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no fight and no violence during that. here is what happened. they were doing a grid to grid search. what they've. doing for the last 48 days. very calculated. very organized search when we're told the law enforcement happened to surprise him outside of this flight hangar. they say he had some weapons inside but they said he was outside at the time. he didn't attempt to return inside. he followed their command, dropping his knees. a few minutes ago he was arraigned in court on charges including first-degree murder. right now prosecutors say they plan to seek the death penalty. they say that today is really the beginning of justice for the family of that slain trooper, for the family of the wounded trooper, and the wounded trooper, of course, as well as the community as whole who have been living in a state of fear and unease for the last 48 days while the hunt has been ongoing. >> i can imagine the community feels such a sigh of relief. in other words, you know, even schools that have been closed now halloween is going to be a lot more pleasant for that community. >> it has. and the keyword you've got it there. it is relief. for 48 days people have been trying to go about their normals but it hasn't been possible. it's always hanging orr their heads. i remember the first week of the search we talked to one guy who said he knew to be going about the routine i. he couldn't shake the feeling that he needs to look over his shoulder. we had schools closed. parents having to explain to their kids. we had the hunting area shut down. people not able to go into the woods, part of the reason they live here. you had the fear that search urs could be harmed at any time. in the press conference you heard investigators say that they felt frein was targeting law enforcement. they the target on their backs the entire time. we're seeing a huge outpouring of gratitude. somebody hung out a giant bed sheet and it says "way to go ptp." >> thank you so much for being with me, sara. i appreciate your time. and now to a major development in that ebola quarantine standoff in maine with doctors without borders nurse caskaci hickox. let's go back to maine near the border with canada. that's where stefanie is with the details. >> good morning. the district court here in maine granted the state's request for a court order. this is not a court order that compels kaci hickox to remain inside of her house all the time without leaving or she'll be arrested. it is rather something that is in line with the cdc guidelines for someone who is at, quote, some risk. and among those guidelines are included daily active monitoring. meaning someone comes here, health official from the cdc to check up on her. we've seen that. someone coming in around 3:00 or so and checking in on her. it also says she cannot go into large crowded public places. she's not allowed to travel freely. she can't travel on public transportation and she can't leave the fort kent area without consulting with state officials. but it also says that she can leave her house as long as she's in not crowded public places. and not within 3 feet of people in the public. that means the bike ride she took yesterday or run or even getting in her car and going for a drive are within the guidelines. so far there's no response from casey or her legal team. they said they would challenge any court order in court. so far we don't know if that's what their intention is. jose? >> thank you so much for being with me. one note to pass along on another nurse. nurse nina pham. tomorrow the nurse who recently beat ebola will be reunited with her dog bentley. tomorrow will officially end his 21-day quarantine. how great is that? we'll hear from president obama next hour in rhode island where he's making his final 2014 pitch and he's zeroing in on women and the economy. give us a little preview at a campaign stop in maine last night. >> we're going strengthen the middle class for the 21st century then we need leaders from the 21st century who believe that women care just as much as what they get paid as men care. we want women paid fairley! >> nbc kelly o'donnell is live at the white house. good morning. well, you know, maybe the improving economy is the october surprise democrats have been looking for? we have some better than expected news on that front yesterday. and today the president will be tapping into that as he makes his final push for women voters >>well, this is the last day of october. it there's a surprise to be had, perhaps that is it. >> it's today. >> and, you know, there's mixed news. progress on the economy, also consumer spending is off a bit. so i think people are still trying to get a sense of how confident do they feel about the economy. but certainly the president and many democrats are talking about those pocketbook issues hoping to have democratic voters energized enough to turn out on tuesday. that's so critical. we've watched during the campaign season how the president has really not been a part of the conversation except as a target in many races when it comes to senate and congressional house races. but he has been making the rounds especially for candidates for governors to try to help democrats there. there's often some bleed over when he's in a state the message that he just gave about women and the economy and their issues certainly would carry with voters who are open to that when it comes to a broader list of races response the president has been effective as a campaign fund fund-raiser. he's had an aggressive schedule in that way. we've seen how his image, his presence, his agenda is in some places not effective for democrats. typically in the south. he's in the northeast today. that certainly is a place where that message can ring a little louder. he's going do what many american dads will do today. he and the first lady will be giving out trick or treat candy at the white house for some special kids invited to the south lawn. so he's going to have a bit of that holiday message. will there be a boo in the forecast for democrats? many pollsters say it's going to be a rough tuesday. the president is trying to do what he can to shore up the base and get out the vote for tuesday. jose? >> nbc kelly o'donnell. thank you so much. our halloween lingo is starting this hour. and you know, we're going to stick with it throughout the hour. the president will make the remarks in rhode island at the top of the hour. you can watch them on msnbc.com. coming up we're going to have more on the midterms as we mark this halloween. we'll ask the question could there be an october surprise that swings the midterms one way or another? the head of the dcc representative steve israel joins me. also, joining me rachel maddow. i want to ask her about the governor's race in florida, her reporting in colorado, and why immigration activists keep disrupting hillary clinton. >> you know, immigration is an important issue and in this state the dream act was passed! 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[ female announcer ] aveeno® daily moisturizing lotion has active naturals® oat with five vital nutrients naturally found in healthy skin. where do i wear aveeno®? everywhere. aveeno® daily moisturizing lotion.. and try the body wash too. aveeno®. naturally beautiful results™. aveeno®. your goals, our experience. your shoppers, our technology. your data, our insights. introducing synchrony financial, bringing new meaning to the word partnership. banking. loyalty. analytics. synchrony financial. engage with us. it's a fresh approach on education-- superintendent of public instruction tom torlakson's blueprint for great schools. torlakson's blueprint outlines how investing in our schools will reduce class sizes, bring back music and art, and provide a well-rounded education. and torlakson's plan calls for more parental involvement. spending decisions about our education dollars should be made by parents and teachers, not by politicians. tell tom torlakson to keep fighting for a plan that invests in our public schools. trick or treat just four days until the midterm elections and candidates are looking for all the vote in this case can get with seven senate races within a three-point margin of error and a busy campaign weekend. might there be an october surprise that could have an affect on one or more of races? let me bring in the washington post and the national journal lauren fox. thank you so much for being with me on this halloween friday. >> good to be here. >> thank you. >> thanks. i want to start with you, one big story line is the absence of president obama in many races. we're talking about that recently nbc's chuck todd asked mary landrieu where the president had a hard time in louisiana. thereon her response. >> to be honest with you. the south is not the friendliest place for african-americans. it's been a difficult time for the president to present himself in a positive light as a leader. it's not a good place for women to present ourselves. it's been a conservative place. we've had to work a little bit harder. the people trust me, i believe. really they, they do, trust me to do the right thing for the state. >> do you think race will play a major role in louisiana? >> yeah, it will. and mary landrieu is right when she talks about race. race has been a sub text, a name text in many ways when you look at politics in the south. i mean, it's the reason why you had in 2005 kent apologize to the ncaa p over the southern strategy. she's not incorrect in what she says, but again, it's probably not the smartest thing to say. when she really needs to put together a multiracial coalition not only of african-american voters but particularly white voters. that's really where she is struggling so far in the poll she's giving something like 25% she has to get closer to a 35, 37, 38%. >> politically i'm not sure it says close to the race. lauren, your latest article you focus on democrats and women voters including on the senate race in kentucky. and you say there's a troubling trend for democrats there. what do you mean? >> well, one of the things that i look at was in some of these races not all of them. there are races where democrats are leading among women. but it's some of the races including in the state of kentucky when allison lundergan grimes is running so close to mcconnell. so i think, you know, this race was always going to be close. it was always going to come down to a nail biter. even if groims doesn't win on election day. it's kept us guessing in the state of kentucky. >> why do you think lundergan grimes hasn't been more effective? >> i think kentucky is a conservative state. it has continued to trend more and more republican since 2008 since president barack obama took office. i think a lot has to do with the national mood of the country and, you know, she does very well in, you know, the city centers in kentucky but she tends not to do as well when we talk about rural voters. i think it's more about a national trend than her not necessarily being able to resonate her message with women. >> yeah. and put on your soothe sayer hat. any october surprise? >> i think one of the things that might be surprising is colorado. here is a state where everyone gets a mail in ballot. if you look so far it's been really tight with gardener with something of an edge there. but i, you know, i think we should look closely at the race. if you look at what happened in 2010 michael bennett had been trailing in the polls leading up to election day and eked out a victory in the last weekend and won the senate seat. it's a race to keep an eye on. >> yeah. and i'm going to be talking with rachel maddow about that in minutes. it's indeed something we have to keep a close eye on. lauren, what do you think? any trick or treat surprises in any races? i have my eye on kansas. it's been a surprising race so far. we never expected pat roberts would come out of a primary and have a challenger in the general election like you have seen with greg orrman. certainly i'll be watching on tuesday to see whether or not an independent might win in the state of kansas. >> that going to be a fascinating race indeed. thank you so much. i appreciate your time. i want to continue the conversation now. joining me now is steve israel of new york. he's with me this morning. >> great to be with you jose. >> some republicans may think they got their october surprise with the ebola or isis. are those issues in the news now driving voters, you think, one way or another? >> well, there's no question the issues are in the news, but here is what is going on. democrats beat republicans on virtually every issue of middle class security. the fact that a woman should be the paid the same as a man for equal work, allowing middle class families to refinance their college debt. the difficulty we've had admitted admittedly. it's difficult to breakthrough on the issues where democrats win when the global issues are dominating the news cycle. so we've adjusted by going trench warfare. trench by trench precinct by precinct, house by house, talking to voters that the facts that democrats have their backs while republicans in the house of representatives stacked the deck against them to protect the special interest. >> i've been interested in seeing how some democrats have really kind of been keeping a distance some turning their back on president obama this time around. if you look at some issues, look, the price of gasoline is coming down in a lot of places it's under $3 a gallon now. it's been years since we've seen that. the economy seems to be doing well. we showed the stock market doing up 140 points almost this morning. and yet there is still a -- i don't know some wanting to keep a distance from president obama >>well, a couple of things. number one, in any president's second midterm election, the president's party loses seats. historic age is 29 seats even reagan at the height of his popularity his second midterm he lost seats. it's kind of natural. history says that the president's party has tough terrain. more importantly it's this. here is what i tell our candidates. it you're running in a really blue district, chances are your voters want to make sure you've been with the president every step of the way. if you're running in a really red district, chances are the voters in the district want to make sure you have never taken a step with the president. jose, the districts where we're competing they're purple. they're in the middle. most people in the districts agree with the president on some things like pay equity for women, may disagree with him on other things. i say to my candidates, just be those people. state your agreements with the president when you agree, state your treatmeagreements with the president when you disagree. but reflect the priorities and sensibility of the congressional district you are representing or want to represent. >> your thoughts on the senate, how do you think it's going to turn out after the november 4th or maybe december because there may be some runoffs. how do you see it ending up in the senate? >> i think you put your -- i think you nailed it, jose. i think, you know, the senate is not my lane. i'm in charge of the house races. i will say this, house and senate we're going to see a lot of surprises on election day. i believe that the day after story will be that neither party expected to see the results that we saw. very, very close races. i think we're going to be looking at a lot of recounts and in the senate maybe some runoffs. the final chapter of the 2012 midterm elections may not be written until december or january. >> okay. i'm trying to figure out. you think the senate is going to be democratic or republican hand? >> i don't -- you know -- >> what do you any come on. it's just us. >> i don't -- honestly. no spin. i just don't really focus on senate polls. my job is to elect house democrats. and that's what i'm focussed on. i hope the senate remains with the democrats >>well, thank you, steve for being with me. i like when you're in the lane. i try get in the diamond lane and things sometimes go there and don't. thank you for being a good sport. we'll zoom some of today's other sttop stories. a frightening picture yesterday in kansas. this morning we have new details about the deadly plane crash in wichita. later he's featured in a powerful new documentary about his decision to take up arms in libya. matthew van dyke will join me to talk about the documentary you will not want to miss. once there was a girl who snooze-buttoned her morning run away... one cap of downy created such irresistibly soft sheets, she wanted to stay in bed forever. downy. surround yourself with three times the softening. ♪ ♪ ♪ woooooah. ♪ [ male announcer ] you're not just looking for a house. you're looking for a place for your life to happen. zillow. remember, the open enrollment period is here. the time to choose your medicare coverage begins october 15th and ends december 7th. so call to enroll in a plan that could give you the benefits and stability you're looking for, an aarp medicarecomplete plan insured through unitedhealthcare. what makes it complete? 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>> i know! everyone will run for the hats and gloves. >> oh, no! scarves, hats. they're going get the space heaters. >> i know how it is down there! what about tonight for south florida? i'm now 54 -- >> that's going to be saturday night. sunday is going to be windy and a high of 70. you may have to get a pair of pants. i know, that may be a little crazy. >> you're asking for too much, bill. >> have a good halloween! >> thank you. all the best. coming up more on the midterms and my colleague rachel maddow joins me next. first, a sports note. miami heat currently 1-0. the cleveland cavaliers 0-. and the super star who took his talents to south beach and took them back away? 17 points in a season opening loss. >> play as bad as i did tonight. >> you can always come back to miami, lebron. 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[ female announcer ] 4-in-1 multi-health metamucil now clinically proven to help you feel less hungry between meals. and promotes heart health. experience the meta effect with our new multi-health wellness line and see how one small change can lead to good things. [ chanting ] >> you know, if they just waited a little while, i was getting to the dream act. [ laughter ] >> that was hillary clinton disrupted again by immigration activists. this time yesterday in maryland where she was interrupted at least three separate times at a rally for the state's gubernatorial candidate anthony brown. all days before president obama expected to take action. i spoke to the white house yesterday and they tell me the president is awaiting the final recommendations by attorney general holder on what specifically he recommends could be done on executive or theers vis-a-vis immigration reform. that final result has not arrived to the white house. the white house says that could be coming any minute. the president won't decide until he gets that. something three republican senators took issue with in a letter to the president yesterday. in colorado, meanwhile, as you can see the state's republican party is asking can we trust mark udall on immigration reform. in a new mailer four days until election day. with me today is rachel maddow. thank you for being with me this morning. happy halloween. good to see you. >> you too. thank you for having me. >> before we get to colorado. why do you think immigration activists keep targeting democrats like hillary clinton? is this a smart politic? >> you know,ive been thinking about for a long time. i think it is smart politics. i think it's better to be feared than loved. and when you take direct action like this it makes people mad at you in the short run. it annoys everybody in the room. it annoys the candidate you keep heckling like that. the activists are trying to change the political calculation for democrats. democrats substantiatively do want immigration reform. they want to do something on this. politically they're pretty happy to be able to point at respects and say, we would do it if it weren't for the republicans blocking us. the activists are changing the political incentives for democrats. they're giving democrats a political short term imcentive to much as much done so the heckling will stop. ting makes them unpopular in the short run but i think it's smart. >> let's talk about the president's side of this. he promised he was going to do the executive orders on immigration reform before the end of the summer and then decided to change until after the elections. politically smart? >> no. i mean, there's definitely a lot of expert opinion in the democratic party that believes that this was the right thing to do. i think it's idiotic. there's a political upside and political downside for the democrats in term of the president acts on immigration reform because congress won't do anything. the upside you would make your promise be a good one to latino voters. you would be making good on the things you've been saying all the the time. the idea of the downside is the thing that the democrats keep mismanaging. democrats like mark pryor and mary landrieu will get attacked as supporting amnesty or whatever nonsense they'll get attacked for no matter what the president does. if the president acts or doesn't act, the attacks on them are going to happen anyway. there's nothing democrats can do to insulate themselves against the attacks. all they're doing is depriving themselves of the upside. by exciting their base, convincing latinos they ought to turn out and vote for democrats and sharpening the difference between parties. they're so worried about the attacks. there's nothing they're doing that make the attacks stop. >> in a place like colorado it's going to be key to see what the latinos do on the fourth of november. let's talk about that. you there were with a live studio audience. i need one of those. but the latino vote is over 15% of the electorate. it's something marc udall focussed on with you. take a listen. >> we've been building for the last ten years this infrastructure. you're going to see the results on election day, rachel. it's a combination of the latino community being in. it's the younger voters. it's the sense that colorado has an example to sell. >> you talk a lot about colorado polling on your show. what is your sense of what is actually happening there? >> the polling thing is really, really interesting. because colorado is distinguished like almost no other state except maybe alaska in having terrible polling. the polling just obviously year after year mistakes what the ultimate result is going to be. in 2010 they said that michael bennett was going to lose to the republican. michael bennett won. in 2012 they said president obama was going to win by maybe a point. he won by over five. colorado is just wrong. what democrats in the state think is wrong with the polling it undersamples latino voters. it's a problem not getting better over time. there was a denver post poll that show gardener way up. it was only landline phones with only conducted in english. they only talked to a couple dozen latino correspondents. they think they don't ask the right latinos in colorado the right question. that's why democrats outperform the polling there. i think it's partly wishful thinking on the part of the democrats this year. i'm assuming the pollsters are getting better. that's part of what they're hanging their hat nons the state. >> and finally, i've told you before my house is your house here in florida. because we're here, my friend. tell me about scott with or without the fan? >> every election cycle florida voters do something inexplicable. and florida politicians do something inexplicable. this race -- i mean, my question to you, jose is how rick scott is governor in the first place. regardless of his policy positions. he is the worst campaigner and the worst debater and the worst public speaker i have ever seen at the top of the ticket in any state. in any top of the ticket race. how is he governor in the first place? >>, you know. honestly as far as political figures are concerned, it is an oddity here in florida. but, you know, there have been odd governors in the past. politically speaking, and, you know, i can't figure anything out in florida. i'm just happy i live here and i want you to come and visit me and then we'll talk about this because i want you down here, rachel. >> i accept your offer. thank you. >> thank you so much! >> and be sure to watch rachel tonight and every night. 