting against extreme weather. so some of this sounds very vegas and very nice and very idealistic. is it practical and realistic? >> first of all, pollution carbon dioxide we inhale oxygen and exhale carbon dioxide he is calling co 2 pollution which it's not. this plan as pie in the sky as the green new deal except it's a little more tepid. what's happened here is beto o'rourke is not satisfying the democratic base. within minutes of him releasing this plan, the sunrise movement, which was instrumental nut green new deal is going after beto o'rourke for going back on his pledge from 2030 zero emissions to now 2050. they are saying that beto's plan could result in 100 million climate refugees and tens of million dead. that's the thanks beto o'rourke gets for coming up with a lighter version of the green new deal and a massive federal boondoggle, just not as big a boon dog as the green new deal's proposal. jedediah: he has all of these democrats to compete with trying to find a way to stand out. look at how he plans to fund this agenda. this is a quote. it says a bill will be funded with the revenues generated by structural changes to the tax code that ensure corporations and the wealthiest among us pay their pair share. i love that marc, structural changes is that a way of saying raising everyone's taxes? >> he goes to incredible pains and even the mainstream media will not say tax increase. it's tax changes. structural changes. there is no other way to put that. this is a massive energy and regulatory tax on the american economy and america. they are afraid to say that word at all. we are getting things like tax changes. structural changes. and what he is doing is it's an obama re-do. here's the difference. obama only spent $90 billion on his green energy stimulus. which, by the way no less than cbs news found four out of five of that money from the energy department went to obama financial backers. so you can see where the money is going to be going with beto's plan and the green new deal. jedediah: thanks, marc for being here. when people realize the impact in their pocketbooks and businesses they won't be so excited about it. >> just changes in their pocketbook. jedediah: just changes. thanks so much. >> thank you. jedediah: nationwide measles wrought break hitting 25-year high anti-vaxer movement. one mother sharing heart breaking photo of her infant son and urging parents to take action. her warning next. >> tech: at safelite autoglass, we know sooner or later... every chip will crack. this daughter was home visiting when mom saw a chip in her windshield. >> mom: honey is that a chip? >> tech: they wanted it fixed fast so they brought it to us. >> mom: hi. >> tech: with our in-shop chip repair service, we can fix it the same day... guaranteed. plus with most insurance a safelite chip repair is no cost to you. >> mom: really? drive safely. all right. ♪ acoustic music >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, ♪ safelite replace. ♪ brian: all right. welcome to news by the numbers. hope you are dressed. first $80 million. that's how many american families are included in a massive microsoft data breach. do you know what? i didn't memorize the copy so i have to use the prompter. discovering a data base with sensitive information was stored on a server. microsoft says the data is no longer accessible to the public. next, more than $255,000. that's how much a long island railroad worker made in overtime last year alone. new york transit officials say they logged more than 4,000 hours. that's about 16 hours a day every day for year finally 90 years old, that's the age of the soon to be college graduate. let's pause. >> i'm going to put it and stare at it northeastern illinois university oldest graduate. steve: congratulations. thank you, brian. turning now to the nationwide measles outbreak big wall. number of cases hitting the highest level in 25 years with 704 confirmed cases scattered across 22 states. this as the california mother shares heart breaking photos of her 5 month old son who contracted the disease in an attempt to urge people to get vaccinated. sarah blum wrote on facebook, quote: this would have been 100 percent preventable if people would just trust their doctors and science and vaccinate their children. here with more nurse practitioner danny stringer who is also a vaccination advocate and founder of kid nurse.com. danny, good morning to you. >> hey, good morning, steve. thanks for having me. steve: thank you very much. so this mother out there wanted to make sure people realized, you know, there are stories about families who are not getting their children vaccinated. this is what happened. and she posted these pictures where the babies got head-to-toe rash of measles. however, the baby is 5 months old. s that too young to be vaccinated, isn't it. >> right. this is such a sad case totally preventable. but you see infants and immune compromised children are so vulnerable to measles. especially in this case. we don't standardly vaccinate infants with mmr vaccine until 12 months of age. so he was too young to be vaccinated and he relies on the rest of our communities to vaccinate to protect him. so truly tragic. truly unnecessary. steve: that's right. they are estimating dani that 169 million kids missed that first dose of measles vaccine between 2010 and 2017. and for parents and adults who are looking in and they believe their child or they got the mmr shot, which first started i think we were talking earlier in the early 1960's. should people get a booster shot? >> it's really important that all children get the vaccine at 12 months and again 4 to 6 years of age. and it's important to vaccinate entire families, too. so if adults are unsure about their vaccination status, please check with your doctor. it's extremely important that you are protected so we can protect your children and our entire community. steve: right. damplet ani, one odani one of ty we are where we are a number of people believe the mmr vaccine can cause problems. autism has been suggested and things like that. i know the scientific community has debunked that where did that thinking come from where, you know, rather than trusting my doctor i'm going to trust this thing i read online or i heard from a neighbor? >> you know, i think it's honestly lackadaisical. if you look back to 2000 when measles were eliminated, measles were eliminated, polio was irradicated we finished off small pox. a lot of parents really questioning do we still need to continue vaccinate? clearly we are seeing the biggest outbreak we ever have since we eliminated measles in 2,000. the answer is yes, we need to continue to vaccinate. we need to protect our children and so if you look at even the washington outbreak when they had 70 cases of measles. they saw vaccination increase of 300 percent in their community. hesitancy is not the answer. vaccines are they are both safe and effective and the best way to protect your children against the measles. steve: you say that now, but weren't you kind of an anti vaxer back in the day? >> sure. i was hesitant. i had questions before i went to nursing school. and that's when i really started diving newt science myself. it's also when i went into hospitals and i saw children suffering from preventable diseases. and that's when i started changing my mind i'm annual advocate for vaccines today because i don't want children to unnecessarily suffer. when we have solutions that we have had that were safe and effective since the 1960's when this vaccine came out. steve: i'm sure you would join me in saying if anybody has questions about the safety of it, talk to your doctor because your doctor knows all the answers. >> right. yes. absolutely. we are willing to have this conversation with parents, with families that have questions. steve: all right. very good. dani springer from phoenix. thank you very much. >> thanks, steve. steve: chase bank tried offering financial advice for #monday motivation and then came the outrage including 2020 democrat elizabeth warren. stu varney said there was nothing wrong with the financial advice. as you can see, he's next ♪ i'm back ♪ back in the new york grove ♪ i'm back ♪ back in the new york grove ♪ steve: 7:33 in new york city. we are back with a fox news alert. right now tensions boiling over in the country of venezuela between president nicholas maduro and opposition leader juan guaido. jedediah: protesters firing tear gas as guaido calls for military uprising. brian: how long is this going to take? kevin corke joins us from the white house with how the white house could respond tensions ramping up. >> no question it's amping up. hearing from senior officials that things are moving on the ground from venezuela that from my colleague john roberts. i also spoke with a senior administration official and he said this is really about russia and iran doing all they can to maintain the status quo. they are backing maduro. he also added that china has a hand in this. they really want to be on the winning team. they don't care if it's guaido or maduro. right now it's maduro the incumbent still in position. i can also tell you this marco rubio said on twitter it's the chinese right now helping to shut down social media in that country. juan guaido also taking to twitter. he said the people of venezuela i need the members of our armed force initiating operation freedom. rubio tweeted this after years of suffering, freedom is waiting for people of venezuela. do not let them take this opportunity from you. now is the moment to take to the streets in support of your legitimate constitutional government. do not allow this moment to slip away it may not come again. we also saw as i mentioned rubio talk about china's influence in shutting down social media there. it's a fluid circumstance, folks. we are watching it and in contact with our sources here at the white house. i promise as i get more i will pass it along. for now back to you. brian: we vicinity the the internet we should be able to put it back on. let's go. thanks, kevin. >> you bet. steve: 25 minutes before the top of the hour. chase bank has been forced to apologize after its #monday motivation effort back fired in a now deleted post. chase tweeted you, why is bank so low. bank account says make coffee at home. eat the food that's already in the fridge. you don't need a cab, it's only three blocks. you i guess we'll never know. bank account says seriously? #monday not motivation. jedediah: elizabeth warren why aren't customers saving money? taxpayers, we lost our jobs, homes, savings, but gave you a $25 bailout. workers, employers don't pay living wages, economists, rising costs and stagnant wages equals zero savings. chase i guess we never know. everyone, seriously? #michael cohe#money motivation. brian: next guest says elizabeth warren has it all wrong stuart varney host of fox business network: stuart, you are listening and readings that dialogue. do you side with elizabeth warren or chase? >> chase, of course. what's wrong with giving solid financial advice? what's wrong with telling people hey, you are a little short on your bank account. things are tight. you don't have that much money to spenelsd. what's wrong with being thrifty? what's wrong with someone saying you know, you could safe money if you didn't have $5 coffees at starbucks. save money if you didn't take a $4 or $5 cab ride and walk instead. that's not poor shaming. that's advice. saving is a virtue. steve: what do you make of chase getting blow back from elizabeth warren and taking down that tweet? >> it's weak. absolutely weak. for chase to withdraw what was good financial advice because they get a few critics. mother jones, this left wing news outlet came on and said you shouldn't be lecturing all people. you gout to take that as it comes. don't back off. offer good advice, what's wrong with that. jedediah: you can have bad habits. i used to be a waitress and teacher. i didn't make a lot of money. i had bad habits. i used to go out and get my tea and boy give out. this isn't about shaming how much money you have. it's about making suggestions that everyone can learn from. >> yes. organize your finances to fit your income. what's wrong with that? brian: yeah. tell your butler i'm thought going to pay you for three weeks. i will have to do my own laundry. >> i had that to do that with an english accent. jedediah: even better. brian: other thing big news joe biden is in this and wants to be middle class joe. here is he talking about how the middle class in this country is hurting. >> the middle class is hurting. it's hurting now. the stock market is roaring. but you don't feel it. there is tax cut last year. did you feel it? did you get anything from it? >> no. >> of course not. of course not. all it went to folks at the top. and corporations that pay no taxes. brian: is that true, stuart? >> no. which bit of it? he got several things wrong. first of all he says the middle class is hurting, it's hurting now. i reject that. in the obama years median household income, middle america, income actually went down. first time i think in decades that that had happened. now, median middle american income is going up. middle class may be hurting in some respects. but not in terms of income. joe also went on to say you don't feel it stock market is roaring but you don't feel it yes, you do. if there 55 million americans have a 401(k). 35 million have an ira. most of those people are invested in stocks. they are benefited enormously from this stock market rally. i wish he wouldn't keep on with this stuff because it's factually inaccurate. it's painting a wrong picture of the way our economy is working today. steve: yeah, but the economy is roaring right now and he has to run against it. he is in a pickle. >> we are the only game in town. america is growing 3.2% rate. just got the numbers in from europe. they are growing it's a 0.4% rate. and some of them are in recession. get out of here. brian: maybe he should run for president of europe. >> true. brian: because they are hurting economically. >> joe biden. >> i'm sure they would love it. brian: someone has to tell joe biden he has to go to 19 other democrats before he gets to the president. you have finals before you get to the tournament. >> he seemed to stumble. it wasn't flowing declarative. i'm here for this reason. jedediah: he is nervous. steve: brand new poll shows him way ahead of everybody else. stuart varney on the fox business network. brian carley never stumbles when she reads the news. carley: tragic news to get. to say three people are dead after a tour helicopter crashes and bursts into flames inthe chopper spinning of control and nose difingt into a. it sounded like a missile hit the plane. the fuel tank landing on the roof of a car. luckily no one on the ground was hurt. neighbors used garden hoses to put out the fire from the crash. the victims have not been identified. a massachusetts sheriff lawsuit against courthouse arrests. makes it harder to criminal illegal aliens. official suit endangering the lives of law-abiding citizen. deter victims and witnesses appearing in court. he said boston outside of refused to comment. and you just can't make this one up. trucker i.d. cards meant to prevent terrorism are ending up in the hands of terrorists. congress demanding a full review of tsa transportation worker identification and credential cards saying they are too ease i didn't forged. they were created after 9/11 to grant passage at ports using fingerprints. lawmakers are also concerned they cost too much. and i love this story. i'm sure you guys will, too. illinois teen honoring 25 fallen marines with her prom dress. designed to resemble an american flag fall down a beautiful blue skirt. the names on the ribbons are of 25 fallen marines. aubrey headon said it took her two years to make. she was inspired by the mother of one of those fallen marines. special girl. looks beautiful. steve: and wonderful tribute. brian: about one hour ago janice dean was celebrating 100 years of hostess. janice: i know it was delicious and they disappeared off the plaza. >> i'm al from fort lauderdale. >> and. >> dan and suzanne. janice: special birthday to dillon. >> our son so proud. janice: wonderful. he is in the u.s. navy. >> thank you for serving dylann. happy birthday, my friend. we have drizzlely weather in the northeast. that's going to clear up. we do have the threat for not only heavy snow. what did you see in the rockies but severe weather today texas oklahoma, across the mississippi river valley. this is going to be a big deal. we could see a severe weather outbreak today and tomorrow across the plain states. that includes tornadoes, large hail, damaging winds. keep that in mind. heavy snow across the rockies. all right. we are patriotic weather forecast today. wave hi t to steve, ainsley and brian. jedediah: we are live with what the intel community is saying this morning about that next. ng] (michelle) i know what it's like to be in a financially struggling family. we had a lot of leftovers...[chuckles] i couldn't have asked for better parents, but like most people they didn't have anyone to teach them the best financial habits. so we changed that. as a financial health coach, i help people every day. i try to put myself in their shoes from my own experience. i connect to them because i've been there. helping families like mine save a little money changes everything. this is personalized guidance. this is wells fargo. what sore muscles? what with advpounding head? .. advil is... relief that's fast. strength that lasts. you'll ask... what pain? with advil. got it.r pickup order? ran out of ink and i have a big meeting today. and 2 boxes of twizzlers... yeah, uh... for the team... the team? gooo team.... order online pickup in an hour. hurry and get an extra 20% off with coupon. at office depot officemax. steve: we have another fox news alert. isis leader al baghdadi has been seen on video for the first time in five years. a lot of people thought he was dead. jedediah: the terror leader acknowledging the group's loss of territory but claiming isis is still very much alive. brian: benjamin hall live in london all over this story knows the region well. the leader's rallying cry he is trying to inspire people even though he lost his caliphate, right? >> absolutely. and there is a real transition period for isis at the moment. they are moving from that period where they control sod much territory to a time when they have to inspire, insight