9 p.m. eastern and all night on election days as the polls roll in. brilliant. joining me now for more on the florida madness is miami herald political ryer. rachel's question. politically speaking we in the sunshine state do have odd political characters that represent us. >> we're a state of weird o-os. it's like halloween 363 days a year. >> if you look at the united states it's tilted and the interests sentiment falls here. including us. what do you see in the race? it seems to be close issues. ? >> what i see is an incredibly close race. i quoted a democratic pollster who performed a poll showing rick scott is up by 2 or three-point. it's in today's miami herald. he said the polling right now relative to this stage of the race is about this close if not closer to the polling in the disputed presidential elections. we had 537 votes. it went on for 37 days. i said is it going to be a long tuesday night? he said it could be a long month. >> it could take forever to get it counted? >> we could be a margin of error. >> what about the absentee votes and the early voting that has been going on. >> glad you asked. so far we've had 2.6 million. >> that's a lot. >> probably will be about 6 million voters. out of the 2.6 million casts the republicans continue to lead the democrats in casting preelection day ballots. they're up by about 135,000. they've falling anyone a day by about 5,000 from 140 that's roughly 5.2% points. >> so we could be talk abouting who is the next governor more than just november? >> right. this has all the ingredients of an incredibly tight race. >> thank you for killing the buzz on knowing things on the fifth of november on us. >> yeah. we have no clue. >> what are you dressing up as? >> that's a good question. maybe i'll dress up like someone who has money not a -- >> thank you so much. let's head back to colorado where new jersey governor christie spent part of his day yesterday. a day after his sit down and shut up moment in new jersey. something casey hunt asked him about exclusively. >> would you encourage you to kids to behave like that? >> what i would not encourage my kids to go to a public event and scream at a public official. >> could you continue to conduct yourself that way if you run for president? >> i don't know if i'm running for president. that's speculation on speculation. >> casey hunt joins me live from colorado springs. one exclusive after another. yesterday it was jeb today it's christie. you didn't sit down and shut up. did he have any regrets on what he said in the confrontation? >> i asked him that directly and he said he had absolutely no regrets. which is right there in vain with how in the vain of how chris christie conducted himself all along. i asked him if he would continue to behave that way if he were president. he said this is who i am. i think this is what voters in new jersey like. i think it's the question if it wear wear across the country should he decide to run for president. >> thank you so much. have a great weekend. i know, you're going to working throughout it all. >> thank you, jose. you don't want to miss a spooktacular five things as tricks and treats collide in the nation's capitol. hopefully the first lady will bend a little bit on her healthy eating thing. you know, because she loves that healthy eating stuff. and today is candy did for many. he took arms in libya. he's been a frequent guest on our program. matthew vann dike joins me next. >> it was a nice welcome back. welcome back to the revolution. , $21. could something that small make an impact on something as big as your retirement? 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[ cat meows ] [ male announcer ] engineered to kill. i want to make a correction. we have a lot of graphics and tapes and banners in the show. we misidentified the location. it's close to the u.s. border and the gulf coast. that's where the city is. i want to apologize and my thanks to all of you eagle eye viewers who watched the graphic and noticed it. frankly, i didn't notice it. it passed me. that wouldn't happen. it shouldn't happen. i apologize. to a documentary film released today. it's called point and shoot a chronicles the tail of an american who joined lib ran rebels to fight against gadhafi in 2011. take a look. >> this time i was a participant. and the feeling was completely different. i was dressed like everyone else. was i was assuming the risk like other important. for the first time in my life, i felt like i was doing something really important. >> we were preparing the war at the same time watching it on television. >> joining me now is matthew van dyke whose footage is seen throughout the film. she's been with us frequently on the film. i appreciate you being back. how are you? >> thank you for having me. congratulations on your upcoming new show. >> thank you matthew, thank you very much! the first question, a lot of people may be asking why you decided to join army rebels and fight against gadhafi. >> i spent a few years traveling through north africa and the middle east by motorcycle. i had done that after getting my masters and i spent some time in libya and made good friends. when the rev louis lugs started four years later, my friends told me what was happening. >> this lead to your capture. you were held for a 1/2 months. i want do you see a clip of that. >> i woke up in prison to the sound of a man being tortured before me. i had a bland fold and they came and targeted me. they started playing video off my camera. it was a clip of maand it remind me why we fight. and the interpreter said you will never see america again. >> two months ago when you came on the show you told me the reason you did it because you didn't want to sit on the couch and watch the world go by. what is your reaction to critics who question your motives? >> people can question whatever they wanted. if they see the film they understand dpaktly why i did it. most people would agree with me, i think. if you have friends in need you should help them. if you believe in something you should go do it not just a give a thumbs up. >> the fighters you were with eventually made it to gadhafi's hometo hometown. here is part that have. i want to show that. that's you firing a gun on the pickup truck. when you look at what is happening now with syria and iraq your friend james foley beheld b beheaded. does that change your perspective? ? i'm more cautious. i'm more cautious after my own experience in libya after having been a prisoner of war. as i lose friends, it makes everybody more cautious. >> i appreciate you coming back. the film opens tonight. i very much appreciate your time. coming up on this t.g.i.f. halloweens. what better treat than five things i hope you have your costume picked out. shopping online is as easy as it gets. wouldn't it be great if hiring plumbers, carpenters and even piano tuners were just as simple? thanks to angie's list, now it is. start shopping online from a list of top-rated providers. visit angieslist.com today. and sometimes i struggle to sleep at night,nd. and stay awake during the day. this is called non-24, a circadian rhythm disorder that affects up to 70 percent of people who are totally blind. talk to your doctor about your symptoms and learn more by calling 844-824-2424. or visit your24info.com. don't let non-24 get in the way of your pursuit of happiness. the yoplait greek taste-off hits st. louis, let's find out which blueberry greek yogurt tastes best. bam! that one. (in unison) it's yoplait! i like yoplait. i've always liked yoplait. the one that you didn't pick was chobani. ooh. i'm a convert. yoplait's the winner! take the taste-off for yourself. it's more than the car.er. for lotus f1 team, the competitive edge is the cloud. powered by microsoft dynamics, azure, and office 365, the team can gain real time insights and instantly share information around the globe. when every millisecond counts, staying competitive begins with the cloud. this is the microsoft cloud. trick or treat in english in my neighborhood they say trick or treat. that's what millions of kids including at the white house where the president and first lady will welcome military families. i imagine a lot of kids, even my own, probably, have gotten a jump start on the candy consumption thing. it's not the first time halloween spirit has spooked washington. a city that knows october surprise. here are the five things get out to vote. flashback. the camelot era. halloween 1963 president kennedy with john john and caroline in the oval office. halloween 1989 when president george h.w. bush and barbara emerged from the giant punk kin. number three al gore never did make it to the white house b dressing as the uni did dog and beauty in the beast. number four, chuck hagel then senator hagel took the opportunity on halloween 2007 to dress up like fellow senator joe biden. still a popular costume option looking for a last minute idea. number five the current first lady out, well, just looking great feline! 1999. michelle obama cat woman of sorts. i'm still trying to figure out what i'm going to go as tonight. one costume i can probably rule out is ron burgundy. but please stay class my united states of america. "newsnation" with tamron hall is up next. i'll see you on monday. time for the "your business" entrepreneur of the week. carlsbad california owns carlsbad food tours. introducing tours and locals to the great food around the town. she's not only grown her business but helped promote the downtown area encouraging diners to eat locally rather than at the mall. for more watch your business at 7:30 on msnbc. [ male announcer ] are you considering a new medicare plan? then you may be looking for help in choosing the right plan for your needs. so don't wait. call now. whatever your health coverage needs, unitedhealthcare can help you find the right plan. open enrollment to choose your medicare coverage begins october 15th and ends december 7th. so now is the best time to review your options and enroll in a plan. medicare has two main parts, parts a and b, to help cover a lot of your expenses, like hospital care and doctor visits. but they still won't cover all of your costs. now's the time to learn about unitedhealthcare plans that may be right for you. are you looking for something nice and easy? like a single plan that combines medicare parts a and b with prescription drug coverage? a medicare advantage plan can give you doctor, hospital, and prescription drug coverage all in one plan for a low monthly premium or, in some areas, no plan premium at all. plus, with the pharmacy saver program, you can get prescriptions for as low as $1.50 at thousands of pharmacies in retail locations like these, all across the country. call now to see if our medicare advantage plans are available in your area. maybe you'd just like help paying for your prescriptions. consider a part d prescription drug plan. it may help reduce the cost of your prescription drugs. with over 30 years of medicare experience, unitedhealthcare can connect you with the right people and programs, offer smart ways to save, and give you helpful tools for a better healthcare experience. remember, open enrollment ends december 7th. whether it's our medicare advantage plans or our part d prescription drug plans, call unitedhealthcare to learn about medicare plans that may be right for you. don't wait. call now. o0 c1 means keeping seven billion ctransactions flowing.g, and when weather hits, it's data mayhem. but airlines running hp end-to-end solutions are always calm during a storm. so if your business deals with the unexpected, hp big data and cloud solutions make sure you always know what's coming - and are ready for it. make it matter. good morning, everyone! i'm alex whit in for tamron hall. eric frein is now behind bars. frein appeared in court this morning and faced several charges included murder, homicide of a law enforcement officer, and attempted murder. she's accused of ambushing state police officers in pennsylvania killing one an seriously injuring another. frein was taken into custody last night when u.s. marshalls conducted a sweep of an abandoned airfield just about 30 miles or so from the bararacks where the shooting happened. they carpeted him away in corporal dickson's handcuffs and squad car. >> the families and the pennsylvania state police have suffered an unimaginable loss of unspeakable proportions. they'll never be the same. but today we find some comfort as a community that we're take these next steps toward justice. >> nbc sara dallof is joining me from blooming grove, pennsylvania. good morning. what more did the police say about how frein was capture dppd they get a tip? >> believe it or not. they didn't. this was luck. they had been doing the grid searches of the dense forest ever since the manhunt began. the grid searches from section to section and that is what they were doing yesterday when they stumbled across eric frein. they surprised him. he was outside of this hangar. they say he followed their demands and surrenderered very meekly. they found some weapons inside the hangar. but he didn't attempt t

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Transcripts For FOXNEWSW Fox And Friends Sunday 20160214

generation by allowing barack obama to make one more liberal appointee. >> the stakes are clearly enormous. the presidential campaign has changed in light of them. we'll bring you the very latest. after the talk of scalia's successor, fireworks between jeb bush and donald trump over a past president. >> while donald trump was building a reality tv show, my brother was building a security apparatus to keep us safe. >> the world trade center came down during his reign. >> oh, man, we have the complete highlights from last night's debate. "fox & friends" begins right now. well, let's get right to it this morning. america remembering a supreme court crusader. the iconic justice antonin scalia guyed -- died in his sleep. his seth sets up a rare opportunity for president obama to appoint a nominee. perhaps a recess nominee to the court. >> garrett tenney has more in d.c. with how washington is reacting. >> reporter: good morning. members of both parties are mourning the loss of justice antonio scalia and whether they agreed with him or not, he was beloved by all. he was such a character out there in the open. that really everyone said they were just drawn to his magnetic personality. former president george w. bush said laura and i mourn the death of a brilliant jurist and american important, supreme court justice antonin scalia. he was an important judge on our nation's highest court. he brought intellect, good judgment, and wit to the bench. he will be missed by his colleagues and our country. and while many are mourning his passing both sides are looking at the vacancy on what this means on the high court. it comes at a time when the supreme court is weighing a host of extremely important issues. such as the legality of president's executive actions on immigration and union dues. and the opening on the high court could have a significant impact on the cases as well as on decisions in the many years to come and a battle is now brewing in the senate over what the nomination -- over the nomination of what's sure to be a more liberal judge by president obama. last night senate majority leader mitchell mcconnell said that he would not confirm any supreme court nominee by obama saying this in a statement, the american people should have a voice in the selection of their next supreme court justice. therefore, this vacancy should not be filled until we have a new president. not surprisingly his counterpart, senate minority leader harry reid said the complete opposite, saying in a statement, the president can and should send a senate a nominee right away with so many important issues pending before the supreme court, the senate has a responsibility to fill vacancies as soon as possible. last night, the president said he has every intention to move forward with nominating a new justice. >> i plan to fulfill my constitutional responsibilities to nominate a successor in due time. these are responsibilities that i take seriously as should everyone. they're bigger than any one party. >> here's many of the court's key decisions that have broken on a 5-4 vote, meaning the new nomination could have potentially historic implications, both on the court and for president obama's legacy. >> thanks, garrett. i appreciate it. well, the next guest, ed whalen, was one of his scalia's law clerks. good morning. will there be another one like scalia, he articulated his views as famously as he did? >> well, he was a brilliant j h jurist, and he was larger than life and grateful for his service to the country. he helped lead a revolution in the rethinking in how one approaches the constitution. there are lots of people who have been shaped by his thinking so i hope there will be a supreme court that reflects his thinking. >> let's talk about this thinking for a little bit which is his originalism belief. that the constitution wasn't a living, breathing document. what it said it said, what it didn't say it didn't say. talk about this. >> right. the basic divide is between originalism and so-called living constitutional. constitutionalists believe it's a zombie constitution in which they can infuse their own views that have nothing to do with what was meant by the constitution when it was adopted. what scalia said, no, it bears the meaning it had when its particular clauses were adopted. you look at that meaning and beyond that, matters are left up to the political process, basically to decide. so scalia did not impose his supposed views of abortion and the death penalty. he said that the constitution leaves that to the political processes or the decided one way or the other. and it's a living constitutionalism who entrench their own views on the constitution on a whole host of issues and justice scalia opposed that. >> all right. ed, as we already know, the talk has moved forward to who will replace him. and that was a big topic of last night's debate. ed whelen, thank you. right off the top, i thought cbs did a nice moment there with the tribute to him, a moment of silence. then of course this was the first topic that the candidates had to handle last night. listen. >> i think that we ought to let the next president of the united states decide who is going to run that supreme court with the vote by the people of the united states of america. >> the next president needs to appoint someone that believes in limited government. >> the senate needs to stand strong and say we're not going to give up the u.s. supreme court for a generation by allowing barack obama to make one more liberal appoint tee.. >> someone on this stage will get to choose the balance of the supreme court. and it will begin by filling this vacancy there. >> i think it's up to mitch mcconnell to stop it, it's called delay delay delay. >> that sums up the views of the candidates this is in the court of the united states senate. of course mitch mcconnell is the leader of the senate and will they approve a nominee to the supreme court or will they delay until the next president? there's not much precedence for this. i think there's been one in american history. supreme court justices approved. >> during the election year, yeah. i don't know about the eighth year, but we saw there that little back and forth between john dickerson and trump saying -- >> there was a big debate over one being confirmed in an election year and 8 -- in 80 years versus appointed. >> these guys are of one mind, this is not going to happen. i hope we can get a clear answer on this, does the president have the right to fill that slot with a recess appointment, that is to go around the senate while it's on recess? this is a tradition that dates back hundreds of years when getting to washington was difficult, there would be long periods when congress not in session and when the president needed to act, can he use that to fill this seat? >> the president says he plans to and in due time. >> a whole year until the end of his at presidency. meanwhile, all focus last night on donald trump and jeb bush and the showdown. they're relitigating the iraq war when all of this happened. watch. >> george bush made a mistake. he can make mistakes but that one was a beauty. we should have never been in iraq. we have destabilized the middle east. >> so you still think he should be impeached? >> it's my turn. >> you call it whatever you want. i want to tell you, they lied. i that said there were -- they said there were weapons of mass destruction and they knew there were none. there were no weapons of mass destruction. >> i'm sick and tired of barack obama blaming my brother for all of the problems that he's had. and frankly, i could -- i could care less about the insults that donald trump gives to me. it's blood sport for him, he enjoys it, i'm glad he's happy about it. >> you have 22 million -- >> i'm sick and tired of him going after i my family. >> on behalf of me and my family i thank god it was george w. bush in the white house on 9/11 and not al gore. no matter what you want to say about weapons of mass destruction, saddam hussein was in open violation of the u.n. violations and george bush enforced what the international community refused to do again. he kept us safe. i'm forever grateful to what he did. the world trade center came down because bill clinton didn't kill saddam hussein when he had a chance to kill him. >> you're watching the -- the iraq invasion was 2003 in the spring. this is a debate that republicans haven't had since. was this a wise idea? you saw the lines drawn here. donald trump said no, it wasn't wise. i think he speaks for the majority of americans and marco rubio said, no, he defended the iraq war invasion. >> marco rubio did a better job of defending george w. bush than jeb bush did. >> the sparks were flying last night. and as we presented a lot of examples there, it wasn't long after a lot of that that the moderator losing control, it was dickerson, rubio, bush, watch. >> you know that -- >> hold on, gentlemen. i'm going to turn this car around. >> senator marco rubio. please. please weigh in. >> on anything i want? >> oh, i thought -- go ahead. >> let's talk about poverty. >> i thought you had a point you wanted to make. >> that was me. >> that's something that -- >> i think that was me that was -- >> you're on the on-deck circle. >> governor kasich, will you -- please weigh in. >> i have to tell you, this is just crazy. huh? this is just nuts, okay? geez oh, man. i'm sorry, john. >> why is it nuts? talk about it. >> every time kasich is like i'm the reasonable one here, i'm sorry. it's embarrassing. all the republicans yelling at each other. i'm glad of this. >> yeah. >> this is really clear. there are somecans who think the bush presidency was a success. the romney campaign did the right thing, and others say no, take it in a new direction. i think in the long run it's healthy to have a real debate over the direction of the future of the republican party. why are you apologizing to the moderator? >> we talk about these as debates and the debate gets shut down. there's actually back and forth on the stage, you know, and john, i think did a good job of having to deal with all of these different opinions. it's much better having six people on the stage than 24 people on the stage. you can actually hear the differences of opinion come out? >> yeah. they're having a real debate over issues that matter. i know lots of people hate this, why are they arguing with each other, it will help in the long run to clarify what the party stands for. >> that's a big question. i saw bret baier after the debate last night. that was a big question he was asking of the candidates who many thought they had a great night. donald trump thought it was his best debate yet. he was very happy with his performance and jeb was happy with his performance. but is that tone, is that arguing a good or a bad thing for the party? and the way it looks. you think it's a good thing. >> it's a good thing to clarify, that do you stand for, tell me and they did. >> "the washington post" said it was a terrible debate, eating themselves alive. let us know your thoughts. we have much more coverage of this. and including president obama plans to nominate a new justice soon. how can the court perform with eight justice? a constitutional scholar with an inside look at the supreme court is up next. i tried depend last weekend. it really made the difference between a morning around the house and getting a little exercise. only depend underwear has new confidence core technology for fast absorption and the smooth, comfortable fit of fit-flex™ protection. get a coupon at depend.com i think we should've taken a tarzan know where tarzan go! tarzan does not know where tarzan go. hey, excuse me, do you know where the waterfall is? waterfall? no, me tarzan, king of jungle. why don't you want to just ask somebody? if you're a couple, you fight over directions. it's what you do. if you want to save fifteen percent or more on car insurance, you switch to geico. oh ohhhhh it's what you do. ohhhhhh! do you have to do that right in my ear? (toilet flush) if you need an opioid to manage your chronic pain, you may be sooo constipated it feels like everyone can go ...except you. tried many things? still struggling to find relief? you may have opioid-induced constipation, oic. it's different and may need a different approach. opioids block pain signals, but can also block activity in the bowel. which is why it can feel like your opioid pain med is slowing your insides to a crawl. longing for a change? have the conversation with your doctor about oic, and ask about prescription treatment options. made on behalf of those living with chronic pain and struggling with oic. fox news alert just hours after the death of justice scalia, president obama wasting no time letting americans know he's in charge and he plans to fill the seat. watch. >> i plan to fulfill my constitutional responsibilities to nominate a successor in due time. there will be plenty of time for me to do so and for the senate to fulfill its responsibility to give that person a fair hearing and a timely vote. >> so what are the president's powers here? can he put someone on the supreme court against the will of the senate? constitutional scholar david ripken joins us with an answer. good to see you this morning. >> good to see you. >> that recess appointment is open to the president. congress is out, he can do that. what would that mean and how long would that person serve on the court? >> he'd serve until the end of his congress, a very short time. i don't think that option really is open to the president. the supreme court has held fairly recently in the case dealing with the definition of recess appointment that it is up to the senate to determine that it is in recess. the senate will return fairly soon. i cannot imagine that president obama would actually put somebody in the court right now. >> okay. so it looks like then the senate really is in control. if mitch mcconnell doesn't want this process to go forward, then we'll have eight members of the supreme court until after the next presidential election. is that correct? >> that's correct. it's not to do with the question of changing the balance of the court. the last time the justice was confirmed in an election year was in 1940. we have tremendous polarization in this country. we have a situation where american people have lost faith in most institutions of our government. to try to have a supreme court nomination and confirmation of a justice -- nomination, confirmation would politicize that process and gravely injure the reputation of the supreme court which is the last thing we need. >> so there are a number of cases on the docket before the court. that pertain to organized labor, health care, separation of church and state. how will scalia's absence affect those do you think? >> well, most of those cases would have been decided 5-4, tucker. they would be decided 4-4 which means which ever is the decision of the circuit court from where the case came, they would stand in the situation. for example, involving fredericks which is the labor case. the decision of the ninth circuit would remain unchanged in the case of fisher the affirmative action case. and the fifth circuit would remain unchanged, et cetera. it's not an ideal situation but the supreme court can function with eight members. it's certainly preferable to having a bruising confirmation battle that would damage the court's reputation. >> what is justice scalia's legacy, what do you think? >> as my predecessor would mention he's the leading originalist. he's the man who never allowed his personal views be translated in my of his decisions. a brilliant jurist. one of the most consequential supreme court justices in history and tucker, he'll be known just as much for his dissents and majority opinions. it's a very tragic loss for all of us who knew him as well as for the country as a whole. >> and a decent man, father of nine. thank you for that. i appreciate it. >> good to be with you. when we come back, the political panel on the best and worst moments from last night's some say out of control fiery presidential debate. your buddy ron is always full of advice. usually bad. so when ron said you'd never afford a john deere tractor, you knew better. the e series. legendary quality. unexpected low price. 