attacks without holding that land. and that's exactly what al baghdadi was doing in this video. it's about 18 minutes long. and in it he looks in pretty good health despite persistent reports over the years that he had either been killed or was injured. he praises the sri lanka attacks and the bombings that took place on easter sunday. he said they were revenge for the loss of his caliphate. he called on followers to launch more attacks festive solid naming france as a target and africa as a base for other potential affiliates. baghdadi hasn't been seen since isis was at its peak. he is thought to be hiding in syria or iraq. intelligence sources have been hunting him for a long time. 25-million-dollar bounty on his head. the fear this video will encourage more recruits to join isis. are ramadan five days away may be an uptick in violence. back to you. steve: that is a worry. benjamin hall, thank you. brian: 12 minutes before the top of the hour. four years ago the last player cut from the women's world cup team. they won the world cup. this year she has made the roster. steve: all star soccer player crystal dunn tells us her inspiring story. she is live with us next ♪ ♪ right now i'll be strock stro. and it really shows. with all that usaa offers why go with anybody else? we know their rates are good, we know that they're always going to take care of us. it was an instant savings and i should have changed a long time ago. it was funny because when we would call another insurance company, hey would say "oh we can't beat usaa" we're the webber family. we're the tenney's we're the hayles, and we're usaa members for life. ♪ get your usaa auto insurance quote today. brian: she is all-star soccer player inspiring americans on and off the field every way. crystal dunn known for being one of the verse tile player in the sport last one sadly to be cut from the u.s. world cup team just four years ago. but she channeled that disappointment by scoring a league high 15 goals as a professional in 20 matches wept onto the rio olympics and now heading to the 2019 people's women world cup in june. here with more on her journey women u.s. national team defender crystal dunn. you won a usc championship too. >> i did. brian: everyone knows who crystal dunn is when you try to achieve at the highest level you got the call in 2015. i didn't know they called you. i thought it was old fashioned. >> no, they call. they call. brian: what happened? >> it wasn't a good conversation. but, it was as good as it can be. not like the coach calls you and says you are terrible we are not taking you. it's more so hey, you know, you played well up until this point. we think we are going to go a different route. we are going to go this and this. once i heard you're not going i blacked out well everything else you are going to say doesn't really matter. yes, unfortunately. brian: how did you decide to bounce back? you stay in the u.s. soccer program? you go back. they win the world cup without you. did you watch? >> yes. did i watch. it was painful. but, mixed emotions but, of course, i had to watch. definitely. brian: right. so you go back and you get on the team? >> yes. brian: what's happening over the next three years? >> the next three years it's competitive. i think people don't realize this is not an ordinary team. it's not like club soccer. every time you are in with the national team it's basically like a tryout. every camp is competitive for three years basically been trying to fight to get a stop and make it to this next world cup. brian: now you are at the point where you are likely starter, certainly first off the bench. so people watching right now might be thinking i'm a forward, i'm a midfielder i'm a back. i have got to play one position. >> yes. brian: not crystal dunn. you are known as versatile. do you like that word. >> absolutely not, no, i'm kidding. i love it it's who i am. there is definitely pros and cons to being thrown all over the pitch. but i think for me it's built my identity and it's fun. i get to play every day. brian: you play every time you come off the bench. you are two to run favorites to repeat as world cup champions while the men struggle to qualify the women are supposed to win the world cup every year. you have been the best or among the best for about 30 years. >> yes. brian: are you thinking now? >> i think our chances are great. i think for us it's taking one game at a time. the torment is long. people don't realize it's a whole month long tournament. you know. you have to take it in stride and focus on the things in front of you. brian: 20 years ago the cover of "time" magazine every magazine was brandi chastain scoring the penalty kick in front of 100,000 people at the ros rose bowl. where were you? >> i was a kid. i'm sad to say i actually didn't watch the game. what i did notice after that game ended there were pictures and posters posted everywhere. that was so iconic for women's soccer. that was really when the world woke up and went whoa, women can play this sport. brian: not only that women are also attracted to sponsors and that shows. you have a lead athlete with one of the world's best teams have hooked up with cvs in what way? or walgreen's, excuse me. >> wall greens. i partner with walgreen's. just to share beauty tips. i think it's important i live this completely wildlife. always on the road, super busy and it's just important to have you know, your go toes. brian: yeah. women's world cup going to be on fox in 30-plus days and qualifying group. you have one team that sticks out. a team that's won the world cup before. sweet. >> yes. >> sweden. tough. best game every time we play them. tight down to pks. win one or we tie it's going to be crazy. brian: how important is it for this generation to put their mark on it. >> it's really important. there is a lot of people going to their first world cup. that's what really have different between this world cup and the last world cup is we have a lot of young people. myself included. this will be my first world cup and really excited. everyone do their best. brian: don't feel any pressure just know the whole country will be watching. sports world stops and gives you the floor. crystal dunn who also stars as a professional with paul reilly's north carolina team. >> yes. brian: go out to walgreen's and support women's sports. >> absolutely, yes. brian: good job. meanwhile coming up straight ahead big final four, chuck grassley, geraldo rivera, eric trump will all be here live. don't miss a minute of the final hour. there will be a quiz. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ born to be wild ♪ moves like these need pampers cruisers 360 fit with an ultra-stretchy waistband and a 360 fit that adapts to every wild move plus up to 12 hours of protection so anything your wild child does... cruisers can too our best ever fit is new cruisers 360 fit ♪ born to be wild . . this is the ocean. just listen. 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(avo) subaru outback. ninety eight percent are still on the road after 10 years. come on mom, let's go! ♪ steve: not exactly brighter than the sun outside. kind of a gloomy day here in new york city. nonetheless, great to have you. ainsley is off today. jed is in her place. jedediah: not gloomy in here. bring the sunshine. brian: april they say was the hottest april forever. i think maybe as a blowback may will be snowy. steve: really? would you like to wage a dollar on that? brian: we don't have any time in the for mat to go over betting. steve: janice dean was predict in the foxcast that a possibility of snow in the plains today. april 30th. there could be a snowy may someplace. not just here. jedediah: 75 degrees and sunshine. steve: you need to be in florida. jedediah: yes i do. brian: if you want to catch up with griff jenkins you have to leave the country. we have a fox news alert. a migrant caravan, going globe heading to the united states border. steve: griff jenkins is live in mexico with more. griff, you're right at the detention center where last week, close to 1000 escaped? reporter: yeah that's right, steve. good morning brian and jed. this is the shelter here 25 miles north of the guatemala border where the caravans have been coming since they first started last object. in january they come through the city. this is the biggest detention facility where 1300 of them escaped because they didn't want to be there. about 700 were brought back. 600 stayed. what you see out here, because it is oh crowded, mostly haitian folks we found wanting to get in there, they want to get some visas. we give you a look not only outside, these are exclusive photos taken by a source that gave them to us inside that showed the overcrowding situation, the poor sanitary situations that they're dealing with. these people out here are aware that it is crowded in there. there is poor situation but they don't want to be on the street here at all. but the big takeaway. big change from caravans we covered since last year, the word has gone global that the catch-and-release system in the u.s. will get you released. you will not be held for long. that is a magnet reaches all the way to nigeria, bangladesh, cameroon. a gentleman from jack from india told us why he is coming. listen. >> i traveled in airplane. after that i just walk right to colombia. reporter: colombia, you've been walking from colombia all the way to here? >> yes, sir. reporter: you want to go to the united states? >> yes i want to go to the u.s. because it's a safe country for me. reporter: so it is not stopping anytime soon. this is not one giant caravan as we've seen in the past. this is rather, just constant flow of caravan folks going just day after day. mexico has said they're trying to do something about it. we're here to get a hard look at that one of the things we know they are trying to do, keep the migrant flow in the southern states. here in the southern state of there is at least 5000 or more according to immigration officials, guys. steve: and griff, you played a sound bite earlier, a man from cameroon, which is in africa, made it clear he had traveled pretty much, walked across most of the world to get there? reporter: he sure did. he went through a lot of countries by boat, by bus. he walked all the way. as you can see the folks here walking around us, light is coming out, it is visiting day. some are family members going in by the way. the man from cameroon he traveled what is called the gravy gap. it is a very, very treacherous part in panama. he battled crocodiles to get here. it is just unbelievable. one thing he has told he thought he could get in if he could get a visa few days of mexico in the u.s. i told them they're not likely to let you in. he is still going to try. brian: seems to be worth it, until we change some of our rules maybe he has a shot. griff jenkins, thanks so much. meanwhile if you want to know what is going on in 2020, the big news, the one who is leading in most of the polls, officially in the race as of last week. yesterday was his real kickoff to his campaign he took aim mainly at president trump. again and also looking for the backing of the unions which was pretty much a given that he had. jedediah: here is joe biden talking about the middle class, the economy and president trump from pittsburgh, pennsylvania. >> i believe pittsburgh and my native town of scranton, my hometown of wilmington and claymont, they represent cities and towns that make up hard-working middle-class americans who are the backbone of this nation. that is not hyperbole. i think we have to rethink how we defined what constitutes a successful economy. i plan to referred to middle class joe. everybody knows it. middle class is hurting. if i'm going to be able to beat donald trump in 2020 it is going to happen here. [cheers and applause] steve: it will have to happen there because president trump actually won pennsylvania. so that is why joe biden was there at the teamsters union hall in lawrenceville, pennsylvania, making an appeal to the rank-and-file who he would need to win over to get the nomination. then go on to be president. stuart varney was listening to middle class joe yesterday. he said here is what he is getting wrong. >> first of all he says the middle class it's hurting, it is hurting now. i reject that, in the obama years median household income, middle america income actually went down, first time in decade that had happened. now median middle american income is going up. joe also went on to say, you don't feel it. stock market is roaring but you don't feel it. yes you do. they benefited enormously from this stock market rally. i wish he wouldn't keep on with this stuff it is factually inaccurate. it is painting a wrong picture of the way our economy is working today. brian: it is also completely ineffective. you can talk about things. somebody can get out on the campaign trail, oh the middle class is hurting, this is happening, that is happening, if people feel differently in their household, their pocketbooks, have more money to spend, if businesses are thriving, 401(k) looks good, that is their reality. brian: one thing joe biden is missing he is not in the finals yet. this is speech would be perfect right after the convention when he got the nomination. he has to go through 19 people before he can see the opening to the white house door for donald trump. you can choose to only fight against donald trump but you will have 19 people combing through your background which is almost four decades in washington, exploring what you're doing. if you ignore them, i think you will watch him timber, especially when he heads over to iowa he got 1% last time. in 2018, quit after finishing fifth. steve: it's a tactic that the front-runner or perceived front-runner often does, i will not beat up people in my own party, i will leapfrog to the next person. joe biden was on another morning show today, apparently asked about make america great again. his unofficial slogan would be make america moral again. that is not maga, that is mama. jedediah: that is running against president trump. he is not moral. he is anti-immigrant. what are you for? how will biden distinguish himself on the stage with some other options. bernie sanders remember right on his tail. buttigieg will be moving up right on his tail. steve: new poll shows biden at 35%. bernie at 15. significantly ahead. brian: hillary at this time had a 20 point lead over bernie sanders. the president of the united states will hopefully put out a nice spread, he has nancy pelosi and chuck schumer, some democratic leaders coming to the oval office, talk at least one topic, infrastructure. steve: apparently the president will not put out a infrastructure package suggestion and neither will the democrats but it is interesting because, just the fact that he has call them back in because last time -- brian: actually they requested this meeting. steve: right. but the last time they got together he walked out. then there was a time, two times ago, december 11th, where he called the cameras in and it was a disaster. watch. >> if we don't have border security, chuck, we're not -- >> i'm with you. >> we want to do the same thing we did last year this year. >> chuck we can build a much bigger section with more money. >> let's debate in private okay? let's debate in private. >> we came in here in good faith. we're entering into this kind of a discussion in the public view. >> that is not bad, nancy. it is called transparency. steve: democrats sent a letter yesterday, chuck and nancy, calling for substantial new and real revenue, which means taxes, and investments to make infrastructure more resilient to climate change, neither of which sounds like something the president would be on board with. brian: that doesn't seem like the infrastructure program. a lot of those seem like infrastructure programs barack obama had he was going to get money for shovel-ready projects, there were no shovel-ready projects. one thing about the president he will demand to see what projects, deadline and a timeline for getting it done. he is removing a lot of regulation but the private public partnership that was originally proposed by gary cohn a year-and-a-half ago, he evidently wasn't a big supporter of. he was not a big supporter of his own plan. we'll see if he has to work something out. jedediah: democrats need to run on something. we did this, accomplished this. unfortunately on every issue seems like they're falling flat. they're hungry for that. oh listen, you guys didn't help me at all on immigration, i will help you on infrastructure. this is how it works now. you guys set a precedent. now i'm not going to budge. >> with all the investigations democrats launched there is no goodwill. giving them a win would be hard to believe where the president thinks he has a winning hand with 2020 with the economy. brian: my thinking it could be a could -- cowin. they used have press conferences where everybody won. carley shimkus is here with the updates. carley: tensions rising in venezuela. guide dough calls for a military uprising. maduro supporters are being summon nod the presidential palace. juan guaido tweeting this video, saying he started his final phase to out of maduro from power. we're told president trump has been notified. president trump is pushing to name muslim brotherhood as a terrorist group. the group has millions of members across the middle east. this coming after president trump met with the egyptian president earlier this month. critics say the brotherhood does not fit the bill to be called a terrorist organization. stacey abrams ending months of speculation about her future. >> i'm announcing today that i will not be a candidate for united states senate. i do not see the u.s. senate as the best role for me in this battle for our nation's future. carley: the failed georgia gub tore ral candidate pledging to do everything in her power to get a democrat elected. she run as non-profit focused on voting rights. this whale be a russian spy. fishermen finding this bellying ga wearing a harness wearing a mount for a camera or weapon. the whale had a label saying equipment of st. petersburg. it was interacting with humans. use a dolphin. i think they're smarter. brian: didn't need aquaman back then. steve: aren't you thinking of quincy? brian: two separate shows. steve: flipper solved crime? brian: joel, didn't flipper solve crimes? right? made it happen. he would alert people to go hunt down criminals. steve: that was