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[claps] ... a new nation. announcer: why not celebrate presidents day with a better night's sleep? through presidents day at sleep train get up to four years interest-free financing on tempur-pedic, and save up to $300 on beautyrest and posturepedic, plus same-day delivery, and sleep train's love your mattress guarantee. hurry! this special financing offer ends presidents day at sleep train. welcome back. some quick headlines now for you. the terror group al shabaab now claiming responsibility for the deadly midair explosion on the somalia jetpacked with people. the suspected bomber was the only person killed after being sucked right out of the airplane. it landed safely. the bomber apparently used a wheelchair to get past security. and a brand-new batch of hillary clinton emails just released by the state department. 81 of which are marked classified. clinton asks one of her counselors how to keep her husband bill in check who seemed to be threatening president obama's re-election in 2012. sandra? >> thanks. well, the death of supreme court justice antonin scalia raised questions during the night's gop debate about the kind of nominee the candidates might choose for his open seat. >> the reason principle matters sadly, the next president going to appoint one, two, three, four supreme court justices. if donald trump is president he'll nominate liberals. your second amendment -- >> hold on. >> you know how i know that? >> hold on, gentlemen, i'm going to turn this car around. >> john roberts, ted cruz with your brother, wanted john roberts to be on the supreme court. he twice approved obamacare. >> wow. here to react our political panel, angela mcgowin, and we have the founder of the bold global media and jessica harlof is a political consultant. jessica, i'll start with you first. what impact does the passing of justice scalia had on the debate last night? >> it was obviously a sad event, you know, thoughts and prayers with his family. i thought it would be more -- they seemed to move past it fairly quickly. after the first question but i thought donald trump had the best answer out of everyone. president obama is going to try to get an appointee thousand and that the republican stream has to be delay delay delay. as you were talking about earlier, it happened 80 years earlier that it took 15 months to appoint someone. but the democrats are going to go hard on republicans in saying you guys are obstructionists at every turn. we need someone on the supreme court. huge issues coming up. i think it's going to get nasty. >> as mitch mcconnell said, the american people should have a say in this. when you have justice scalia, he has been on since 1986. the american people should have some input. i would have liked to see more conversation about justice scalia and questioning donald trump because he insultded scalia while he was alive. >> his challenge on affirmative action. >> right. trump said i want to nominate someone like my sister who is a very liberal pro-abortion person. >> we lost one of the most conservative intellectuals on the bench. he was considerate, he stood his ground but friendly with everyone. and the people -- the candidates who answered it properly was rubio and kasich. what cruz and trump did i thought was awful. >> some of the criticism immediately following the debate was that this was politicized so fast. but i want to get to some of the biggest surprises, some of the biggest disappointments of the night. because you three are not shy on your opinions on this matter. terry, start with you first. what was the biggest surprise for you? >> i was very surprised at jeb bush. he was very high energy. he was going after trump a lot. he was talking about -- i thought i was disappointed. he should have pushed back on the question about iraq because it was barack obama who caused isis to come about. our troops, our american troops with our surge, we stabilized iraq. then -- >> is that -- >> i thought he had shone -- >> does it change anything for him? >> i don't know. he has a lot of money. >> yeah. i think rubio brought his a-game. i think he totally redeemed himself from the little flub with christie. you know n the last debate before this one. also, jeb bush he came to play. >> right. >> those two impressed me the most. >> all right. >> kasich, jeb bush and rubio. >> kasich was the voice of reason. >> if i was in charge we'd all be best friends. >> what was your best moment? >> i think it's interesting that we found the threshold for where donald trump can offend and it's when he goes after george bush. i know the crowd was largely establishment, state party picked who would be there. that back and forth -- >> that's awful. you can't judge everyone in the audience. you're taking a page office donald trump's playbook -- >> i have never seen his playbook and i never intend to. >> you just did. >> why? >> rubio defended george w. bush. rubio defended ronald reagan and he was the one that stood there -- >> but i -- >> but establishment. >> we have to move on. >> -- who chose who would be in the audience. >> thank you so much. we have to move on. >> donald trump effect. >> thanks to all three of you for being here. coming up, he said being friends with justice scalia is one of the great privileges of his life. our own judge andrew napolitano remembers his friend next. this is how lenders saw me. in my 20s, i was super irresponsible with credit cards. it was time for experian. they gave me tools so i could finally get serious about my credit. now lenders see me for who i really am... go to experian.com and start your credit tracker trial membership today. the bold nissan rogue, with intuitive all-wheel drive. because winter needs a hero. now get a $189 per month lease on the 2016 nissan rogue. nissan. innovation that excites. ♪ ♪virgin islands nice ♪ ♪so nice ♪so nice, so nice ♪ spend a few days in the u.s. virgin islands and return with a lifetime of experiences. that's virgin 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constitution, this has been the chief justice berger. i can think of no two better public servants than chief justice rehnquist and justin scalia. you have our heart felt wishes. >> president ronald reagan announcing the appointment of antonin scalia to our highest court in the nation back in 1986. >> morning remembering the man -- this morning remembering the man and legacy of the man who knew him best, judge andrew napolitano joins us by phone. great to talk to you this morning. tell us about justice scalia. what was he like? >> well, good morning, guys, thanks for having me on, even though it's a sad and a shocking time. it hasn't sunk in. it's one of the great privileges of my life to get to be so close to a historic and pivotal figure. so he was the same -- like a lot of great men, he was the same way in person and in private as he was on the bench and behind a lecture podium. he was loud, gregarious, funny. bombastic. he even had a practical jokester side to him. he was the life of the party. he was a great inquiz iter, what do you mean, explain it to me. i said this last night and tucker, you know this, that aspect of him drew a lot of people to him that didn't always agree with him. >> exactly. >> not the least of whom was his ideological opposite on the court, ruth bader ginsburg who was probably his best friend on the court. >> judge, his legacy, do you think we'll see another justice like scalia or is this part of a bygone era? >> wow, that is a question that i hadn't really thought about. you know, people come in all sizes, shapes and temperaments. justice sonia sotomayor who is almost an ideological opposite and is 30, 35 years younger than he has a very, very similar personality. but in terms of always being the first justice to ask a question, in terms of questioning the side that he was going to lose -- that he thought he was going to vote against, in an effort to bring out their weak points, so as to demonstrate to his fellow justices on the bench in trying to change their minds, nobody really comes to mind in -- on the present court who has perfected that art as he did. >> i'll remind everybody, this is a man that you had the unique opportunity of being so close to. you're his friend. we have actually a picture i believe of the two of you together. there you are. judge, could you elaborate a little bit on his biggest accomplishment in his 30 years on the supreme court? >> yes. without getting too much into the weeds, justice scalia was the intellectual creator and leader of a movement called originalism. basically originalism stands for the proposition that the constitution as a supreme law of the land means the same thing today as it did when it was ratified in 1789. and that if the people want to change it by a constitutional amendment, they can. but they can't expect nine unelected justices to change the meaning of the document because it's a contract between past generations and the present generations. so you start by looking at the text, the words mean what they say. if the words are ambiguous, then you look at how the people who wrote the constitution, particularly james madison, understood those words to mean. now, sandra, that is not a popular way to interpret the constitution today. but he steadfastly stood to that. he began to draw more and more judges and justices on the court to it. he began to draw more academics to it and it is now a large and respectable body of legal thinking. still a minority view. but a respectable body of legal thinking that respects the congress and says, you guys changed the laws. you guys changed the public policy, not nine unelected justices. >> he was so smart and so witty and so eloquent, even liberals in washington admired him. i think some of them did. judge, great to hear your voice this morning. thanks for doing all. >> all the best. >> thanks. a fox news alert, a mississippi police officer has been shot in the head overnight as he chased down a pair of armed robbery suspects. he was investigating a convenience store robbery when the masked suspects took off running. he chased them for five blocks before he was shot right in front of the police department. he was airlifted to the hospital. no word yet on his condition. the suspects still on the run this morning. a u.s. pilot is saved from ejection into isis-controlled territory, thanks to his quick thinking crew. they were passing over isis held land in the middle east when the pilot discovered the fuel line was malfunctioning. leaving him with only 15 minutes left in the air. ejecting would have risked capture or death. luckily, a nearby refuelling plane immediately changed course accompanying the f-16 jet back to base. a bizarre attack on the golden gate bridge. police say two people were hit in the legs by blow darts as they walked. both were hit in the leg. both darts were made out of metal and were about five inches long. they are being tested for any potential chemicals. the california highway patrol is now investigating and looking for surveillance video of those attacks. and incredible images as a 65-year-old good samaritan puts his life in danger to save another. the man heard terrifying screams and saw flames coming from a crashed car during his morning commute. the man sprinted into action dragging the driver out. seconds before the car burst into this explosive fireball. the driver was severely hurt, but will be okay. and those are your headlines on this sunday morning. extremely cold sunday morning. >> dangerous deep freeze wreaking havoc on the north east with temperatures in the single digits. >> and there was a pileup on the interstate in pennsylvania. at least three people were killed, more than 70 people injured. >> and rick has been following us. >> i'll tell you the images of the car crash are scary. you hit a cold weather like this on that -- on those roads, very, very cold. very -- it freezes a lot. doesn't get any of the melting and the roads are really dangerous out there. a chilly morning you can see with the color here where the cold air is. but it is settled in across the northeast right now as we expect it and it's 1 degree right here in new york. breaking records. it's the coldest air mass that we have seen maybe in at least about 15 years across much of the northeast. we have had a lot of cold weather in the last two years but this is kind of the coldest that we have seen. that's why this is so dangerous. it's also really windy out there. feels like minus 33 in boston right now. feels like minus 23 in buffalo and 1 degree in d.c. this is the colder air, still certainly cold across the upper midwest, but not as cold as it is now. settled in the parts of the northeast. look at what happens. we're starting off very cold, the wind will subside throughout the day today. air temperatures are very, very cold. by the time we get to tomorrow morning it will feel balmy. 16 in new york. minus 6 in boston. there's a little system moving in, we have to watch this tomorrow we'll watch for some snow across the tennessee valley. and the potential ice storm, guys, across parts of the carolinas. >> thanks, rick. >> definitely not one of the mornings you forgot to put on the hat and gloves. >> you'll be reminded. there was a big debate last night. marco rubio came under fire for repeating lines in the last debate. >> let's dispel once and for all with the fiction that president obama doesn't know what he's doing. he knows exactly what he's doing. >> did he redeem himself last night? we have a debate coach who will pass out grades, next. at ally bank, no branches equals great rates. it's a fact. kind of like social media equals anti-social. hey guys, i want you to meet my fiancée, denise. hey. good to meet you dennis. boy: once upon a time, there was a nice house that lived with a family. one day, it started to rain and rain. water got inside and ruined everybody's everythings. the house thought she let the family down. but the family just didn't think a flood could ever happen. the reality is, floods do happen. protect what matters. get flood insurance. call the number on your screen to learn more. good morning, everyone. some quick tech headlines. a new campaign called flash drives for freedom. promising to enlighten the north korean people on western culture by smuggling u.s. memory sticks into the secluded country. they're preloaded with movies and tv shows from the u.s. organizers hope this will help north koreans see what the world beyond their borders really look like. apple is on tap to release the newest iphones and ipads next month. tech blogs say a brand-new four inch iphone and ipad will make their debut on march 15th. those devices may be for sale in the same week we're told. and i think that's it for your headlines this morning. >> with this fiction that barack obama doesn't know what he's doing. he knows exactly what's doing. this notion that barack obama doesn't know what he's doing -- >> there it is. >> let's dispel with this fiction that obama doesn't know what he's doing. he wants the country to be like the rest of the world. >> marco rubio under fire for his poor debate performance. he even took the blame for it if you'll remember up in new hampshire. but he vowed to bounce back before taking the stage last night. how did he do? let's ask former gop debate coach brett o'donnell. nice to see you this morning. it seemed like with "the washington post" and other places, looks like rubio bounced back. what do you think? >> i thought he had an excellent night last night. marco was on message again. he was back to the person that we had seen in the debates prior to last weekend's debate. and particularly in the exchanges with ted cruz, he was particularly effective. in the back and forth over immigration i thought that marco rubio got the better of cruz. especially in calling him out for basically lying and saying anything to get elected. that's a devastating attack on cruz. >> let's listen to him taking on ted cruz on immigration. >> marco went on univision in spanish and said he would not rescind president obama's illegal executive amnesty on his first day of office. i have promised to rescind every executive action including that one. >> first of all, i don't know how he says what i said on univision, he doesn't speak spanish. second of all -- [ speaking in spanish ] >> oh, that was one of those moments. >> yeah. >> a lot of people jumping all over twitter, was that spanglish that he was speaking? >> yeah, exactly. i mean, i thought marco handled that exchange very well and in the face of a debate that was more like wrestlemania than a political debate, marco was very poised. kept his cool. and i thought came off very well last night. >> he seemed like the establishment candidate. he was defending george w. bush, it seems better than jeb was defending george w. bush. here is another moment he blamed bill clinton, coming to the defense of george w. bush. watch this moment. >> the world trade center came down during the reign of -- he kept us safe. that is not safe, that's not safe, marco. that's not safe. >> the world trade center came down because bill clinton didn't kill saddam hussein when he had the chance to kill him. >> and george bush -- >> rubio seemed strong there. where jeb bush kept bringing up his mom and bringing up his dad. he seemed to do a better job at defending him, no? >> yeah, in fact, i thought it ma night to step in and defend george w. bush. in the face of the attacks that have gone back and forth between jeb and marco, marco even at that point came to his defense. that's one of those strategies in a political debate that's particularly effective when you can co-op the entire stage. you know, and defend others on the stage and agree with them. so i thought marco showed strength last night in that moment. >> overall, as this is your area of expertise as a debate coach, marco rubio, what grade did you give him last night? >> i would have given an "a" to a-minus. i didn't think it was perfect. there were places that he sunk into the wrestlemania format, but overall i thought he had an excellent night. i would have given him an "a." >> donald trump dealing with boos in the crowd as he said the donor class and the lobbyists in the room. how did trump fare last night? >> i thought he looked angrier and meaner than he had in the debates. i would have given him a "c." i don't think he was as effective as he has been. maybe going after george w. bush on lying about weapons of mass destruction and blaming him for 9/11 might cross the line. >> ted cruz, how did he pull off? >> i thought he was around a b-minus. you know, ted cruz seems to think everything is about being a college debater rather than a political debate. and instead of really staying on message, he tends to want to get in the weeds and defend every single point. it makes him defensive at times. >> jeb bush and kasich you gave the same grade, a b-minus. why? >> i mean, i thought -- john kasich had the line of the night. in the midst of all the fighting, kasich said hey, we're helping hillary become president here. which i thought seemed being the adult in the room. other than that, he didn't have standout moments and i thought jeb had one of the best debates of all the political debates. but he still didn't shine through like marco rubio did. >> ben carson, you gave an incomplete. every time he was called on, he was surprised. >> he never really completely shows up. if you don't finish your thoughts it's an incomplete grade. thoughts and have complete thoughts, it's an incomplete grade. >> thanks for getting up early with your report card. >> you're welcome. coming up, justice scalia. once said the constitution can favor religion over non-religion. what does his death mean for religion liberty cases headed to the court? we're joined by jonathan morris ahead. what if one sit-up could 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side effects. look me... in the eyes... and see what's possible... botox® cosmetic. it's time to take a closer look. one can be sophisticated and believe in god. heck, a first smufr at least as easy to believe in as a big bang. one can even be sophisticated and believe in a personal god. a benevolent being who loves mankind. one can even be sophisticated and believe in jesus christ. >> justice scalia was never shy about his faith. last month he told a crowd celebrating religious freedom. >> "one of the reasons god has been good to us is that we have done him honor. to be sure, you can't favor one denomination over another. but we can't favor religion over non-religion." >> he died yesterday, unfortunately, in texas. there are a lot of religious liberty cases headed to the supreme court. where do they stand? joining us, religion contributor, father jonathan morris, who knew nino scalia. >> not very well, but i sat next ti to him, having conversations. here i thought, here i am a nobody having a conversation with him -- this was the last time i was with him. he grilled me to try to understand something that i was about to say that he wasn't sure of. he kept going after it, after it, because he was intellectually curious. because he pursued truth like a rabid dog going after wanting to find out exactly why you believed what you believed. he actually wanted to know maybe if you were right. and i love that about him. and one of the things i think -- one of his great legacies in pursuit of the truth was the quote that you read, sandra, i think there might have been a type-o. it also said he believed that we could actually favor religion over non-religion, not the opposite. >> what will this mean for some of the religion cases coming before the supreme court? >> he believed that if you took the name and voice of god out of the public square, that you would take it out of our minds. if you take it out of our minds, you take it out of our heart. you take god out of our heart, you take america out of this great nation because our nation was founded on the principles of god. >> what will his biggest legacy be? >> i think the defense of the first amendment and religious liberty. he believed so deeply that there was nothing wrong and there's something good about, for example, having ten commandments in a courthouse. that is the truth that our law was based on the ten commandments. and he was unafraid to say it. he did not care about what other people said, but he said in a beautiful, beautiful way. i think that's his great elections see. >> auto -- great legacy. >> and the hurricane earl decision. >> absolutely. >> thanks. coming up, some looked at him as uncle arthur, memories coming up. go, go, go, go, go, go... touchdown! ♪ choir and harp music. this place, it's the best-kept secret in football since... hey, how did he get in here?! and with toe nail fungus! fight it! with jublia. jublia is a prescription medicine used to treat toenail fungus. use 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"fox & friends" begins right now. we begin with a fox news alert this morning. america is remembering a supreme court leader. the iconic justice, antonin scalia, died yesterday in texas while quail hunting at the age of 79. he had spent more than 30 years on the supreme court, advocating tirelessly, sometimes unpopularly, yet steadfastly for the constitution. >> his death sending shock waves through washington, setting up a political showdown between president obama and senate republicans. the president can appoint a new justice before the end of his term. while republicans already promising to block that appoint and leave it to the next president. >> scalia's passing comes at a time when the supreme court is weighing several important issues such as the legality of the president's executive actions on immigration, abortion restrictions, and public union dues. let's bring in our next guest. >> next guest looked up to justice one like an uncle. he's devastated by his passing. joining us on the phone to help remember his legacy, our fox news analyst, arthur idala. welcome. >> caller: thank you. i usually come on the weekend and we have fun and get to yuck it up a bit. i definitely don't feel that way today. >> we're so sorry for your loss, arthur. how will you remember justice scalia? >> caller: well, people believe the word, but fun. every time we went out, we had fun. we ate a lot together. we drank a lot together. he was a fun guy. yes, we would talk about politics, and yes, he would talk about the law. but to be honest, there was usually a glass of wine involved. a cigar involved. definitely food involved. he's not what people would think of he's this conservative justice and against this, that, and the other thing. he wasn't like it. he didn't care his -- i don't know, his admission or policies on his sleeve. he carried his love of life on his sleeve. his appreciation of his family coming over from sicily years ago. basically that poor immigrants and what he achieved. it was a good time. in a selfish way, i'm disappointed because on friday, two days ago, i confirmed that he and i and my dad were having lunch, just the three of us, next tuesday, in his favorite italian restaurant after oral argument at the supreme court. so many times i'd been there and watched the argument. then i would go immediately into his chambers. as soon as he heard my voice, he would scream from his desk, "arturo? arturo, come here, arturo." the fact i'm not going to hear him again it heartbreaking. i know it's not a tragedy, a 79-year-old man who lived a full life, but i'm very sad. >> what was interesting about justice scalia, obviously the most famous conservative intellectual in the country. yet, very popular among liberals even in washington who grudgingly admit that he was wittier, more articulate than they were. he seemed almost drawn to people on the other side. was it to convince him? >> caller: no. it was his genuine love of people. it was neither of those. it was his genuine love of people. he genuinely loved -- ruth bader ginsburg, their friendship was deep and well known. they loved opera together. they spent new year's eve together many, many, many years in a row. they're family. that's just who he was. he love of william brennan. in terms of politics and judiciary, he could not be any more different than bill brennan. he loved bill brennan. i believe when brennan retired, scalia was asked and given brennan's chambers. that's how much he inspired him. he was a really, really nice guy. and if this wasn't early on sunday morning, i could say he reminds my of roger ale. a positive man with all these people working for him. yet, when you are one on one with him, he's a wonderful, wonderful guy. very similar in many ways. y that reminded me of each other very much. >> very, very funny. what do you think legacy will be on the court, arthur? >> caller: just tremendous. he made more than a court -- it's law students and lawyering. he made the whole originalist and strict constructionalist, texturalist. he made that a household fan of lawyers. who basically said what the constitution says is what it says. it's not what we want it to say. >> i'm curious, as a lawyer, i'm sure you've spoken to many having argued before the supreme court. from the lawyer side of things, what was it like to go up against him in the supreme court? >> caller: first of all, i've never argued in front of the supreme court. every time i argued with scalia, it was over a scotch or glass of wine. i mean, what is it to stand at home bat with a bat in your hand and have jose rivera on the mound? he was the sharpest, most intellectual, most glib, most witty -- i mean, you know, get ready. you're going to be in the fire of the storm -- in the eye of the storm. yet, he was never mean. he never belittled anybody or embarrassed anybody. he had a big heart. >> arthur, your perspective and unique and personal. it's neat. and before we let you go, something i loved that you told us prior to the interview, that you told me in the past when i became a parent was his advice or words to you upon the birth of your son. >> it made me cry. it made me cry yesterday. he said, "arthur, you're never as vulnerable as when you're a parent." it's just so true. i mean, when you are living life and only worried about yourself, you're a tough person. i'm not worried about this. i'm not worried about that. all of a sudden, you have this little life in your hands that means more to you than anything on the planet. it's devastating. and you know, he had some personal losses with his children. his son-in-law who was married to his daughter, six children. than long ago, he dropped dead at 40, 41 years old leaving his wife and all these children. i was very -- i don't want to overstate it, but at that funeral, i was the pallbearer for just scalhool -- justice scalia's uncle, his aunt. we didn't see each other a lot, but the two or three thing we did, it was that thick bond. you didn't need to see him that often to feel that degree of closeness. >> he had nine children when he passed away yesterday at 79. thanks. >> caller: thank you very much. take care. bye-bye. justice scalia's death a few hours before the gop candidates took the debate stage in south carolina. >> how to replace justice scalia may have been the only thing that all the candidates agreed on. john with us this morning. the aftermath? >> reporter: good morning to you. i'll tell you, for the most part, last night's debate kind of redefined the bloodsport of politics. the whole thing started off politte -- polittiely enough, t the person insisting the selection of the next justice be left to the next president. >> this is a tremendous blow to conservatism. a tremendous blow, frankly, to our country. >> he will go down as one of the great justices in the history of this republic. >> justice scalia was a legal giant. he was a brilliant aithful to t constitution and changed the arc of american legal history. >> reporter: that's where the politeness ended and the gloves came off. jeb bush decided his route to the political redemption goes through donald trump's nose, decided he was going to be the only one who could stand up and go face to face with donald trump. though it was left to marco rubio to put a cota on this exchange. listen. >> dump was building a reality tv show -- donald trump was building a reality tv show, my brother was building a security at rat us to keep us safe. i'm proud of what he did. >> i lost hundreds of friends. the world trade center came down during the reign of -- [ booing ] >> he kept us safe? that is not safe. that is not safe. >> on behalf of me and my family, i thank god all the time that it was george w. bush in the white house on 9/11 and notnot al gore. >> reporter: we'll see how the line that trump plays that he blamed george bush for 9/11. also declaring war on each other yet again, were ted cruz and marco rubio who revisited their battle over immigration from a couple of debates ago. listen to this -- >> marco went on univision in spanish and said he would not rescind president obama's illegal executive action nesty in his first -- am nesty in his first day in office. >> how he knows what i said on univision becausely doesn't speak spanish. [ speaking spanish ] >> in espanol. >> reporter: cruz speaks a little spanish, though admittedly says his spanish was lousy. the night was redemption for marco rubio who needed to erase the memory of that horrible moment he had in new hampshire. i think by most accounts, he did that. and south carolina preserves its reputation as a place where political candidates wanted to show voters here that they can throw and take a punch. >> thanks, john. >> thank you. it's tough to find your favorite moment from last night. >> take three steps back. trump is trying to redefine the republican party. you're either for that or against it. this is a demarcation point. this is a break. he's not trying to continue the bush administration or the romney campaign. this is a whole new thing. >> was last night a turning point, do you think? >> i think the whole thing, we're missing it. trump is this loud, out-of-control guy. he's saying there is a new party i want to create. i have no idea what's going to happen. no idea if it's good, bad, but it's a big deal. >> it will be interesting to see if that's a good move. george w. bush campaigning for his brother on monday. then jeb says hei'm not going t invites you to the rally in the weird moment. we'll see if going after jeb bush in south carolina is smart. an 86% approval rating. >> you got the sense gloves came off. there was a bloody battle for survival at the lower end of the candidates. at the higher end, there's so much at stake. they went for it. >> there's a lot at stake. what does the party stand for? we'll find out. coming up, what effect will trump's statement on the iraq war have the polls in south carolina? our next guest says justice scalia's passing will set off a political explosion. we'll have byron york here next. i've smoked a lot and quit a lot, but ended up nowhere. now i use this. the nicoderm cq patch, with unique extended release technology, helps prevent the urge to smoke all day. i want this time to be my last time. that's why i choose nicoderm cq. they carry your fans' passions, shouhopes, and dreamscarry pads. and maybe, a chance at greatness... because shoulders were made for greatness. not dandruff thwe'd like to open a savingsake account for him. yes yes. great thanks to mom and dad and their safe driving bonus check from allstate. oh. look at this. safe driving bonus. are you a safe driver? lucky little fella. only allstate gives you two safe driving bonus checks a year for driving safe. see how much more an allstate agent can do for you. call 877-644-3100. like in most families, dad's always the last to know. that's why accident forgiveness was the first thing he asked for when he switched to allstate. michael james! middle name. not good. get accident forgiveness from allstate and keep your rates from going up just because of an accident. find out how a local allstate agent can help better protect your family. call one right now. plus, drivers who switched saved an average of $446 a year! just a few more ways the good hands are doing more than ever before. see what the personal service of an allstate agent can do for you. call 877-644-3100 a fox news alerts. republican candidates vowing to uphold justice scalia's conservative legacy. here's last night. >> the simple fact is the next president needs to appoint someone with a proven conservative record similar to justice scalia that is a lover of liberty, that believes in limited government. >> the senate needs to stand strong and say we're not going to give up the u.s. supreme court for a generation by allowing barack obama to make one more liberal appointee. >> someone on the stage will get to choose the balance of the supreme court. and it will begin by filling this vacancy that there's now. >> i think it's up to mitch mcconnell and everybody to stop it. it's called delay, delay, delay. >> it is up to mitch mcconnell to stop it. can he do that? the "washington examiner's" byron york with an answer. can he do that for a year? >> yes, they can. they have the authority to do it. simply by not taking up the president's nominee. on the other hand, the political pressures will be intense because you have to imagine that president obama is going to nominate some particularly interesting and qualified candidate. you'll see news reports, i'm sure, saying that it's september 12th, 2016, day 135 of the republicans' refusal to consider president obama's nominee. so it will be a huge political fight. >> that's exactly right. he'll nominate, of course, using the demographic requirements he thinks will help the democratic nominee in the presidential race. republicans don't have a history of having tough in battles like this. >> i've covered a lot of judicial fights, and there are always republican senators who say, look, i believe that a president has a rate to have his qualify -- a right to have his qualified nominees confirmed. on the other hand, they may number a different mood. lindsay graham, the former presidential candidate, was at the debate. he's been a longtime member of the judiciary committee and said he's going to oppose any obama nominee who doesn't have really broad support like 75 or 80 votes in the senate. he said the reason he was going to oppose them was as payback for democrats using the nuclear option. remember, they got rid of the filibuster for most judicial nominees. graham said, i told president obama at the time there's going to be a price to pay for this. and this is the price. >> you were at the debate. you wrote a smart piece on it this morning basically making the point the debate over the iraq war never occurred on the republican side for 13 years. and it erupted in public last night at the debate. trump going after president bush's, george w. bush's stewardship of the country. does trump win? >> i don't know. if george w. bush is the third rail of south carolina politics, we're going to find out. this was a debate unlike any other republican debate in the sense that it dealt with, it reckoned with the legacy of the iraq war more than any other republican debate has. there were things that trump said last night that sounded like they could have been in a democratic debate in 2004. remember, the democrats were very strong on that in that year during the iraq war. the other republicans, not just jeb bush but marco rubio, as well, kept a more conventional republican position on this. so i think this is a huge test. it's a gamble for trump. by bringing up something that republicans in the past have decided ton talk about. >> isn't it also a gamble for rubio? he basically said the iraq war was a good idea. is that a winning position? >> we're going to find out. it's interesting because if you look at south carolina republicans, they do approve of george w. bush. they still like george w. bush. there's a heavy, heavy military presence here. i came into the airport yesterday, this was a huge sign saying welcome to the biggest military -- >> yes. >> there are people involved in the military who say it was a mistake to invade iraq. >> they bore the brunt of it, of course. byron york from the scene. thanks for that. appreciate it. >> thank you, tucker. more "fox & friends" coming up in a minute. stay tuned. i tried depend last weekend. it really made the difference between a morning around the house and getting a little exercise. only depend underwear has new confidence core technology for fast absorption and the smooth, comfortable fit of fit-flex™ protection. get a coupon at depend.com four score and seven years ago, our [train horn blares]th-- ... to the continent... [claps] ... a new nation. announcer: why not celebrate presidents day with a better night's sleep? through presidents day at sleep train get up to four years interest-free financing on tempur-pedic, and save up to $300 on beautyrest and posturepedic, plus same-day delivery, and sleep train's love your mattress guarantee. hurry! this special financing offer ends presidents day at sleep train. what a debate. gop candidates making their case debating who has the best plan to fight the war on terror. watch. >> we should not be policemen of the world. but whether we go, we mean business. >> we need a commander in chief that sets the objective we will utterly defeat them because they have declared war, they've declared jihad on us. >> i voted against barack obama's plan to use it was the right decision. >> i would restore the military. i would have a strategy to destroy ice is -- destroy isis and create a policy of containment as it relates to iran's ambitions. >> jeb is so wrong. you've got to fight isis first. they're chopping off heads. these are animals. you have to knock them off strong. you decide what to do after. you can't fight two wars at one time. >> our military passengnel here retired infantryman in the marine corps reserve, kieran lawler. retired air force general and amber smith. great to see you. we were up late seeing this incredible debate. on the point of who would be the best commander in chief to lead us in the war against terror, steve, where do you come down on this? >> i would probably say marco rubio had a tremendous night last night. he certainly put out that he is very knowledgeable about the world affairs, certainly on foreign policy. we need a commander in chief who knows foreign policy and can react to it. i think marco rubio demonstrated that. >> amber, do you think he bounced back in his performance after last week around foreign policy? >> he had a much better debate performance last night than the previous week. he sort of redeemed himself. i still thought he was a little scripted. i think myself and what the american people are looking for in a commander in chief is that leadership role. they want a commander in chief who's going to make the command decisions that require split-second decisions with limited intel, limited information that have life or death consequences. i think we saw that last night out o of jeb bush and rubio. >> where do you come down to o this? >> i thought ted cruz showed a lot. he's good on the issues, aggressive. he understands we have to balance civil liberties. he's also a great communicator. one of the failures of the george w. bush administration was when things got tough, he couldn't communicate why we needed to be in remember, why we needed to do the things we needed to do. he lost the support of the country. that would not happen to a president ted cruz. >> let's talk about that failure of leadership that the george w. bush presidency and iraq war, of course a huge topic of debate last night. relitigating the iraq war, never thought i'd see that in a debate. you mentioned george w. bush and the failure there. donald trump went after him calling him a disaster. marco rubio comes to his defense. is that going to hurt marco rubio defending the iraq war? >> no. i think the argument surrounding whether or not we should have gone into iraq -- going into iraq was not the mistake. the mistake was on president obama with the too-early withdrawal from iraq. they made the command decisions they had to make in 2003 on whether or not to go into iraq. you have to live with the consequences. president obama mismanaged the withdrawal that got us into the situation we're in tonight. >> donald trump said it was george w. bush getting us into iraq and creating a power vacuum there. steve, it was smart to go after him in south carolina where he was terribly popular? >> i thought it was a terrible move for donald trump. i was watching and asking myself, is he purposely throwing this election? is he purposefully throwing his chance of becoming the nominee? doing that in south carolina was a terrible move. the republican party and republican people have been defending bush for the last eight years. for him to throw bush under the bus, poor move. >> was it a bad movie in south carolina? >> it was terrible. earlier he said vote for me, i was against the iraq war. when he talked about how 9/11 was bush's fault, he sounded like michael moore. not someone who was ready to be a republican commander in chief. >> do you think george w. bush will help him this week? he's going to be campaigning on jeb bush's behalf in south carolina. do you think it will work for him? >> absolutely. yep. >> there's bush nostalgia there. >> i think so, yes. >> amber, kieran, and steve, great to see you. we're all tired from watching the debate last night. up late, until midnight. thanks. coming up, his death sending shock waves through washington and may impact the course of the country. peter johnson with a look at justice scalia's legacy and what it means for each and every american, next. plus, don't go anywhere. we have a big show ahead. donald trump will be here. ben carson will be here. laura ingram will be here, and newt gingrich, all join us live. at ally bank, no branches equals great rates. it's a fact. kind of like bill splitting equals nitpicking. but i only had a salad. it was a buffalo chicken salad. salad. hi hey you look good. thank you, i feel good. it all starts with eating right. that's why i eat amaz!n prunes now. they're delicious and help keep my body in balance. i love these. sunsweet amaz!n prunes, the feel good fruit. all across the state the economy is growing,arts today. with creative new business incentives, the lowest taxes in decades, and university partnerships, attracting the talent and companies of tomorrow. like in utica, where a new kind of workforce is being trained. and in albany, the nanotechnology capital of the world. let us help grow your company's tomorrow, today at business.ny.gov withof my moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis... ordinary objects often seemed... intimidating. doing something simple... meant enduring a lot of pain. if ra is changing your view of everyday things orencia may help. orencia works differently by targeting a source of ra early in the inflammation process. for many, orencia provides long-term relief of ra symptoms. it's helped new ra patients and those not helped enough by other treatments. do not take orencia with another biologic medicine for ra due to an increased risk of serious infection. serious side effects can occur including fatal infections. cases of lymphoma and lung cancer have been reported. tell your doctor if you're prone to or have any infection like an open sore, the flu, or a history of copd, a chronic lung disease. orencia may worsen your copd. if you're not getting the relief you need... ask your doctor about orencia. orencia. see your ra in a different way. boy: once upon a time, there was a nice house that lived with a family. one day, it started to rain and rain. water got inside and ruined everybody's everythings. the house thought she let the family down. but the family just didn't think a flood could ever happen. the reality is, floods do happen. protect what matters. get flood insurance. visit floodsmart.gov/flood to learn more. welcome back. the nation reacting to the loss this morning of supreme court justice antonin scalia. remembering for his conservative principles, his humor, and his undeniable wit. >> are you cantankerous? >> no, cantankerous? i express myself vividly. those criticisms are opinions, not of my colleague. i'm a good friend of steve brier. i like him a lot and of sandra day o'connor. and of whoever else whose opinions i criticize. >> if they call one of your opinions sheer applesauce? that's fine as long as they can demonstrate that it's true. >> i actually think applesauce is something good to eat. >> well -- it's not good in opinions. >> here to way in on the justice's life of dedication and lasting legacy is fox legal analyst peter johnson jr. >> good morning. >> good morning. >> obviously the sadness, a father, grandfather lost, an american hero. at the same time, a day for celebration of a life and the law of the service of the united states of america. because when you look at judge stall a, here's a guy, a scholarship -- judge scalia, here's a guy, a scholarship guy. xavier high school, jesuit high school in manhattan, a new york boy. son of a sicilian immigrant, a family of teachers. harvard law school. georgetown -- >> valedictorian -- >> a couple of times. magna cum laude. and stuck on his principles as a conservative. as a man who believed that the constitution should be a dead document. and what he meant was i reject the constitution as a living dynamic document that shift every time you want it to shift. that's malleable to your own political inclination as the wind goes. he says, no, rub your nose in the text of the constitution and let's adopt what the founders, what the framers were talking about in the constitution. >> what does he mean for law school students studying some -- he's been known famously, his dissenting opinions on some of these big opinions? what does he mean for law school students? >> let's look at a couple. the first -- it's the rule of law, number one. number two is sticking to your guns, and three is articulating it in a way that is understandable and clear. not only for lawyers and judges but for regular americans. he wasn't afraid to dissent. he became in the 29 years that he was on the bench the great dissenter appointed by ronald reagan i guess in 1986 or so. so let's look at a couple of them. arizona versus the united states. he says we're not talking here about a federal law prohibiting the state from regulating bubble gum advertising or even the construction of nuclear plants. we're talking about a federal law going into the core of state sovereignty. the power exclude. the other case that he is probably going to be remembered for is the famous gore/bush election case. >> yeah. >> he signed the order that allowed the recount to be stayed. and then the united states supreme court decided basically that george bush would be the next president of the united states. he would always contend with liberals that would get upset about it and say how could you be part of that, and his reaction basically was get over it. he would literally say, "get over it." he brought to the court a love of the law, a love of music, a love of literature. a love of the constitution and who we are as a people. >> he wrote clearly. he wrote in a way -- >> the layman, nonlawyer could understand what he was saying. he wasn't a hack. you didn't get an idea that he reached a conclusion before the argument. >> renaissance man is a word that's overused, but he was a renaissance man in america. he's the kind of person whether you're conservative or liberal or mainstream american that you say to your 9 or 10-year-old boy or girl, there is a person that you emulate in terms of scholarship, dedication, commitment to the united states of america, to the flag, to who we were, to who we are, to who we should be. his life should be celebrated today. >> what does the next year or so look like in the replacement process? >> at this point, it's going to be a political mess. we'll talk about that later in the show. will there be a replacement or not, or -- >> if you had to bet, will there be in the next year? >> probably not. >> we'll see you back in a bit. thank you. now to our headlines this morning. a fox news alert -- a mississippi police officer shot in the head overnight as he chased down a pair of armed robbery suspects. the officer was investigating a convenience store robbery when the masked suspects took off running. he chased them for five blocks before he was shot in front of the police department. he was airlift to -- airlifted to the hospital. no word on his condition. the suspects still on the run. millions of your tax dollars going into the pockets of questionable v.a. doctors instead of helping our veterans. a new bombshell report from the "clarion ledger" shows in 2014, $23 million went to more than 2,500 v.a. employees who were put on paid leave. some out of the office for a year. lawmakers say the feds don't have the means to discipline problem employees, and they stay on paid leave far too long. could lsu's legendary football program get sacked? the state's democratic governor threatening to shut down the tigers' fall season. the state is facing a budget shortfall of nearly $1 billion for this year. so the governor says there's a chance public campuses would be forced to close this spring. student athletes would get incomplete grades making them ineligible for the football season. full disclosure, i am an lsu graduate. all right. there it is. a "sports illustrated" upping its game with not one, not two, but three swimsuit issue covers. clayton morris is finally looking up. >> it's about time. >> they include haley clausen, plus-size rookie ashley graham, and ufc star rhonda rousy. the first time "sports illustrated" has released three covers for the swimsuit edition. graham's cover is being praised for including women with different body types. there you have it. >> plus size in the center. >> there you have it. those are the headlines this morning. >> does it need to be sflil you know what i mean? politics now on the swimsuit issue? keep it out of my swimsuit issues. extreme weather report. dangerous deep freeze wreaking havoc on the northeast united states with temperatures slipping into the single digits and below in a lot of places. >> this is why we need the swimsuit issue, to warm us up. the brutal cold being blamed for this -- did you see that yesterday? holy smokes near harrisburg. 