lassie. brian: guys, write us if you had seen crimes. jedediah: i have to rein in these two. the plea from senator chuck grassley coming up next. >> mom: honey is that a chip? >> tech: they wanted it fixed fast so they brought it to us. >> mom: hi. >> tech: with our in-shop chip repair service, we can fix it the same day... guaranteed. plus with most insurance a safelite chip repair is no cost to you. >> mom: really? drive safely. all right. ♪ acoustic music >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, ♪ safelite replace. repair the enamel on a daily basis. with the new pronamel repair toothpaste more minerals enter deep into the enamel surface. you have an opportunity to repair what's already been damaged. it 's amazing. ♪ brian: president has convert ad skeptic originally on his trade deals and his willingness to renegotiate nafta as well as negotiate head-to-head with china and that person who was skeptic and now a believer is chairman, now senator chuck grassley of iowa. senator, you wrote a column in the "wall street journal" i think people are mischaracterizing. you want the president to release some tariffs but you are very, you are very, actually awe inspired what he already achieved in trade. in what way? >> from this standpoint. first of all this president is the first president in the last campaign to make an issue out of trade. now this president is trying to stand on the platform he ran on. he has been very successful in the negotiations with the mexico and china. he is on the brink of a victory. i want to help him get that victory. i want to put pressure on pelosi and the house of representatives. if the president takes the first step, then it puts the burden back on that. and we have to approve china, or have to approve mexico and canada or we're not going to have any credibility with negotiating with japan. now we're in the process there. the president's on a brink of a victory with china negotiating. and that's going to be better than anything else that's been done, even with mexico and canada. so i want to help the president get to a victory and taking these tariffs off is very necessary first step, not only for us but for mexico and canada as well. brian: senator, you're saying hey, we negotiated the usmca. it is up to three governments to get it approved but release the tariffs. retaliatory tariffs, a lot of people who deal in pork and deal in corn specifically, right? >> well, that affects the agriculture of my state but i'm not doing this just because it will help the economy of iowa if you get the tariffs off. i'm doing it because we, trade, for the last 70 or 80 years made a big difference. 50 years ago half the world was in poverty. now less than 10% of the world is in poverty. i have read statistics where in couple years 50% of the world's going to be considered middle class in their respective countries. so trade is good, not only for the united states, but it is good for the world an countries that trade don't war. brian: so do you think, senator, i know the president really respects you, if you picked up the phone to the white house, said, guys, congratulations what you've done so far, but release the tariffs, will they listen? >> i don't know but i'm going to have an opportunity to talk to the president about it. i want to help the president get a win. he already has a win. he is on the cusp of getting this through three countries, having a major victory. then he is on the brink of victory in china. so he has done a wonderful accomplishment so far on trade. brian: you got it. senator grassley, thanks so much for starting your day with us. >> god bless you. brian: straight ahead geraldo rivera meets with inmates behind bars all about addiction, opioids. don't move. it nourishes and strengthens my joints for the long term. osteo bi-flex. find our coupon in sunday's paper. osteo bi-flex. i was told to begin my aspirin regimen, blem. and i just didn't listen. until i almost lost my life. my doctors again ordered me to take aspirin, and i do. be sure to talk to your doctor before you begin an aspirin regimen. listen to the doctor. take it seriously. steve: we got a inside look the at the potential roles drugmakers are playing in crisis. geraldo rivera spoke to florida inmates about their own personal struggles. jedediah: we're learning about what the county is doing to help the inmates overcome their addictions and get their lives back. brian: fox news correspondent at large geraldo rivera is with us with more on his series. geraldo. >> good morning, everybody. yesterday we talked about the role the big pill manufacturers played in getting this town and the rest of the country hooked on these opioid. we'll talk about this really innovative program within the sarasota jail system. and also how the county now is calling these pill pushers, what they are, murders. watch. lying face down in the grass, not half a mile from the sarasota, florida, home, a 41-year-old man, an overdose victim became the first whose death led to a murder conviction. how did you get a manslaughter conviction on this guy? >> we had to prove the defendant in this case provided our victim, carfentanil. not only did he give him the drugs, that the victim overdosed in the defendant's car. that the defendant dumped body on the side of the road. >> can we expect more prosecutions like this? >> a message to all the drug dealers here, if you push these drugs on our society that we're going to take you to the full extent of the law. >> we're charging people homicides for killing people by dealing them. some people have to be held accountable. we're here to help them make a better people. >> i'm been in the business 49 years. do you they say once a junkie, always a junkie. as clean as they seem now do you think they will be back out here again? >> no. we have stories. >> david is one of the successful stories. how many have you been arrested. >> i would be lying to you if i had exact number. it's a lot. >> how long have you been clean and sober? >> how did you turn it around? >> actually in these pods. >> what are you doing in these pods? i have a great career, a family loves me. trying to put one foot in front of the other, progress every day. >> how does it feel having david around for you guys? >> we all want to do better. we have intentions. he want our old life back. >> this program is making me not a better human being, a better father, a better son. better everything. >> being in the recovery pod has taught me that there is a solution. there are people out there willing to help you. >> this is the first place that i really believed that it was possible, that it was worth it. that it was attainable. i didn't think that before. >> i'm in recovery. and i'm, hoping that everything works out. and that i get my children back. i want my life back. it breaks my heart. every day that i don't get to see them, don't get to hug them, because of the choices i've made. jedediah: wow. geraldo, so important to showcase the people who have turned their lives around because it can be so depressing. but everyone watching that, you know what? it is possible to come out on the other side of this and have my life back? >> it's possible, jedediah. it's not easy but sarasota really has an innovative approach with the pod program. those pods, units separated from the rest of the general population in the jail. what they do, they treat, they teach parenting skills and job skills and career placement. they have taken a recidivism rate that was 46%. this he reduced it to 13% among men and 6% recidivism among women. this is success. they have lawsuits going against these soulless manufacturers who made tens of billions of dollars. at the retail level, grassroots level, they're helping people patch their lives together. >> steve: geraldo, this is such an innovative program tell me they're doing this across the country? >> i wish i could, steve. it is too common in our prison systems around the country to treat these drug offenders as criminals. to, to give them no slack, that there is any disease involved here. they are treated like burglars, like murders, like rapists. sometimes indeed they should be because they committees other crimes. generally speaking most of the people in the pod are people whose crimes are drug-related, in the sense that they sell a nickel bag to get some for themselves or a dime bag. they're small-timers. so this sarasota, has now taken another look at their humanity, and seen what is salvageable. that is all they do. brian: they have a back operation, get painkillers an can't stop. they don't get proper medical care. geraldo, great series, thanks so much. >> thanks. so important. >> thanks, brian. brian: 29 minutes after the hour. big news, our next guest suing two big banks to keep his financial information private. i think you know his name. i think you know him. eric trump is here live. ♪ we humans are strange creatures. other species avoid pain and struggle. we actually... seek it out. other species do difficult things because they have to. we do difficult things. because we like to. we think it's... fun. introducing the all-new 2019 ford ranger built for the strangest of all creatures. brian: we're back with a fox news alert. right now tensions are boiling over in venezuela