50-car pileup on a stretch of interstate in pennsylvania along route 76. at least three people were killed. more than 70 injured. >> rick is tracking more on this cold snap. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. central park, new york city, at minus 1. that's the coldest temperatures that we've had since 1994. 20-some years. boston minus 9, the coldest since 1957. we're pushing 60 years. you get an idea -- it is really cold out here. dangerously cold. a short-lived cold snap that's one bright spot. look at that now. it's 1 in fairbanks. this is what it feels like -- feels like 1. feels like minus 36 in boston. the cold air has settled in across the eastern seaboard. not all the way toward florida, though. obviously we have the cold here now. there you>>. feels like 1 -- there you go. feels like 1 in d.c. minus 5 in quebec city. the actual temperatures come to 0 in new york city. minus 9 in boston. nineus 11 toward buffalo. there's a storm coming, and it's going to bring snow across parts of missouri. and then eventually across the tennessee valley. and then we warm up. guys, we'll be back into the 40s by tuesday with rain. short lived, but a dangerous morning. guys? >> thanks. >> go inside, get some hot chocolate. the question on the internet -- are the two men related? yes, they're noting to know the answer. we'll explain why. >> are they related? and a jam-packed show this morning. donald trump is here. ben carson is here. laura ingram is here. and newt gingrich. we've got a crowded show. it's "fox & friends" this sunday. check out the bass pro shops spring fishing classic and our triple crown bonus. for a limited time, you can get triple rewards points, up to $100 in bonus bucks and free installation with purchase of select marine accessories. trust number one doctor recommended dulcolax constipated? use dulcolax tablets for gentle overnight relief suppositories for relief in minutes and stool softeners for comfortable relief of hard stools. dulcolax, designed for dependable relief . . . . . . . . . . i think we should've taken a tarzan know where tarzan go! tarzan does not know where tarzan go. hey, excuse me, do you know where the waterfall is? waterfall? no, me tarzan, king of jungle. why don't you want to just ask somebody? if you're a couple, you fight over directions. it's what you do. if you want to save fifteen percent or more on car insurance, you switch to geico. oh ohhhhh it's what you do. ohhhhhh! do you have to do that right in my ear? let's talk about social media last night. it's fun to watch the trends and most-searched-for items in the news. >> fun sometimes. >> fun, funny, troubling. here was the most tweeted about moment. we'll get to the sad moments. here was the most tweeted about moment last night. jeb bush going after donald trump. watch this. >> first, i suppose we're showing the most -- >> biggest liar. you probably are worse than jeb bush. you are the single biggest liar. why do you lie? >> don't interrupt -- donald learned -- donald, adults learn not to interrupt. >> i know. >> ooh. trump has a history of this. when he gets into a debate and it gets personal, almost always the message is i'm going to diminish you. i'm stronger than you, more of a man than you. he's basically said this out loud. it kind of works. >> it works. >> right. the back and forth -- >> whether or not it should. i'm not debating the merits. the points in the debate. like who's the bigger figure. >> and going back and forth between bush and trump last night, all over twitter, you saw in real time during the cbs debate the surges and spikes on google, twitters, about the back and forth between bush and trump. specifically around the iraq war and 9/11. and who was to blame, it was your brother, bill clinton? >> while that was one of the most talked about moments of the debate, one of the top trending questions -- >> love this -- >> -- during the debate office jeb bush. it was this -- is jeb bush related to george w. bush? >> well, jeb, you know, signs say jeb with a question mark, to distance himself -- >> it tells you a lot. president bush is coming to south carolina for the first time to campaign for his brother. he hasn't been on the trail previous to this. i think he's coming monday. that's by design, of course. the question is does it help when voters learn that jeb bush is george w. bush's brother? >> they also ask the question because jeb kept bringing up his mom, people were searching on google for who is jeb bush's mom. that was -- these were real searches last night -- >> that will help jeb bush. >> this is one ofclated -- offic-- one of clayton's segments. the special counsel to bill clinton is up next with more. we're just getting started. a huge show, tremendous show, in fact, donald trump will join us in a minute. and ben carson, laura ingram, newt gingrich, they're all here. change your channel at your peril. it would be insane. don't do it. see me. see me. don't stare at me. see me. see me. see me to know that psoriasis is just something that i have. i'm not contagious. see me to know that i won't stop. until i find what works. discover cosentyx, a different kind of medicine for moderate to severe plaque psoriasis. proven to help the majority of people find clear or almost clear skin. 8 out of 10 people saw 75% skin clearance at 3 months. while the majority saw 90% clearance. do not use if you are allergic to cosentyx. before starting, you should be tested for tuberculosis. an increased risk of infections and lowered ability to fight them may occur. tell your doctor if you have an infection or symptoms... ...such as fever, sweats, chills, muscle aches or cough. or if you have received a vaccine or plan to. if you have crohn's disease, tell your doctor as symptoms can worsen. serious allergic reactions may occur. see me. see me. see me on my way. find clear skin and a clearer path forward. for a different kind of medicine, ask your dermatologist about cosentyx. four score and seven years ago, our [train horn blares]th-- ... to the continent... [claps] ... a new nation. announcer: why not celebrate presidents day with a better night's sleep? through presidents day at sleep train get up to four years interest-free financing on tempur-pedic, and save up to $300 on beautyrest and posturepedic, plus same-day delivery, and sleep train's love your mattress guarantee. hurry! this special financing offer ends presidents day at sleep train. this week denigrates the disable and it's really weak to call john mccain a loser -- >> i never called him -- >> that is outrageous. that is an american hero. he also said -- i've laid out my plans. >> he said about language. two days ago he said he would take his pants off and moon everybody. and that's fine. nobody reports that. >> what i've been watching here this back and forth and these attacks some of them are personal. i think we're fixing to lose the election to hillary clinton if we don't stop this. >> holy smokes. explosions on stage last night in south carolina at the debate. did republicans make a mistake by targeting one another rather than hillary clinton and bernie sanders? joining us this morning lanny davis, former white house special council to president bill clinton, a law school friend of both clintons. great to see you, lanny. >> i had a great time watching last night, tucker. enjoyable reality television. >> so let's say present trends continue and trump gets the nomination and democrats are like, oh, he's a racist, he's so mean. what else are they going to run on him on? here's a guy against the iraq war, hillary clinton famously voted for the iraq war, how do you pin this guy as some sort of right wing maniac when he's to the left of hillary on foreign policy? >> well, i don't need to use labels. he speaks for himself. he insults, he demeans, he interrupts, he's grouchy, he's not a presidential character. and certainly if he runs for president we just have to let him show that he's not really president of the united states caliber. >> oh, so just on style points? isn't that kind of an elitist position? >> no, it's not icky things. he's insulting people, the audience and his fellow candidates. a president has to be focused on representing our country. he's an embarrassment. aside from that he still hasn't told me or you what's he going to do about 12 million people who are here? is he deporting them back or not? how is he going to pay for his programs? what in god's name is he talking about in the middle east? who is he supporting, putin in russia or the american foreign policy position that is bipartisan? so there are issues he can't explain because he uses insults instead of explanations. >> i wonder why so many democrats are voting for him, so many moderates, democrats, independents, exactly the people hillary clinton would need to get elected president. they're for trump. isn't there a lesson in there for you, you think? >> well, we have to appeal to our base working class democrats. >> working class democrats are not supporting hillary clinton. look at exit polls from new hampshire. that's just not happening. no working class people, rich people are supporting hillary. >> i would not say no working class people. >> very few. >> bernie sanders has shown great appeal to working class democrats. when we are a party united, we will have the support of working class democrats versus a republican candidate who wants to cut taxes on the wealthy and increase taxes on the middle class to pay for their programs. look at what trump has proposed. but what about marco rubio, just to get my reaction to him in. i heard somebody say he actually did well. can you tell whether someone who is for immigration reform along with senator mccain and senator schumer who's now against immigration reform chrks way does he go on that? and he and ted cruz both are accusing each other with throwing food. this is what we democrats love to watch. >> that's true. it's ob secured the positions of the democratic contenders. hillary clinton for example is for giving driver's licenses to illegal aliens in california. is that something she wants to defend in public? is anybody for that other than her? >> well, i don't know whether she's for driver's licenses -- >> she said she is. >> but i do know that she's for a pathway to citizenship the way that jeb bush is for a pathway to legal residence. and marco rubio in florida voted in favor of giving welfare benefits and other benefits to illegal aliens. so we need to at least find out what are we going to do with 12 million people, some of whom are good taxpayers, have children, have been part of this country for 30 or 40 years. and they're living in the shadows. what hillary clinton is trying to say, whether it's driver's license or anything else, we have to have an answer to that question. what's trump's answer? >> let them all in they'll vote democrat. that's hillary's answer. give us a preview of the talking points over the fight over justice scalia's replacement. mitch mcconnell said we're not taking this up before a new president is elected. what are democrats going to say to that? >> first of all, it is a serious question. hillary clinton has said it's an outrage and dishonors the constitution to expect the president for one year not to nominate a crucial ninth supreme court justice. but my point which everyone watching whether you agree or disagree are going to agree with this. if it was a republican president, is there any doubt with one year left before the election that republicans would be saying the republican president should nominate somebody? this is all about political hypocrisy when mitch mcconnell and all the republicans are saying he's got to wait for the american people to decide. do you have any doubt, tucker, if it was a republican president the positions would be reversed? >> no, of course. they agree with the republican president. they're not afraid a republican president will bring the country into venezuela land. >> i say it's a double standard, but we both agree. >> lanny davis, good to see you this morning. >> thank you, tucker. should republicans push back if president obama tries to support a supreme court justice to replace antonin scalia before the next presidential election? laura ingraham joins us at the top of the hour for advice. and dr. ben carson will be here too and donald trump. it's a packed show. don't go away. i take prilosec otc each morning for my frequent heartburn because you can't beat zero heartburn! ahhh the sweet taste of victory! prilosec otc. one pill each morning. 24 hours. zero heartburn. good morning everybody. this sunday february 14th, happy valentine's day. i'm sandra smith. and i am in for anna this morning. fox news alert, the supreme court's leading conservative voice silenced. justi justice antonin scalia dead at 79. >> those are criticisms of my opinions, not of my colleague. >> how the fiery justice is being remembered by friends and colleagues this morning. >> and then justice scalia's death has set up a showdown in washington over who gets to pick his successor. >> i think it's uch to mitch mcconnell and everybody else to stop it. it's called delay, delay, delay. >> i do not believe the president should appoint someone and it's not unprecedented. >> the next president needs to appoint someone with a proven conservative record similar to justice scalia. >> so president obama says he gets to choose and do it right away. the republican controlled senate says no way, we're blocking you. will they hang tough or will they cave to the president? we'll bring you the latest. andont-runner donald trump finding himself right in the middle of the fireworks last night. >> well, donald trump was building a reality tv show, my brother was building a security apparatus to keep us safe. >> the world trade center came down during your brother's reign, remember that. >> i'll tell you -- >> the biggest liar -- you are probably worse than jeb bush. >> whoa. >> you're a liar, no you're a liar. this hour donald trump joins us live. fox & friends hour three begins right now. let's get right to it. fox news alert this morning. america is remembering a supreme court crusader, the iconic justice antonin scalia died yesterday at the age of 79. >> his death sets up a rare opportunity for a president -- for president obama to appoint a recess nominee. will he try to do that? we're live at the white house with the very latest. good morning, doug. >> reporter: morning, guys. the flag here at the white house remains at half-staff and it will remain that way until sunset on the day of justice scalia's internment. the president last night offers condolences to justice scalia's family calling him a brilliant mind and larger than life presence on the bench. but all of the kind words belie what is likely to be a huge political fight ahead over his replacement. here's the president speaking last night. >> obviously today is a time to remember justice scalia's legacy. i plan to fulfill my constitutional responsibilities to nominate a successor in due time. there will be plenty of time for me to do so and for the senate to fulfill its responsibility to give that person a fair hearing and a timely vote. >> but even before the president spoke last night, senate majority leader mitch mcconnell threw a great big wet blanket on the president's plan. he said, and i'm quoting, the american people should have a voice in the selection of their next supreme court justice there are this vacancy should not be filled until we have a new president. mcconnell's statement also echoed by the man who would conduct the confirmation hearing, the chairman of the senate judiciary committee chuck grassley says the fact of the matter it's been standard practice for over the last nearly 80 years that they are not confirmed during a presidential election year. to signal the huge fight that lies ahead, senate minor it leader harry reid said it would be unprecedented for the supreme court to go a year with a vacant seat. there remains the possibility that the president could make a recess appointment. there is a narrow, narrow window over this week for him to do so. still that recess appointee would have to be confirmed by the senate if it were to happen. the last recess appointment made to the supreme court was done in the eisenhower administration in 1956 when william brennan was made a recess appointee. back to you in new york. >> stayed for an awful long time. doug, thanks a lot. we bring in now laura ingraham who in addition to everything else she does is a lawyer and knows an awful lot about the supreme court. i think she joins us by phone. laura, you there? >> it's good to talk to you guys. this obviously sends shock waves through the legal community. i personally just personal before we get into the jurs prudential issues. the first time i met justice scalia was in 1986 i was working in the reagan administration and i went to congratulate him on his son being named to the supreme court. he was 50 years old and he's the kind of person the first time you met him he was -- you know, the phrase larger than life gets thrown around a lot. but he truly was that both in mind and intellect and personality, in approach, in kindness. i think a lot of folks on the left feed off of justice scalia's originalism on the court as, quote, harsh. but for him it was the least conceited thing not substituting your own personal preference for the wisdom of the framers and the original text of the constitution. so he thought that was the best of all the theories that could possibly be applied to reading statutes and interpreting the constitution. so as a man, just a towering figure as a person and as a personal friend that just had dinner with him a couple weeks ago in washington for a big catholic charity. he was as usual -- i literally cannot think of him without smiling. he was that kind of person. whether you were playing squash with him or tennis or whether you were talking about the court and everything that was happening. i clerked for justice thomas in 192 and 1993 on the court and it was a wonderful experience for all the reasons but because he was a personal friend as justice thomas became so the two of them very, very close friends. let's talk about what's at stake now for the country. as we saw last night at the debate, this is a critical juncture for the court as tight as the 5-4 balance is. the president not stick his chin out there say, look, come hell or high water i'm going to put a recess appointee on the court. i think that's going to further polarize the country that we've seen over the last few years under his administration. i wouldn't be surprised if he did it, but it will unify the republicans that are badly needing unification right now given the two months of the primary process. >> let's look at last night. you mentioned the debate and off the top of the debate last night was a somber moment, a moment of silence. and then they were asked, the candidates, about what to do with an appointment during this election year. here's their response. >> i think that we ought to let the next president of the united states decide who is going to run that supreme court with a vote by the people of the united states of america. >> the next president needs to appoint someone with a proven conservative record similar to justice scalia that is a lover of liberty, that believes in limited government. >> the senate needs to stand strong and say we're not going to give up the u.s. supreme court for a generation by allowing barack obama to make one more liberal appointee. >> someone on this stage will get to choose the balance of the supreme court. and it will begin by filling this vacancy that's there now. >> i think it's up to mitch mcconnell and everybody else to stop it. it's called delay, delay, delay. >> laura, does this -- the death of justice scalia affirm ted cruz's position? he's been out there talking about the court running amok and that the next nominee should have the opportunity to put someone on there who is not an idealogue. >> ted is the best, i thinkin, this conversation to explain it to the electorate, the citize y citizenry, i think he understands better than anyone on that stage last night how critical it is. that being said, his sister on the third circuit court of appeals, mary ann barry trump, trump is not a neophyte to this either. his sister is a senior judge on one of the most important federal circuit courts in the land. and he in that moment where he says, well, you supported that guy john roberts who gave us two votes for obamacare. so the back and forth is fascinating and jarring. yet, i think cruz without a doubt has the -- you know, has an incredible resume and speaks fluidly about the issues of substantive due process. >> right. >> abortion rights. you know, all of the case law that has been so close over the last really since i clerked on the court 1993. i mean, the case law has been tight on a lot of these issues. a lot of these issues of the day not just social issues but is e issues involving terrorism, clearly the fourth amendment. noi going to be 4-4 decisions probably going to be held over to the next term that justice scalia was in the process of writing this term. >> laura, while we have you i can't resist getting your reaction to the debate last night. donald trump came out against the war in iraq, caused a lot of people to be pretty uncomfortable. but he also pushed a lot of the other people on the stage to basically defend the war in iraq. marco rubio specifically. how does this play? does it hurt trump more or rubio more? >> well, i think it's a risky strategy, but i think this is what he's thinking. he's thinking that there are millions and millions of republican voters who have had the luxury of some time to look back on whether the war in iraq was really a good idea. you know, all the money we spent, all the men and women we lost. and i think a lot of republicans, the establishment doesn't like to hear this, tucker, but i think millions and millions of republicans probably agree with trump that in the end this was a disaster for the united states. we've lost influence in the middle east. we toppled dictators who probably had their finger on the dike of what was going to be a flood of timult. and he's betting people aren't just going to reject the republican party of today and the election, they're going to reject the republican party of the bushes. and i think it was a preemptive strike he was launching against w. who's coming to south carolina on monday. and he wanted to set this up as a preemptive strike against the entire bush administration. >> and mentioning bush, a lot of people this morning waking up after watching that debate last night, laura, and talking about jeb bush. we have guests saying that was a breakthrough moment. his best debate yet. what was your take? >> i mean, i think ts people think he had a breakthrough moment are the people who were upset jeb hadn't done better. i guess he did better than he did in the second debate, but i don't think that really says much. i think the same old fault lines exist and the most memorable ones the debate as usual comes from trump as entertainer in chief however the line was that jeb had. if they think they're going to re-litigate the iraq war throughout the united states in the primary process and that's going to end well for them, i don't think it is. that's my -- i don't think that's going to end well. >> laura ingraham, thank you for joining us this morning. >> thank you. well, he got justice scalia to open up about his fiery personality. >> are you cantankerous? >> i'm not cantankerous, i express myself vividly. >> chris wallace reacts to scalia's passing next. >> just ahead, dr. ben carson and donald trump will join us here on fox news. at ally bank, no branches equals great rates. it's a fact. kind of like grandkids equals free tech support. oh, look at you, so great to see you! none of this works. come on in. 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(flourish spray noise) share the joy. boy: once upon a time, there was a nice house that lived with a family. one day, it started to rain and rain. water got inside and ruined everybody's everythings. the house thought she let the family down. but the family just didn't think a flood could ever happen. the reality is, floods do happen. protect what matters. get flood insurance. call the number on your screen to learn more. are you cantankerous? >> i'm not cantankerous. i express myself vividly. those criticisms are criticisms of opinions, not of my colleague. i'm a good friend of steve breyer, i like him a lot, and sandra day o'connor and whoever else opinion i criticize. >> and criticize your opinion of share apple sauce? >> that's fine. as long as they can demonstrate it's true. >> i actually think apple sauce is something good to eat. >> well, it's not good in opinions. >> there's chris wallace interviewing justice scalia back in 2012. chris, to watch that video now of course in the wake of this news, what does that say to you? >> well, look, it was one of the favorite interviews i've done in my 12-plus years here on fox news sunday. two points, he is so brilliant. and he was so much fun to be around. i mean, he was just bursting with wit and bursting with brain power. and he's missed. i mean, whether you agreed or disagreed with his judicial philosophy and the positions he took on a lot of the central issues in our life here in america, you couldn't help but like him. and you couldn't help but admire the ferocity, the sheer brilliance with which he defended and expressed his opinions. >> chris, what did you make of a senate majority leader mitch mcconnell just very shortly after the passing of scalia coming out and saying that his vacancy should not be filled until the next president has been chosen? >> this is going to be a battle. you know, in a funny way it's almost fitting because although he was not a politician, he made it clear he wasn't a politician. he was a jurist, scalia loved the cut and thrust of political debate. and we're going to have quite a debate now in this country. barack obama's got 11 months as president, he's clearly going to name somebody. and my guess is he's going to try to get maximum political advantage for it and try to put republicans in kind of a box. but it becomes pretty clear both from what you heard from mitch mcconnell the senate majority leader and what you heard on that debate stage last night in south carolina, the republicans have no intention -- now with justice scalia's passing this is divided down the middle, four conservatives, four liberals. and if you appoint an obama judge to replace antonin scalia, the whole balance of the court and its decisions on a lot of the most important issues facing the country, it all changes. >> and democratic appointees never move right where as the opposite of course is not true. do you think the president can fill that ninth seat with a recess appointment? >> well, first of all, the court -- i mean, the senate i suspect is not going to go into recess for the rest of this year. and remember, it was the supreme court that ruled that his recess appointment -- obama's recess appointment of three people to the national labor relations board was invalid. and they overturned it because they said the president doesn't get to decide when the senate is in recess, the senate gets to decide that. now, the key question, and i hadn't thought of this but somebody raised it last night in our specials coverage is i believe that the senate goes out on january 3rd of next year. that their term runs out. of course the president's term doesn't end until january 20th of next year. so he would have, according to my math, 17 days to make a recess appointment. i believe that's the case. now, he wouldn't have a lifetime appointment. he'd have a recess appointment for the length of that congress, but still, he might well be able to make a supreme courtecess appointment on his way out the door with just 17 days left in office. >> chris, you spoke on fox news sunday to bernie sanders. and you asked him this question about antonin scalia. take a listen. >> there is already a fierce argument after the passing of justice antonin scalia, democrats say the president should name and the senate should confirm his successor, republicans say that should be left to the next president. where do you stand, sir? >> i think we want a full contingent on the united states supreme court. we are dealing with enormously important issues. the constitution is pretty clear. president makes the appointment, senate confirms, let's get on with our business. >> your take there, chris? >> well, it's clear. there's the battle. that's the battle lines being drawn there. the democrats are going to say, hey, he's president for 11 months, name a supreme court justice and the republicans are going to say, you can name them, we're not going to confirm them. >> all right. well, chris, fox news sunday is always can't miss tv, but special guests bernie sanders and marco rubio today. fox news sunday. thanks, chris. >> you bet, thanks, guys. >> dr. ben carson here next. stay tuned for that. i've smoked a lot and quit a lot, but ended up nowhere. now i use this. the nicoderm cq patch, with unique extended release technology, helps prevent the urge to smoke all day. i want this time to be my last time. that's why i choose nicoderm cq. the flame is out... ugh...today the flame is out, tomorrow my attitude... your mother... antonio. antonio. que? 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[claps] ... a new nation. announcer: why not celebrate presidents day with a better night's sleep? through presidents day at sleep train get up to four years interest-free financing on tempur-pedic, and save up to $300 on beautyrest and posturepedic, plus same-day delivery, and sleep train's love your mattress guarantee. hurry! this special financing offer ends presidents day at sleep train. welcome back. some quick headlines now. the terror group al shabaab now claiming responsibility for that deadly midair explosion on a somalia jet that was packed with people. the suspect bomber was the only person killed though. he was sucked out of that hole right out of the plane. the plane then landed safely. the bomber apparently used a wheelchair to get past security. that's called karma. and a brand new batch of hillary clinton's e-mails just released by the state department has 81 marked classified e-mails. in one e-mail clinton asks one of her counselors, how to keep her husband, bill, in check during the 20 -- election cycle. >> what does the constitution say about whose duty is here to act in this kind of situation? >> we need to start thinking about the di visiveness that is going on in our country. i looked at some of the remarks that people made after find e finding out that justice scalia had died. and they were truly nasty remarks. we should be thinking about how can we create some healing in this land. but right now we're not going to get healing with president obama. >> right. republican presidential candidate dr. ben carson joining us live this morning. good morning to you, sir. >> good morning. >> so, how would you summarize your debate performance last night? >> well, i was pleased to actually be included in the debate without having to jump up and down on the screen saying me too. but there was some extent of that but not as it was before. there was an opportunity to direct people towards more things rather than the food fight which is really irritating. >> seems like you were driving people a lot to your website to drive people to see some of your substantive responses to some of these questions. >> well, not only that -- i was going to say not only that but this past week i spent one hour in front of national security forum just being asked questions about national security. and that will be up soon. people will be able to see that this is not a deficit area for me. >> of course it was the focus of a lot of the debate last night and the iraq war and the lines were really clear. should the republican party, should rank and file republicans, embrace the iraq war, or should they disavow it? which side are you on? >> well, i don't think that it was the right thing to do in the beginning. but i do think it was a good idea to get rid of saddam hussein. and my reasons are a little different than everybody else's. you know, they were thinking about weapons of mass destruction. i'm thinking about the fact that he killed hundreds of thousands of his own people and was a real monster. but there are other ways to get rid of people without, you know, invading the country and creating instability. >> and destabilizing the region, which was one of the main arguments from donald trump last night on the stage. do you think your debate performance last night was sufficient to help you move the needle in south carolina? >> well, it really kind of depends on whether people are really listening or if they're looking for entertainment. if they're looking for entertainment, probably not. if they're looking for someone who really gives them an alternative from the status quo, which is just going to lead us to the same places, and if they're looking for somebody who has a history of solving problems and if they go and actually look at my policies and say they make tremendous sense, then i think it will move the needle. and the people in south carolina are a little smarter than some other people, so we'll see. >> well, we know as we're running on the bottom of the screen right now that foreign affairs, the economy, these are still the biggest topics for the american people. what's your strategy? what are you going to do going forward? i mean, things got fierce last night, dr. carson. the battle is heating up. what are you going to do to stay in it? >> well, i will continue to make appearances until the actual voting takes place. i'm going to be doing a lot of media particularly local media television and radio getting to the people. and that's going to be the key. >> so what was it -- i mean, you were on the stage last night. people are screaming at each other, calling one another liars. it really got bitter and personal. what was it like when the cameras were off? did people talk, shake hands, did the hostility linger on stage? >> no. when the cameras not looking at them they engage in cordial conversation. you know, it's largely a show. they know it. and i say it's like ancient rome. everybody wanted to go to the coliseum and watch the lions tearing everybody apart while their society was crumbling around them. >> wow. >> we're having exactly the same phenomenon right now. and hopefully we will wake up in time. >> boy, i hope before the vandals show up. that would be bad. dr. carson, great to seau this morning. thanks a lot for doing this. >> thank you so much. donald trump of course is the very center of the fireworks during the debate last night. >> while donald trump was building a reality tv show, my brother was building a security apparatus to keep us safe. >> the world trade center came down during your brother's reign, remember that. [ audience booing ] >> you are the biggest liar. you are probably worse than jeb bush. >> and it got more intense from there. donald trump joins us live next. don't go away. i tried depend last weekend. it really made the difference between a morning around the house and getting a little exercise. only depend underwear has new confidence core technology for fast absorption and the smooth, comfortable fit of fit-flex™ protection. get a coupon at depend.com . . . i wanted to know who i am and where i came from. i did my ancestrydna and i couldn't wait to get my pie chart. the most shocking result was that i'm 26% native american. i had no idea. just to know this is what i'm made of, this is where my ancestors came from. and i absolutely want to know more about my native american heritage. it's opened up a whole new world for me. discover the story only your dna can tell. order your kit now at ancestrydna.com george bush made a mistake. we can make mistakes. but that one was a beauty. we should have never been in iraq. we have destabilized the middle east. you do whatever you want, you call it whatever you want. i want to tell you they lied. they said there were weapons of mass destruction. there weren't none. and they knew there were none. there were no weapons of mass destruction. >> okay. [ audience booing ] >> i'm sick and tired of barack obama blaming my brother for all of the problems that he's had. and frankly -- [ cheers and applause ] -- i could care less about the insults donald trump gives to me. it's blood sport for him. he enjoys it and i'm glad he's happy about it. but i am sick and tired of him going after my family. my dad is the greatest man alive in my mind. >> those are clips from the debate last night in south carolina. not even the most intense moments of that debate, which was really kind of amazing. donald trump was at the center of it all, joins us live by phone. mr. trump, good to have you. you won the drudge poll in the aftermath of that debate. i'm interested in this question. you came out against the iraq war 13 years later said it was a flat out disaster. couple other candidates including marco rubio in effect defended the invasion of iraq. what side do you think most republicans in 2016 are on? >> i think everybody agrees, almost, even jeb it took him five days to come up with an answer, he's not too sharp. five days announced good thing, bad thing. ultimately he said it was a bad thing. but the iraq war was a disaster. it was a mistake. we spent $2 trillion, thousands of lives, tucker, thousands of lives, wounded warriors who we love all over the place. what do we have? nothing. absolutely nothing. iran is taking over iraq as sure as you're sitting there. and that's the way it is. we get nothing. they get the oil, they get everything. we get nothing. so it was a huge mistake. whether people like it or not. and i'm the only one with the vision to have said don't do it. and i wasn't even a politician when i said that. >> donlald, of course last nigh you took on george w. bush a lot of opponents saying that was a huge mistake. south carolina george w. bush is hugely popular, going to campaigning for jeb this week. you obviously disagree with that point? >> i don't think it was a mistake to say the war was a tremendous mistake. i think the people in south carolina, which i know, who i know very well and i'm doing very well there, i think most of them understand, look, all smart people know that the war in iraq was a huge bungle. it was a huge mistake. it was a tremendous mistake. and then it was made worse when obama got us out the wrong way. he should have left some people there. i was against the war, but the way he got out was terrible. and it led to all of the things that you see right now, which is a total catastrophe. but getting us into that war was a mistake. now, if i'm going to say that, and that's going to be neg fif tr me, then i'm going to have to say it any way because i tell the truth. don't forget, in that room you had so many special interests. you had all special interests and lobbyists. and they're all cheering on their candidate because their candidates will do whatever they want them to do. i'm self-funding my campaign. i'm putting up my own money, so i had my wife and my children there. and they had lots of people, and lots of people have a lot of things to say. jeb bush spent $148 million on this campaign. and he's nowhere. he's not going to go anywhere. >> let's listen to some of the audience reaction last night, donald, specifically around your attack about george w. bush and 9/11. take a listen to the aurd yedie reaction to the boos. >> okay. let me just tell you this. jeb is so wrong. jeb is absolutely -- [ audience booing ] -- just so you understand. you know who that is? that's jeb's special interests and lobbyists talking. let me just tell you something -- [ audience booing ] -- jeb is so wrong. >> so in the room all these boos. tucker mentioned the drudge poll. there's a blaze poll after on the internet that had you, you know, crushing the other candidates last night. >> well, there's a "time" magazine poll too and i was at 77%. that's a lot when you have six people up there. i was at 77% that i won. so obviously the people out there agree. don't forget, tucker you said it fantastically, something's going to have to happen with the party or we're going to lose yet another election. i'm not even doing it to win election, i'm doing it out of common sense. the war was a horrible thing. if we're not going to admit that, you're going to have yet another election where the democrats are going to win. and guys like, you know, ted cruz, cannot win an election. he's he's nasty, he's not a leader. >> donald, speaking of ted cruz, he last night took you on and said that you would appoint liberals if elected. listen. we want your reaction on the other side. >> you know, flexibility is a good thing, but it shouldn't -- you shouldn't be flexible on core principles. i like donald. he is an amazing entertainer, but his policies for most of his life -- >> thank you very much, i appreciate it. >> for most of his life his policies have been very, very liberal. for most of his life he has described himself as very pro-choice, and as a supporter of partial birth abortion. right now today as a candidate he supports federal taxpayer funding for planned parenthood. i disagree with him on that. that's a matter of principle. and i'll tell you, if donald trump is president, he will appoint liberals. if donald trump is president, your second amendment will go away. >> reaction to that, mr. trump? >> well, it's a lie. but let me say about politici s politicians. he goes i like donald trump, i really like donald trump. that's a lie. he doesn't like me. this is political speak. these guys they always say it's like jeb bush and marco, they say, oh, i like him very much. i like him. they hate each other. this is all politics. this is political speech when he says he likes me. just so you understand, diane sikes, judge -- i will tell you this, justice john roberts, tucker, you know him well, was put on the bench. he was forced in by jeb bush through his brother. he was forced in through cruz. cruz wanted him more than anybody. cruz put him on, cruz pushed him like crazy. what did he do? twice he could have ended obamacare. twice despite all knowledge, despite everything, nobody could believe it he voted in favor of obamacare. we should call it roberts care because justice roberts gave us obamacare. it should have been terminated twice. he was pushed in there by cruz. cruz is the one that wanted him. and he pushed him hard. so cruz is telling me about appointing supreme court justices? justice john roberts was a disaster. we have obamacare because of him. >> so i want to get back to how the republican party should change. so your point is another romney campaign is not going to work. how does the republican party need to change in order to win this election and govern effectively? >> well, somebody said last night about i was a conservative, i wasn't a conservative. you know what i am, and i came up with the term last night, i think the first time. i'm a common sense conservative. we have to use common sense. we have to have strong borders. i'm stronger than anybody on the borders. i mean, sheriff joe from arizona endorsed me, that should tell you right there. but i'm stronger than anybody on the borders. i'm stronger than anybody on trade. you know that, tucker, from dealing with me for a long time. i'm stronger -- nobody's even close to me. i want to end obamacare. i want to end common core. we have to end common core and do education locally or we're dying. i'm stronger than anybody on the second amendment. but i'm also somebody that is common sense. we have a party that's gridlocked. we're not going to win the election. i mean, i can win states that nobody else can win. i can win michigan. i can win new york. i can win states that aren't even in play for these other people. somebody like ted cruz i won't even talk about jeb bush because he's got no chance. you know, in new hampshire jeb bush spent $43 million. i spent $3 million and i won by 21 points. and he was like fifth. so this is -- i mean, are we going to have a guy like this as our president? >> well, we heard you say last night your best debate performance yet, donald? >> well, i think i did very good. i mean, it was a different kind of a performance because everybody was gunning for me. >> okay. >> you know, i think i did great. if you look at drudge and look at "time" magazine and every single poll said i won by a lot. but i'm very modest and i refuse to say that. >> well, you are fired up this morning. >> next saturday of course -- >> hey, tucker woke me up. there's no question about it. >> good to have you. donald trump. >> thank you all very much. i appreciate it. >> thank you. well, you just heard how donald trump thinks he did last night. how does a jeb bush supporter think his candidate did? illinois congressman and veteran adam kinzinger up next. i've been blind since birth. i go through periods where it's hard to sleep at night, and stay awake during the day. learn about non-24 by calling 844-844-2424. or visit my24info.com. yeah. yeah. then how'd i get this... [ voice of dennis ] ...allstate safe driving bonus check? what is that? [ normal voice ] so weird, right? my agent, tom, said... [ voice of dennis ] ...only allstate sends you a bonus check for every six months you're accident-free... [ normal voice ] ...but i'm a woman. maybe it's a misprint. does it look like a misprint? ok. what i was trying... [ voice of dennis ] silence. ♪ ask an allstate agent about the safe driving bonus check. are you in good hands? you just heard from donald trump, so how does a jeb bush supporter think his candidate did last night? >> well, let's ask illinois congressman and jeb bush surrogate adam kinzinger. nice to see you this morning, congressman. >> good to be here. thanks for having me. >> yeah. >> so you look at some of the immediate debate reaction, looked like marco rubio had a strong night. he was sort of being praised as the guy that defended george w. bush. do you think that jeb bush did an adequate job of defending his brother last night? >> oh, yeah. look, when you watch how jeb did, i think, you know, over the last three or four debates he's gotten progressively even stronger. i think last night was his best debate. not just performance but substance. this is why i like the governor so much. he understands people's anger, but he shows a path out. he says, look, here's how we're going to get to a point where we don't have to be angry because we have a country that we know and a country that's working again. and, you know, you contrast that to your previous guest, donald trump, where it's just about pushing people down and being angry and yelling, it's a very different candidate. i thought, look, he was the only guy on the stage to take on donald trump too. everybody's kind of frightened about it. i was very proud of his performance and i think he's going to do very well in south carolina. >> congressman, you and i have had a chance to talk about this on several occasions. and whether or not jeb bush is going to have that turning point, that moment in this election where he becomes realistic, a realistic threat to a guy, a leading candidate like donald trump. donald trump just dismissed jeb bush as not even somebody he's worried about. was last night a turning point for jeb bush or not? >> donald trump may not be worried about jeb in his mind, but he's really worried about anybody that says anything negative about him. i mean, he's got such thin skin. it's unbelievable. it's like a third grade thin skin. but look, i think if you look at how jeb did in new hampshire, you look at the fact that everybody's kind of in a fight for second place. and i think now a fight for first place after last night's debate performance by trump. this is a jump ball. but the inspiration that jeb has here in south carolina, it's a strong veterans community. 