between president nicolas maduro and opposition leader juan guaido. steve: protesters say they're firing tear gas as guaido calls for a military uprising. jedediah: kevin corke live from the white house as we anticipate reaction from the trump administration. reporter: we're literally reaching out to the administration, hearing back from them. they're monitoring obviously very closely. we expect perhaps to be hearing from the secretary of state mike pompeo, perhaps on twitter any moment now. at last check i had not seen a tweet from him. if that changes i will let you know but marco rubio, the senator from the great state of florida who obviously has a great number of expatriates from venezuela in florida, a great many venezuelan americans there, he said this. the maduro regime called for armed groups to take to the streets is a clear sign that they have lost faith in their control of the military in venezuela. that is so important. i spoke with senior administration officials who have been telling me all morning long this is a fluid circumstance. we don't know how it will end up. juan guaido does enjoy strong support from the military. as we get more information i will pass it along. but for now, back to you. steve: kevin corke live from the north lawn of the white house. thank you very much. inside the white house is where president trump lives. on the couch right now, eric trump, executive vice president of the trump organization. he joins us live. >> good to be here. brian: in a way today's appearance is more about you and the trump organization because the attorney general of new york, made it clear she is going after you guys with no apparent reason, except for maybe she wants to make a name for herself or feels as though that is what the american people want. so she, they are trying to get your bank records on every major banking transaction you've done, especially deutsche bank. >> and everybody else. this is so sad. this is presidential harrassment 101. my father always talked about the deep state on campaign trail. this is the deep state. they subpoenaed 81 and a bunch kids in the white house. they subpoenaed attorneys. then they subpoena accountants. they subpoena banks. they don't want to do their job. they don't want to fix health care, don't want to fix immigration, they want to subpoena everybody that has ever met trump. steve: they want, congress wants your financial records, your family's financial records. so now you are suing capital one and deutsche bank to keep them from come buying with the subpoenas, right? >> honestly we're not adversarial to any of the banks. we're saying this is presidential harrassment. all these people do. they're not winning. economy is incredible. this country is doing great. i don't think they have any front-runner candidate right now, if it is joe biden i would love to run against him, they have awful track record from the last administration. what they want to do, they want to harass trump. they don't want to do their jobs. they want to harass trump. i want to see how much money laurie spent for baby formula. i want to see how many beers tiffany had on friday afternoon in georgetown. this is literally things they're asking for. not just ask about something. any trump family member from any period of time going back in history. they are subpoenaing banks we have not done business with. brian: she outlined some things. any potential legalities involving trump real estate holdings in new york. lie lighting "new york times" expansion that expansive investigation they did. go back to the 2016 trump tower meeting again. examine government subsidies trump received which were also subject of "the times" investigation. >> when congress subpoenas somebody they have to have legislative purpose right. one of the things they're subpoenaing, my father was looking at buffalo bills for a little while to buy the buffalo bills. we would like to see everything associated with your father's potential purchase of the buffalo bills. what the hell is the legislative purpose of subpoenaing for records associated with possibly buying the buffalo bills. steve: it didn't happen? >> in 2009, a deal that didn't happen. this is how deranged these people are. they're not winning on issues. they know he is going to win again. they don't have any front-runners. so many of their all-stars, aocs of the world who wants to spend $93 trillion on green new deal and eliminate planes. they're faltering. what do they do? they harass. they harass tiffany. they harass don and harass ivanka. harass everybody associated. harass white house aides who are young, quite frankly trying to bankrupt the kids in amount of legal bills. this is the deep state at work. this is what my father talked about during the campaign. jedediah: it is exhausting to voters. at this point it is transparent to voters that democrats are struggling to talk about the issues. one person talking about the issues a little bit is joe biden. he is the front-runner right now. he is in pittsburgh talking about the middle class, saying the middle class is hurting. get your reaction. >> everybody knows it. the middle class is hurting. the stock market is roaring. but you don't feel it. there are 2 trillion-dollar tax cut last year. did you feel it? did you get anything from it? of course not! of course not. brian: corporate tax rate is only for rich people. >> you know the irony of this whole thing, under the entire eight years of obama you didn't have a single wage increase. wages were totally stagnant during the entire eight years. they were even stagnant before that. we have massive wage increases in this country, right? disroy portionately the lower and middle class. that is disinagainstous statement. three minutes after that he starts talking about health care. i'm going to fix health care. buddy, you're the guy that broke health care. obamacare single-handedly the worst thing to happen in the health care in the nation. all of sudden you will fix it. by implying you will fix it, does that mean you didn't get it right to begin with? the system you created is fundamentally broken. steve: eric the rest of the party is behind medicare for all. he stands in stark contrast to them. he is for obamacare, which i was part of versus -- >> you know what? the democrats won't let you fix, they won't let my father fix health care because they understand that they own health care. they own obamacare. and if he fixes it and he makes it something great which is all the guy wants to they will realize they really messed it up to begin with. that is the tragedy of our political system and kind of the swamp creatures. jedediah: is your dad worried about rhetoric of joe biden being successful? if people feel they're doing better in their wallets, their homes, their pocketbooks, that is what really matters. does this worry him? >> biden doesn't worry him at all. biden talking about jobs going to mexico. my father started that conversation. what i saw was my father's voice. reading off a teleprompter. i don't think he is expecting. brian: go full circles. the subpoenas were issued to two banks, deutsche bank, capital one, to stop them from giving bank record to congress. >> by the way they're amazing institutions. we have great relationships with them. as a family we have to fight back. guys we have to fight back. we're under total siege from all of these people, from every angle. all it its presidential harrassment. we have to fight back. we're very fortunate we have the backbone to be able to do it. we will. but they're great institutions. steve: i know you talked to your dad last night. today in about two hours he will meet with chuck and nancy. they may talk about infrastructure. is hopeful or is it going to end the way it did last time, he walks i'm out of hire? >> he is real real estate devel. no person who would be better in the world to fix the infrastructure than him. this is where our attention should be focused on infrastructure. it should be focused on education. it should be focused on health care, not the nonsense distractions, subpoenaed for records possibly buying buffalo bills 11 years ago. because you have nothing else. we'll fight it. we'll fight it more. he is going to win this thing again. i've said that to you before. he will win the thing again because the guy is doing an awesome job. people are seeing democrats for who they are. brian: eric trump, thanks so much. jedediah: thanks for being here. brian: meanwhile 19 minutes before the top of the hour. someone has to wake bill hemmer. this is the story. just a few hours the man charged in the deadly california synagogue shooting will face a judge. jedediah: we are live with a preview. we'll hear from one of the heroes to confronted him next. in key nutrients. get more by adding one a day. it's the #1 multivitamin uniquely designed for men and women. one serving, once a day. one a day. and done. who wanted to get away who used expedia to book the vacation rental that led to the ride which took them to the place where they discovered that sometimes a little down time can lift you right up. flights, hotels, cars, activities, vacation rentals. expedia. everything you need to go. ♪ brian: the man charged in the deadly california synagogue shooting will face a judge today. jedediah: it comes as hundreds of people gather at a funeral for the heroic mother who died in the attack. steve: eric richards from our fox affiliate in san diego joins with us a live preview of today's hearing. eric. reporter: good morning to you. you know what? john ernest, 19 years old, not too far from san diego, as you mentioned in court this afternoon. we're talking 1:30 pacific time. he was charged officially yesterday. the d.a., district attorney's office of san diego announcing additional charges now qualifies him. he is eligible for the death penalty. a lot going on. we'll get you to some video as mentioned too, this deadly shooting on saturday, so unfortunate, killing one woman and hurting three others. this suspect, 19 years old he was studying nursing at cal state san marcos. we also got confirmation he was lifeguard at the y in rancho employed there from may through september of last year. now he is charged with the murder of three counts of attempted murder, all with hate crime allegations as well as arson for allegedly trying to burn down an escondido mosque last month. over last couple days, we learned a lot about this suspect. how he called 911 about this shooting on saturday. how he allegedly posted a nine nine-page manifesto online. 60-year-old woman unfortunately killed. three others hurt. he will be arraigned this afternoon. we'll have a lot more with the story. we're live from san diego. back to you in new york. steve: arec. thank you too much. two hours ago brian hat an interview with oscar stewart, he is the army vet when the shooting started he was in attendance at synagogue. lying everybody else he turned towards the exits to run. in a split second you know what i will run at the guy who is shooting he did just that. >> spoke with brian recounting his instincts, the chase down, extremely compelling interview. >> i heard the gunshots. i knew what gun shorts were unfortunately. i stood up, i was going to run like everyone else, i took one, maybe two steps. at the last, i don't know why i turned around and i ran towards the gunfire. i kept the pursuit. as soon as he jumps in the car raises rifle. i punched car. he starts the car, at this moment i hear from the background, i have a gun. clear out. get pack -- back. i fall back, jonathan more ral less the border patrol agent, opens up with five round. i remember the christchurch shootings, the guy went from one mosque to another. there was a church next door. there is a grocery store down the street with people just teaming all the time. and maybe i didn't think about that but i think my instinct kept me from, kept, wanted to keep that from happening. brian: just amazing. he went to him. got within five feet, with the rifle actually going off in his face. he could tell the guy was inexperienced the way he was holding the gun. got him to turn and go. everybody else was sitting ducks. if it wasn't for him and the border patrol guy it would have been over. steve: luckily the gun jammed. confluence of good luck after something horrible happened. jedediah: absolutely courageous. you know him and love him in rascal flatts. do you know how this led to jaidee marcus to nashville stardom? he is here next. brian: i want to find out what bill is coming up. >> kellyanne conway, things arep popping. call to arms, will that call for military uprising succeed? we'll check on that. border, new idea to fix it. big meeting at white house, chuck schumer, nancy pelosi and the president. remember the last time they were together? how did that go? come join sandra and me, guys, top. hour, nine to noon. with all that usaa offers why go with anybody else? we know their rates are good, we know that they're always going to take care of us. it was an instant savings and i should have changed a long time ago. it was funny because when we would call another insurance company, hey would say "oh we can't beat usaa" we're the webber family. we're the tenney's we're the hayles, and we're usaa members for life. ♪ get your usaa auto insurance quote today. you won't find relief here. congestion and pressure? ♪ go to the pharmacy counter for powerful claritin-d. while the leading allergy spray only relieves 6 symptoms, claritin-d relieves 8, including sinus congestion and pressure. claritin-d relieves more. - there but what are wes to get our messactually saying?ys. any message is a story. and all stories tell the tale of the times we live in right now. how do you want to be remembered? how do you want your story to play out? our own experiences make the best stories, and your words carry a lot of weight. think about what you want to say before you say it. or send it. ♪ ♪ life is a highway brian: got to do a music video. we know him from the grammy award winning country music band, rascal flatts. jay demarcus from the all the surprises in between. steve: his new memoir, shotgun angels, broken records and unshakable help hits the roads. jedediah: here is join us jay is here. >> thanks for having me. jedediah: i'm so inspired by this whole book. talks about how you were guided by faith and hope. what was your inspiration and motivation to put the book out there? >> that is good question. i didn't have anything to write about that anybody would be interested, when i started going over monumental moments in my life growing up in columbus, ohio. there were so many things that happened to that were kind of miraculous. i thought maybe somebody could be inspired by my story. tough to figure out where to get started in a music career sitting in the middle of columbus, ohio. things started lining up for me. my mom was taking us to church three or four times a week. seemed a little excessive at time. i'm grateful that she did. it planted seeds in me that took strong root in life that lean on the faith and times you want to give up. i'm so thankful i had her to look too. maybe somebody else feels the same way would get encouragement. steve: one thing would derail most people, you left out the college to go to nashville to make a fortune. you become part of a christian band. things are going great. they are very popular. what happened. >> imagine being on top of the world, having hits and dove awards you think everything is going great. you hit rock bottom. i got a young lady pregnant. we didn't know what to do. steve: i was in christian band. >> that doesn't mix very well in the industry. that is a no-no to have a child out of wedlock. i lost everything in the blink of an eye. record deal was gone. booking agent dropped me. management was gone. i didn't know what i was going to do. i felt i let everybody down, particularly my partner, singing partner. i was devastated. went through a few dark years. considered giving up a pursuing a career in music and move back home. i had to dig the deepest, called my mom a lot back home. you know what you were born to do. what i told you. you have a relationship with christ that will carry you through anything. it did. brian: put your child up for adoption. >> we placed her in adoption services. i think about it every day. one of the most things difficult things i ever had to do. i wanted to adopt her. my mom tried to adopt her at one point. ultimately the mother and i decided together it was best option for us at the time. brian: how is your daughter today? >> i don't know. we don't have relationship right now. hopefully one day i will meet her. i want to decision to be hers. steve: name of the book is shotgun angels. what does that mean? >> there are a couple of stories in there, it has a dual meaning. shotgun angels that ride beside you that are looking out for you. it. there is another story in there about my mom. she drove to camp to get me when i got home sick one time, she had two dollars to her name. it was 96 miles each way. she didn't have a gas gauge that worked. she droves, she swears there were angels in her gas tank. brian: a little blind faith. >> i can say this book is so inspiring for some of us how to deal with those setbacks come out strong as you have. >> i appreciate that. thank you. brian: can you stick around? >> absolutely. would i love to. steve: let's sing along. brian: he knows the key. ♪ we're finally back out in our yard, but so are they. scotts turf builder triple action. it kills weeds, prevents crabgrass and feeds so grass can thrive, guaranteed. our backyard is back. this is a scotts yard. ♪ ♪ book now and enjoy free unlimited open bar and more. norwegian cruise line. feel free. >> we're going to talk to jay demarcus from rascal flatts in his new book in the "after the show show". >> before that listen to the radio show from 9:00 to noon on fox nation. now watch us. >> bill: thank you, guys, breaking news now on a tinderbox lit in venezuela. the country's opposition leader juan gado is calling on the people of venezuela and the military in that country to overthrow maduro's socialist regime. fox news learning that security forces have fired tear gas at guaido when he was surrounded by military members in caracas. president trump watching it from the white house and the trump white house supports the venezuelan people. another one afghanistan war vet custody charged with playing a terror attack in southern california and where we start today. i'm bill hemmer.