12 living medal of honor recipients that have endorsed him. when i was walking around downtown greenville campaigning and shaking hands, people really like jeb. so i think this is going to be a great state for us. look, we have a lot of great candidates in this race. but i think jeb stands head and shoulders above frankly everybody else. >> you are a man who served in the military, we had a military panel on our show earlier this morning to discuss the debate performances last night. they all either said that it was marco rubio or ted cruz that came out strongest on foreign policy and the most likely to succeed in leading our military. why jeb bush? >> well, look, again, ted cruz, marco rubio, great guys, they're senators. jeb has a record of leadership in florida, but not just talking about his record. he wants to marry that record to performance in the future to turning the country around. the greatest threat right now to our civilization is our national debt. the second greatest is isis. and he has a comprehensive plan to defeat and destroy isis, to push back against russia. i mean, last night donald trump basically praised russia and putin as he's done over the last few months. and attacked george w. bush. this is a party that appreciates the leadership of george w. bush and frankly understands that putin is a bully and an actual threat to the security of our nato partners in america. so, again, jeb's the only guy that really pushed back on that. i think he would be a fantastic commander in chief, but we have a lot of great candidates out here. >> congressman, good stuff. we had a panel to kick off fox and friends this morning despite their political beliefs on either side they said they thought that was jeb bush's best night. traded a lot of barbs with donald trump. thank you, congressman. >> you bet. take care, guys. >> things did get heated last night during the gop debate. so how did the moderators handle everything? >> senator marco rubio, please weigh-in? >> on anything i want? >> oh, i thought -- >> let me talk about poverty. >> howie knows a few things about debates. he's going to be here to grade those moderators next. what if one piece of kale could protect you from diabetes? what if one sit-up could prevent heart disease? one. wishful thinking, right? but there is one step you can take to help prevent another serious disease. pneumococcal pneumonia. if you are 50 or older, one dose of the prevnar 13® vaccine can help protect you from pneumococcal pneumonia, an illness that can cause coughing, chest pain, difficulty breathing, and may even put you in the hospital. even if you have already been vaccinated with another pneumonia vaccine, prevnar 13® may help provide additional protection. prevnar 13® is used in adults 50 and older to help prevent infections from 13 strains of the bacteria that cause pneumococcal pneumonia. you should not receive prevnar 13® if you have had a severe allergic reaction to the vaccine or its ingredients. if you have a weakened immune system, you may have a lower response to the vaccine. common side effects were pain, redness or swelling at the injection site, limited arm movement, fatigue, headache, muscle or joint pain, less appetite, chills, or rash. get this one done. ask your doctor or pharmacist about prevnar 13® today. hold on. >> you know how i know that? >> i'm going to turn this car around. senator marco rubio, please weigh in. >> on anything i want? >> i thought you had -- >> let me talk about poverty. >> i thought you had a point you want to make. >> i do. >> i think that was me that had a point. >> you're on the on deck circle, sir. >> governor kasich please weigh in. >> i got to tell you. this is just crazy. this is just nuts. oh, man. i'm sorry, john. >> why is it nuts? talk about it. >> as governor kasich said, jeez, oh, man. how did the moderators do and what about the audience. here to tell us howie kurtz. the audience, i don't remember audiences participating to this degree in previous debates. >> no. and i found it very distracting. particularly partisans of ted cruz and marco rubio. in the fall general election debates, the moderators asked the audience to be quiet. i thought it became so disruptive that it might have been a good idea. >> john dickerson of cbs, some say he lost control last night. what did you think? >> i'm going to give him an a. particularly for a person that came to it late in life. there are a couple times when trump and cruz were going at it and it threatened to spin out of control. he found new angles and new information. for instance, when dickerson asked about -- dug up an old quote from 2008 where trump had spoken sympathetically of the impeachment of george w. bush. it helped push things in a new direction. >> yeah, you could lose a finger or two if you got to close. so major garrett? >> i give major garrett a b plus. it was his job to get into the weeds on policy specifics. thought he did a good job. it added a nice layer of substance while dickerson was asking questions that were going to often create some fireworks, major garrett drilled down. >> kimberly of the "wall street journal," what did you think? >> i give her a b in part because she didn't get many chances. if you're going to put somebody on, give them more of a chance. i think kim strassel did provide an important perspective. she had a specific role to play. i thought she did it well. >> she's very smart, obviously, but who takes positions on specific candidates on the stage, is that uncomfortable? >> kbryeah, i think it raises a serious question. sheas been pretty tough on donald trump for example. this came up with national view getting kicked out of one of the debates after they published that whole issue of donald trump not being a real conservative. i'm all for vibrancy of opinion. when you have moderators up there, they probably ought to be people who have not taken a firm stand. >> otherwise, it's pretty easy for the candidates to dismiss them. howie kurtz, coming up after our show. >> insane. >> you be insane. we're just trying to help here. a looming showdown, a bad one and a bitter one between president obama and the congress over who replaces justice scalia on the supreme court. and then last night's debate, it was unbelievable. if you missed it, we'll have highlights and be speaking to newt gingrich. stay tuned. he's here in just minutes. equals great rates. it's a fact. kind of like social media equals anti-social. hey guys, i want you to meet my fiancée, denise. hey. good to meet you dennis. text mom. i'll be right back. be good. boys have been really good today. send. let's get mark his own cell phone. nice. brad could use a new bike. send. [google] message. you decide. they're your kids. why are you guys texting grandma? it was him. it was him. app-connect. from the newly redesigned volkswagen passat. right now you can get $1000 presidents' day bonus on new 2015 or 2016 passat, jetta or tiguan models. good morning, everyone. it is sunday, february 14th, 2016. i'm sandra smith. this is a fox news alert. leading conservative voice on the nation's highest court silenced. justice antonin scalia dead at 79. >> and then news of scalia's death set up a showdown over who gets to pick his successor. >> someone on this stage will get to choose the balance of the supreme court. it will begin by filling this vacancy that's there now. >> i think it's up to mitch mcconnell and everybody else to stop it. delay, delay, delay. >> president obama says he's going to fill that ninth seat. republicans say no way. newt gingrich is on deck with his reaction and prediction. and a bitter clash between jeb bush and donald trump. >> well, donald trump was building a reality tv show, my brother was building a security apparatus to keep us safe. >> the world trade center came down during your brother's reign. remember that. >> this morning, donald trump responds. he was right here on "fox & friends." hour four, perhaps my favorite hour, starts right now. fox news alert. america remembering a supreme court crusader. antonin scalia died yesterday in texas at the age of 79. >> his death sending shock waves through washington, setting up a political showdown. >> the president can appoint a new justice before the end of his term while republicans are already promising to block that appointee and leave it to the next president. the supreme court is weighing several important constitutional issues. joining us now is a man who knew justice scalia and ran the house of representatives, newt gingrich joins us. >> good morning. >> good to be with you. >> i hate to jump right into politics. will the president will able to get his choice for the ninth seat on the supreme court through or not? >> he shouldn't be able to. i think it's pretty clear that the historic precedence are in the last year of a presidential term that there's a bias towards the next president with the votes of the american people picking that person. mitch mcconnell's got to do two things. refuse to hold hearings, have the committee not even consider it. and second, make sure that the senate stays in pro forma session so the president cannot make an interim appointment. the senators have to reorganize niez their schedule, have a pro forma schedule on a regular basis and say you can send up anybody you want to, we're not having hearings or taking it to the floor. >> having four four and leaving these big decisions to the appellate court. democrats also saying, look, president obama was elected to a four-year term. americans spoke. he was elected to four years, not three years. he has every right to choose a nominee. >> he has every right to recommend. he doesn't have every right to choose. the senate is not obligated to approve who he recommends. sit down with mitch mcconnell and conservative senators like mike lee, ask them who they would approve and nominate somebody in the scalia tradition. obama is not going to do that. obama wants to send up a radical to eliminate religious liberty, to impose bigger government and more power in washington. and that's his right. i understand that's what he believes. the senate has no obligation to shift this court in the last year of the obama presidency. >> i want to get your reaction now to the debate last night. sparks were flying throughout the night, particularly between donald trump and jeb bush over iraq. listen. >> george bush made a mistake. we can make mistakes. but that one was a beauty. we should have never been in iraq. we have destabilized the middle east. >> i think it's my turn isn't it? >> you call it whatever you want. i want to tell you. they lied. they said there were weapons of mass destruction, there were none and they knew there were none. >> okay. governor bush -- >> i'm sick and tired of barack obama blaming my brother for all of the problems that he's had. and frankly -- [ cheers and applause ] -- i could care less about the insults that donald trump gives to me. it's blood sport for him, he enjoys it and i'm glad he's happy about it. i am sick and tired of him going after my family. my dad is the greatest man alive in my mind. >> speaker, what did you make of those exchanges? >> probably the best performance by jeb bush we've seen in the entire campaign. and he ought to feel pretty darn good this morning about that. i think trump made a very big mistake in getting into a fight over george w. bush. there may be no state in the country in which republican voters have greater admiration for george w. bush than south carolina. if this degenerates over the next week, i think he'd lose it. the state's not going to vote to repudiate george w. bush. if trump can get back online, i think he'll be all right. last night was not a good night for donald trump. >> it was about a decision he made to invade iraq in 2003. you had trump coming up and say, that was a mistake. you had other candidates, particularly marco rubio saying no, it was defenseble. which side of that debate do you want to be on in the primary in the general election? >> i think first of all, the outcome of our intervention in the middle east is something we ought to have the guts to look at very seriously. i was for the war in 2003. i still think it was the right decision. but clearly, the things we have tried have not worked under two different presidents. having a debate about what we need to learn and move forward makes sense. going back and relitigating 2003, at least from the standpoint as trump as the frontrunner, is really a very self-destructive thing for him to do. remember, if you're a young voter this year, you were 3 years old in 9/11. i mean, we're -- young people, when somebody's going to look to the future and ironically, the person that's trying to do the best job of that is the oldest candidate in the race, bernie sanders, which is truly weird. >> donald trump earlier on our show defended his performance last night and particularly those questions around the iraq war and 9/11. listen to donald earlier. >> the iraq war was a disaster. it was a mistake. we spent $2 trillion, thousands of lives, wounded warriors who we love all over the place. what do we have? nothing. i think -- the war was a tremendous mistake. i people in south carolina that i know very well, most of them understand -- look, all smart people know that the war in iraq was a huge bungle. it was made worse when obama got us out the wrong way. i was against the war, but the way he got out was terrible. now, if i'm going to say that and that's going to be negative for me then i'm going to have to say it anyway because i tell the truth. >> that seemed to be one of the huge moments of the debate. mr. speaker, you went after the moderators and the questioning right off the back. we saw a huge spike of course. do you think that that moment for donald trump last night will move a needle in that kind of similar direction? >> no. and if you'll notice what he just did, which makes some sense, if you want to debate, the question is the american policy in the middle east working, trump's going to win on the issue of no, it's not working. whether it's the george w. bush version or the obama version, we aren't where we thought we would be. we've lot a lot of lives and spent trillions of dollars. trump can win that debate. if he gets sucked back into fighting over george w. bush, he will get battered very badly. >> there's also this moment last night that left a few laughing. marco rubio battling ted cruz over immigration. listen. >> marco went on univision in spanish and said he would not rescind president obama's illegal executive amnesty on his first day in office. i have promised to rescind every single illegal executive action including that one. >> first of all, i don't know how he knows what i said on univision because he doesn't speak spanish. [ speaking spanish ] >> any comments? reaction? >> my general impression is that rubio actually won the debate overall. i broke up laughing watching ted. i thought it was a great comeback on his part. slightly muddled. i don't know if the moderators and audience realized how much he had responded. in terms of the primary, i think the actual unspoken winner last night may have been kasich. kasich is doing much better in south carolina than anybody expected. he's the guy who didn't get hurt. part of his whole strategy has been to be the nice pleasant guy who doesn't get hurt, talks positive. he didn't compete for the headline, but i suspect he came out of the debate last night with more strength in south carolina than when he went in. >> very quickly, do you think the majority of republican primary voters are for a path to citizenship or against it? >> i suspect the primary voters are against the path to citizenship, but probably most of them are for a path to legality. >> all right. president obama says he will appoint a successor for justice scalia. will the republican-led congress stop him? and the candidates spar over the economy during last night's debate. >> we are killing ourselves with trade pacs that are no good for us and our workers. >> typical family of four, fix $36,000 you earn, you pay nothing in taxes. >> who has the best plan? maria bartiromo is looking at the numbers with us this morning. she joins us next. >> come on in. >> hello. >> uh-oh. there's a problem in the back. i tried depend last weekend. it really made the difference between a morning around the house and getting a little exercise. only depend underwear has new confidence core technology for fast absorption and the smooth, comfortable fit of fit-flex™ protection. get a coupon at depend.com in my business i cbailing me out my i.all the time... i'm not the i.t. guy. i'm the desktop support tech supervisor. and my customers knowing right when their packages arrive. introducing real-time delivery notifications. learn more at myusps.com one day a rider made a decision. the decision to ride on and save money. he decided to save money by switching his motorcycle insurance to geico. there's no shame in saving money. ride on, ride proud. geico motorcycle, great rates for great rides. this is a body of proof. proof of less joint pain. and clearer skin. this is my body of proof that i can fight psoriatic arthritis with humira. humira works by targeting and helping to block a specific source of inflammation that contributes to both joint and skin symptoms. it's proven to help relieve pain, stop further joint damage and clear skin in many adults. doctors have been prescribing humira for 10 years. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections and cancers, including lymphoma, have happened, as have blood, liver and nervous system problems, seri and new or worsening heart failure. before treatment, get tested for tb. tell your doctor if you've been to areas where certain fungal infections are common, and if you've had tb, hepatitis b, are prone to infections, or have flu-like symptoms or sores. don't start humira if you have an infection. want more proof? ask your rheumatologist about humira. humira. this is my body of proof! one minute answer and -- >> candidates making their case debating who has the best plan when it comes to the economy. >> stay where you are or build in the united states, because we are killing ourselves with trade pacs that are no good for us and no good for our workers. >> my tax plan, typical family of four, first $36,000 you earn, you pay nothing in taxes. above 10%, everyone pays the same flat rate. >> the family is the most important institution in society. you cannot have a strong country without strong families. >> here to react is the great host of "sunday morning futures," maria bartiromo. >> trump had a really interesting answer. he was asking, the carrier plant, what do you do about it. he says, they can move to mexico, but i'm going to direct tariffs to make it too expensive for them. will that work? >> he has brought up this issue umpteen times. however, his solution to it, for me, doesn't necessarily make the grade. you can't just slap tariffs on imports coming in and not think that it's going to have implications. you do something like that for mexican goods coming on, at the end of the day, that's just going to raise the price of goods for the american people. as far as the issue, a plus for trump. he brought this issue up. but as far as solutions, i would say b. i gave him overall an a minus. >> he has said that we are to blame because we like cheap stuff. we don't want to buy one well-made toy airplane, we want to buy four cheaply made ones from china. >> we did. we want the best price and american customers are going to be value conscious. the issue is the currency wars that are going on. many of these countries devalue their currency making their currency so much for attractive as the dollar strengthens. it's more than just putting a tariff on a price. that's all i'm saying. i think it's the right issue. i think it's smart of him to bring it up. but at the end of the day, i don't think it's as easy as the solutions he's putting -- >> let's talk about marco rubio and the grade you gave him. he continues to talk about this heavily debatd tax angle. you said all along, these candidates need to talk about taxes. how did he do? >> i think rubio's plan is very different from the other plans. i gave him credit for carving out the family and giving people credit for having a family. but the problem is that every other tax plan takes away all loophol loopholes. he doesn't. the question has to become, how do you pay for it. that's what we keep debating about. i think rubio's plan isn't very different than what we have right now. the highest rate is 35%. it's not a flat tax like the others. i think that tax experts tend to believe a flat tax taking away all loopholes would be better off in terms of actually moving the economy. so i'm giving rubio a b minus. >> oh. all right. >> and then ted cruz? >> ted cruz, i like the idea of a flat tax plan. because i think a flat tax plan would work. the issue here is, it's different than ben carson's tax pran because some people say involved in cruz's plan is a vat tax which you don't really understand very well, but it is going to help foreign countries and it is going to eventually rise. so there is a little noise in the tax plan of cruz. however, i like his plan the best. i think a flat tax plan would in fact encourage people to invest more, spend more, get the economy moving. i give him an aminus just because i think it is a little convoluted, but i think -- >> do you know what that would do to lobbyists, though? they would have to sell a lot of their summer houses, for real. >> talking about key people to talk to this morning, you have an exclusive with paul ryan. >> obviously budget issues have been front and center this week. we want to talk about his plan to move the needle. we're also going to talk about the budget obviously, but also about immigration. we're also going to get senator mulvaney's thoughts on justice scalia this morning. lot to talk about. >> did you ask ryan why he got rid of the beard? >> i didn't. >> not a good time to shave. >> thanks so much. well, the death of scalia sending shock waves throughout the political world. how big an affect does that have on the presidential campaign? >> he was widely criticized for repeating lines in last night's debate like a robot. a political panel weighs in on his performance. my mom loves giving me advice. she even gives me advice... ...about my toothpaste and mouthwash. but she's a dentist so...i kind of have to listen. she said "jen, go pro with crest pro-health advanced." advance to healthier gums... ...and stronger teeth from day one. using crest toothpaste and mouthwash makes my... ...whole mouth feel awesome. and my teeth are stronger too. crest-pro health advanced... ...is superior to colgate total... ...in these 5 areas dentists check. this check up? so good. go pro with crest pro-health advanced. mom's right...again! good sunday morning, everybody. some quick headlines this morning. a state of emergency now declared over the explosive zika virus outbreak. hawaii just issuing a warning. the state hasn't confirmed any cases of the mosquito-borne virus, but will now have access to emergency money in case zika does make it to the island. >> a new england boy's boarding school. about 60 students are now sick forcing the school to cancel classes. healthy students are expected back on the campus tomorrow night. clayton? >> the country reacts to the death of supreme court justice antonin scalia. obama quickly turns it into a part san battle. watch. >> obviously today is a time to remember justice scalia's legacy. i plan to fulfill my constitutional responsibilities to nominate a successor in due time. there will be plenty of time for me to do so and for the senate to fulfill its responsibility to give that person a fair hearing and a timely vote. >> but does a republican-controlled congress have the power to stop the president. good morning, peter. >> let's take a look at the law and let's also take a look at the politics and let's take a look about who is going to be replacing the late judge scalia. he talked about that a couple years ago here on fox. >> i would not like to be replaced by someone who immediately sets about undoing everything that i've tried to do for 26 years. sure. but i mean, i shouldn't have to tell you that. unless you think i'm a fool. >> of course. so the idea that president obama could actually select a nominee during -- as a recess appointment. >> correct. >> is that possible? >> it is. two things. under article two, there's a shared power between the president and the senate in terms of confirmation. president sends someone over there, the senate confirms or doesn't confirm. the problem is the right under the constitution to act tomorrow, to act today -- >> why wouldn't he do this? >> it's a political issue. the second point of that is he can make what's called a recess appointment under the constitution, lawful. it's been done before. >> what's the precedent? >> it was done by dwight d. eisenhower back in the '50s a couple of times to say congress is not in session, i intend to send someone to supreme court tomorrow, they will begin sitting tomorrow to ensure there are no 4-4 ties. it's the right thing to do under the constitution, he would say. we can't have deadlock at the united states supreme court. we can't have a year absence in terms of a critical ninth vote on the supreme court. or he can say i'm sending this to the senate for a