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Boys and Girls Club of Boone County hosts inaugural fundraiser

The Boys and Girls Club of Boone County is hosting its inaugural DUNK! event, an adult only, basketball-themed party with more than 20 restaurant and beverage partners, activities and games,

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Surfside Beach police chief reflects on his career: ''I've always loved just being in uniform'

Surfside Beach police chief reflects on his career: ''I've always loved just being in uniform'
wmbfnews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from wmbfnews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

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Jazz Ensemble sends off seniors

With the end of the year only a few weeks away, people are saying goodbye to friends, pupils, and coworkers who are moving onto the next chapter in their lives. But rather than bemoaning this parting of colleagues, people like Dr. Michael Hackett, director of Jazz Studies, and Jazz Ensemble I are celebrating their relationship...

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Southern Miss jumper Zayne Palomino has high hopes for outdoor season

Southern Miss jumper Zayne Palomino has high hopes for outdoor season
wdam.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from wdam.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

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Eric Richards | Death Notices | New Castle News

This is a Death Notice for Eric Richards published on 2024-04-09 in New Castle News

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The Whitney Center Jazz Orchestra presents  "¡CELEBRACIÓN LATINA!" – Sheridan Media

Sheridan College Director of Bands and Jazz Studies Dr. Eric Richards has a lifelong love affair with the music of Latin America. Sharing his passion with the Sheridan community and beyond, Richards has assembled his professional big band, The Whitney Center Jazz Orchestra, in concert to pay tri

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American Composers On Another Timbre article @ All About Jazz

American Composers On Another Timbre article by John Eyles, published on April 6, 2024 at All About Jazz. Find more Multiple Reviews articles

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