confirmation. and if you in the republican senate want to fight about it and stop this man or woman from confirmation, then you'll deal with the political consequences. so there's a constitutional basis, but it accept sets up a political war in america. does that person become a pawn in a presidential election year. >> so the president has the power to do it and there's precedent for it being done. is there anything that the republican-controlled congress can do to stop what he has the legal authority to do? >> absolutely. the senate through its powers and donald trump talked about it last night delay, delay, delay, delay. they don't have to take this person up for a vote. it can be blocked procedurely, but if they do take the candidate that the president sends, then it becomes a political donnybrook. it becomes a question of what is the future of the supreme court and it mimics a presidential -- >> isn't it sad that we immediately go to these battle lines? isn't there not some middle ground here? a nominee perhaps that everyone could agree on? >> let me talk about that. i'm looking at it and i think there's a possibility. the president could make a recess appointment today or tomorrow to fill the late justice scalia's seat on the court, and at the same time thereafter select someone else to be confirmed by the united states senate. so this president could say today -- >> so a temporary -- >> i intend to point someone that we all love and respect as republicans, democrats, and independents who will do justice in the supreme court and at the same time, send something else for confirmation. a place holder to ensure that justice is done at the supreme court. >> a temporary. >> that's an interesting view and he could make the recess appointment today or tomorrow based on the law, based on the constitution. this is going to be a fight one way or the over. >> always great seeing you. >> good to see you. >> happy valentine's day. marco rubio vowed to bounce back last night after his poor debate performance last week. >> bill clinton didn't kill osama bin laden when he had the chance to kill him. >> our political panel is here and seated and ready to weigh in? and this year's sports illustrated swim suit cover. there's three covers this year. holy smokes. and you thought it was cold outside? ♪ okay ladies, whenever you're ready. thank you. i got this. no, i'll get it! let me get it. ah uh, i don't want you to pay for this. it's not happening, honey. let her get it. she got her safe driving bonus check from allstate last week. and it's her treat. what about a tip? oh, here's one...get an allstate agent. nice! switch today and get two safe driving bonus checks a year for driving safely. only from allstate. call 866-788-0900 now. here we go, hold on man, is that a leak up there? that's a drip. oh ok. now that's a leak. that is a leak! and if you don't have allstate renters insurance... game over. protect your valuables from things like water damage for as low as $4 a month when you add renter's insurance to your al call 866-788-0900 now. and if you're a safe driver, you can save up to 45%. just a few more ways, allstate is changing car insurance for good. call a local allstate agent today. marco rubio in a defensive crouch all week for his poor debate performance last week. he vowed to bounce back. did he do it? we have a great political panel this morning. and democrat strategist jessica. it is great to see you all in order. trump's getting all the attention for coming out against the iraq war. rubio basically defended the iraq war. >> he was strong on every issue last night. i love the fact he defended george w. bush. that's what i believe the american people want. they want someone who is positive and will talk about results and solutions. and i think he bounced back. what happened with christie, that was like a temporary flaw. it was not a setback. >> it was so ideological. there really were ideas at stake here. you have trump saying, this is the new party i propose to build and the others saying kind of happy with the party i have. >> when trump says i want to impeach george w. bush, that's -- >> he didn't say that last night, by the way. >> the moderator fairly pointed that out. for trump to turn around and say let's impeach george w. bush for something most of the democrats were voting for. behind side's 2020. the -- >> i think he was last -- maybe tu trump said that in the past. >> i didn't hear anyone say the iraq was a mistake other than trump. as a democrat and hearing donald trump come out stronger than hillary clinton has against the iraq war. >> i thought it was great. i saw polls circulating. over 60% of them now see the iraq war as a mistake, but they still love george bush. he is delightful -- >> was he able to -- >> he did attack bush a little bit. that was more to get at jeb than george bush. >> rubio said that george w. bush kept us safe. they do under the current president. >> that's a little bit difficult to argue. i know we talked earlier about rubio saying 9/11 was clinton's fault. i don't want to get into that. >> please don't. >> so jeb says my brother kept us safe. trump says, yeah, except for 9/11. >> rubio pointed out rightly that it was clinton who did not kill saosama bin laden when he d the chance. >> under bill clinton where you had the uss cole -- >> isn't it painful when trump says that? >> the audience was very upset with the fact that trump was trying to blame george w. bush. it was because of clinton wanting to kill the military. clinton being distracted by his libido. >> it is amazing this is what this has turned into. >> now i really feel uncomfortable as a democrat. >> as you should. >> when the audience takes sides in something like this. at home, they're doing this because they're paid to do it. does that work? >> the issue with -- many for me about donald trump. what we think about it is not what the average american ever thinks about it. what's going on in this country i don't think is necessarily reflected in how we see things. >> that's for shower. >> i think donald trump is offensive on every level. you see polls, banning muslims not such a bad idea, temporarily or permanently. >> when you say something that's offensive, he puts down the audience -- >> he's a bully. >> do we have any idea who people think? >> well, they like donald trump. >> i don't think that south carolina values are trump values. >> we're going to find out and replay the tape including tape of me making stupid predictions after the primary in six days and we'll -- >> in a week though, with his new york values. >> thanks for joining us. sandra smith has your headlines. >> riveting conversation. a fox news alert, a mississippi police officer is in the hospital right now after being shot in the head overnight. that officer was responding to an armed robbery when the masked suspect took off running. the cop chased him before he was shot right in front of the police department where fellow officers found him. no word yet on his condition and the search is still on for those suspects. millions of viewers' tax dollars going into the pockets of questionable v.a. doctors instead of helping our veterans. a report shows in 2014, $23 million went to more than 2,500 v.a. employees who were put on paid leave. some out of the office for a year. lawmakers say the feds don't have the means to discipline problem employees and they stay unpaid leave for far too long. up to $25 million of annual funding headed to the 9/11 memorial. the controversial bill passing congress despite opposition from the obama administration over how the money is spent. some families of 9/11 victims also objecting to the memorial being operated by a private nonprofit whose ceos are getting large salaries while visitors are paying to see some exhibits. the ground zero site now officially considered a national memorial. here it is. sports illustrated upping its game with not one, not two, but three swim suit issue covered. hailey clauson, ashley graham and ronda rousey. it's the first time the magazine has released three covers for its swimsuit edition. graham's cover is being praised for including women with different body types. >> she's a rookie. she -- >> they don't look so different to me. >> i was going to say. >> believe me, they've looked very closely and tucker's decided -- >> she's -- who cares. that looks fantastic. >> they all look beautiful. >> to the weather now. >> do you know any man that likes stick thin women. >> i'm not weighing in on this debate at all. >> you'll take a stand on everything else. >> by the way, that dress is fantastic. so from hot to cold. extreme weather wreaking havoc on the northeast with temperatures dipping into the single digits. the brutal cold, if you haven't noticed, being blamed for a fatal 50-car pile-up in the state of pennsylvania. at least three people were killed. more than 70 were injured in that pile-up. rick, everybody's talking about it this morning. it just feels dangerous outside. >> it is dangerous. in fact, this is the coldest air mass in new york city now in 22 years. in boston, since 1957. it's not just play cold. it's really cold. we've got the hardiest fans ever out here. you know it's zero outside right now. you guys are from florida. >> that's correct. >> reporter: so this is a big difference. how long have you been standing out here? >> about 15 minutes. >> reporter: take care of yourselves. >> that's what we feel like. >> reporter: take a look at the maps. we're going to show you what's going on here. zero right now in new york city. it is still minus 5 in boston. the windchills are far cooler than that. you can see that cold air mass across areas of the north. good news here. it's not going to last that long. we're going to see a big warm up in the central part of the country and eventually into the northeast. that's on its way. it's very good news. in the meantime, a little bit of snow today across parts of the ohio valley, tennessee valley. get ready for a sloppy day tomorrow. it's primarily rain. starts off with snow and then rain across the coast. back into the 50s by tuesday. >> it's actually going to warm up pretty quickly here. thanks. >> they fled already. justice scalia's death sending shock waves throughout the political world. geraldo rivera is next with memories of the conservative champion. >> and what effect will it have on the presidential race on the democratic side? ed henry joins us in just a minute. stay smart around the boat ramp. make sure you've got your partner behind to watch. there he is! (boat hits post) klunk ♪ at bass pro shops spring fishing classic get a bass pro gift card with purchase of select tracker and nitro boats. twell what if i told you that peanuts can work for you? that's right. i'm talking full time delivery of 7 grams of protein and 6 essential nutrients. ever see a peanut take a day off? i don't think so. harness the hardworking power of the peanut. the nissan rogue. with the power and performance of our intuitive all-wheel drive. now get a $189 per month lease on the 2016 nissan rogue. iand i'm jerry bell the third. i'm like a big bear and he's my little cub. this little guy is non-stop. he's always hanging out with his friends. you've got to be prepared to sit at the edge of your seat and be ready to get up. there's no "deep couch sitting." definitely not good for my back. this is the part i really don't like right here. (doorbell) what's that? a package! it's a swiffer wetjet. it almost feels like it's moving itself. this is kind of fun. that comes from my floor? eww! this is deep couch sitting. [jerry bell iii] deep couch sitting! americans remembering perhaps the most famous and vibrant member of the supreme court, iconic justice antonin scalia died yesterday. he was quail hunting in texas. he was 79 years old. sets up a rare opportunity for president obama to appoint a nominee, perhaps a recess nominee. ed henry joins us live this morning. and the affect on the democratic contest. >> hillary clinton came out with a statement, both saying that president obama should have time to put forth the nomination even though the republicans in the senate, as you know mitch mcconnell and others already saying, look, we're going to stop this, we're going to block it. i understand the pressure on mitch mcconnell. you have conservatives around the country who think these republican leaders in washington are just pushovers for president obama. they want to try to stand strong in their eyes what they believe is the principled move and hillary clinton and bernie sanders are going to be saying just the opposite. hillary clinton in that debate a few nights ago, i think she mentioned president obama 25 or 30 times. his legacy is her legacy now because she's struggling so much. i'm heading to nevada later tonight because the polls have tightened there now with bernie sanders. if she loses nevada or wins but just barely makes it, there's going to be more hand wringing among democrats. republicans want to stand strong in their eyes and block whatever nomination comes forward. this would hand hillary clinton is big weapon. if she could say look, these mean republicans are blocking president obama's nominee, that's going -- >> without even seeing who the nominee is. >> she's going to say it no matter what. that's the other part of the scalia legacy. let's not forget the legacy of the man who vice president joe biden who disagreed with justice scalia on almost anything said that his biggest regret of a vote in the senate was confirming justice scalia. was it because he disliked him? no. he said because he was so effective. that is something coming from a democrat like joe biden who's being honest and candid there that justice scalia was a principled conservative, highest integrity. look what we have in the presidential campaign right now. hillary clinton who's been flip-flopping on almost every major issue. and then on the republican side last night, a lot of platitudes about justice scalia. i didn't hear a single -- i didn't hear any of them lay out what their conservative vision for the country is to be fair here. hillary clinton has her problems, but so do some of those republicans on that stage as well. >> as chief white house correspondent, what are your sources telling you? >> they're being very tight lipped about it right now. i don't know just yet because they're trying to be careful to let the funeral move forward and all of that. a recess appointment though, my gut tells me that it seems even more radioactive. they might rather just have the issue of putting forth someone who the president thinks is more than qualified and let republicans block it rather than doing a recess appointment that's another obama executive action that might blow up for him. >> if we can put politics aside for a second, you knew justice scalia on a personal level. >> and not very well. i don't want to exaggerate it. a friend of mine said justice scalia wants to come to a party before the dinner. everybody always says, these dinners it's all about celebrities and nonsense. so he was on his way. one of his security guys called me. he was running late. that's my daughter. they said, he's running late, he's in traffic. i ran downstairs to get to the dinner. i forgot one of my friend's tickets to the dinner. i ran to the room and justice scalia was showing up and there was nobody left in the party. i was thinking, god, this guy's going to think i'm an idiot. he spent ten minutes talking to my daughter. she was the only one left at the party. ten minutes as if she was a justice on the court. he treated her like a princess and that is class all the way. >> she's now a staunch -- >> she's now become a conservative in the scalia mode. >> thanks, ed. i love it. up next, geraldo rivera knew justice scalia personally. he's going to join us. that's next. ♪ ♪virgin islands nice ♪ ♪so nice ♪so nice, so nice ♪ spend a few days in the u.s. virgin islands and return with a lifetime of experiences. that's virgin islands nice. ♪so nice, so nice going more into the loss of one of the most vibrant voices on the supreme court, answer intense battle, who sits in the ninth seat? president obama vows he's going to appoint a new supreme court justice, the senate says no why. why some say the american people should pick when they pick a new president this fall fall, geraldo joins us. justice scalia, and it is impossible to overstate how important he was to the conservative movement. more than in this thain perhaps buckley, he helped manage and manage the thrust of the conservative movement. he was the godfather of the conservative movement in many ways. i think his loss will be sorely felt. this is a cataclysmic blow i think to the to the conservative movement, i don't know anyone as intellectually glib, as affable yet as sharp constitutionally speaking as justice scalia. also, he was as the first italian-american justice on the court, he was a hero among soening in the italian-american community. if it's impossible again to overstate how he was to that community, so he will be very sorely missed in those areas as well. in terms of the personal relationship, like ed henry, i don't want to overstate it. we have had several conversations, but that correspondents dinner that ed references, i was justice scalia -- bill o'reilly and i were justice scalia's date. he sat right between us, for the entire evening citizens united was on the lips of everyone, that very controversial decision that gave birth to the super-pacs, and it is stark money that's flowing in. it had a monumental impact. he was very open, as he always is in the social situation. whether you were right, left or center, he was so personable, so care mattic, so affable. he was -- he didn't back down at all when the liberal mainstream media was attacking him. he was strong in that case, very evenhanded. he was so frank. he will be missed sorely in terms of all these 5-4 decisions. abortion, affirmative action, immigration, his vote that was obviously considered a cinch for the conservative side, it becomes 4-4, what happens to lower court rulings, i just want to talk politics for 30 seconds. you have several scenarios. my friend donald trump said delay delay delay, president obama said in due course, he's going to nominate someone. so you have this gamble. president obama if he has any chance of getting someone confirmed this late in his term to the supreme court of the united states, this crucial ninth vote, it would have been to be a consensus candidate, probably a liberal, moderate republican candidate, but if the republicans delay and they force it past the election, what if they lose the election and then the democrats can -- >> they're not holding their -- thank you for your perspective and memories of him this morning. more fox, next. and the lowest taxes in decades, attracting the talent and companies of tomorrow. like in the hudson valley, with world class biotech. and on long island, where great universities are creating next generation technologies. let us help grow your company's tomorrow, today at business.ny.gov . couldn't do it. and packed so much in the show. >> happy valentine's day. \s good sunday morning, everyone. i'm maria bartiromo, welcome to "sunday morning futures." remembering justice antonin scalia. plus the debate over his replacement. fireworks. six of the remaining gop candidates trading jabs last night ahead of the critical primary ahead of south carolina. who were the winners and losers ahead? plus mice exclusive interview with house speaker paul ryan. his take on immigration and the state of the economy today, as we look ahead on "sunday morning futures."

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Transcripts For DW DocFilm - Dirty Games - The Dark Side Of Sports 20180606

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do what i know but it's all very well and down and i we out of. it's of lust in so out of idea. was it in the sand in the air an e. room a lot of. i'm seen on the wrong dick to stay. over didn't do this for the long way on e e just a difference of two if it so they be should number you need get said get him da of the pond into on the on to do would need to. i'm going to didn't hear and see i knew didn't do any kind of kind of out of african what to do i once was on and i see again thomas and was in. and then mitt romney didn't know if i'm going to be a percentage there but yeah i mean funny on the show going down is top of the mark and then i don't know and i must say i was she had some four hundred or so in my head. i knew killing the day that i thought it might go to dario it and say i didn't go i would get in there was no more to do she descended. so i do not and didn't then i wasn't even going to learn how many new immigrants also i wasn't on the diligence of. measuring to turn it to live. your. life. up. you. please. lose your job at. least. to. in concluding we are facing a complex investigation because many international implications. the prosecution is only growing and will take time. it would not be professional to communicate to you today the details. if the world of food bowl needs to be patient. by its nature this investigation will take more than the legendary ninety minutes. the fact of the matter is that what has been revealed so far is a mafia style crime syndicate in charge of this sport my only hesitation and using that term is that it is almost insulting to the mafia because the mafia would never have been so blatant over and out again. in its corruption. trial techno europe puerto rico i should tell me but i want you to get ahold of me now which way i set it up to face what not a set up one day or two weeks. at i probably above but not all wearing white for them. now well great i meant it when i get to it that you autocue that people actually. want to write and want to talk about health and wanting of a. job trying. a new city on specs from a richer man is tyrone whose former crews were a champ. jr bill which imposter drayton featherweight champ freddie gordon. and for the briefest of p.r. is a guy named jose rivera who was a welterweight champion. you think fights to make betting money. you fix fights to get a fighter championship you fix fights to maneuver a fighter up the ranks toward a championship fight you fix fights to win. in order again to position someone strategically. you fix fights to lose in order to get paid and in order to make you know reading to see the way you fix face varies greatly. you fix fights by buying judges that's and you know that's one easy way to do it you fix fights by having the referee working for you so that. if there's any way that the ref can stop a fight in your guy's favor he does you fix fights by colluding with the fighters generally the loser so almost always a loser. winners almost never told the fighters for years. one of the things that you're cognizant off when you are fixing fights is that you're doing something illegal something that theoretically can wind you up you know want to jail on get people angry at you so you never really say anything you know nothing that's culpable so there's a code. and if you're in boxing for a while you know the code everybody knows the code. will go into a ship. where there is either a trainer or manager and you're looking for somebody your guy can beat this up these guys make their money and it's interesting that people who lose in boxing generally speaking if they're professional losers can make more money than winners . winning cost money losing makes money that's not true obviously at an elite level but almost every other level is the case. so what you do is you say i've got a guy. and he is looking for looking for workers in the first ok so that means that. he needs to win you know and we want to keep him busy. the response to that is a got somebody and generally the second faces but he hasn't been in the gym to watch. ok so the subtext there is he's he's not good shape and so you're honing in on where this thing is going to go and he said other that's ok you know. like i got to get in a few rounds i mean it's going to knock out at which point he goes well you know ok . i can do that but really mike by guys and she had to go more than three or four. that's ok so you just fixed a fight. nobody's done anything illegal nobody's done anything with this come out and stated anything explicitly. but that's a done deal. and you get. you get what you pay for. it is how many fights you six. hundred how many i'm not sure but hundreds. i see it all the time now i mean i don't make our living in boxing anymore but i see fixes all the time sure it will always exist and always households. right. there we go without me even the evening when the word not be countries in six continents to begin to. take its i think tends toward the sensational. irish hurricane peter mike. and keep laughing keep laughing. don't rule funny ya if you go even you want to use those you respect me on what i'm doing or what i've been doing the last three months until you've been announced to go against a guy like this you have been dumped in the pits. profitably. i'm hard to feel to be clearly from midfield pads on saturday night work week take place in sats. but if you haven't paid you reason it's a good pick then soon because remember what happens when i refuse my cuckoo. heelys measure was going to have been back your back you only had no money so i for a while was bankrolling what they were doing i was breaking mcneely and sometimes and second only to new york for various things you know and i was making fights for peter so i mean i knew them very well i was very involved in what's gone on so i bring if you don't need to i'll pray for his office it's time to structure a policy and we work out a deal for me only to be tyson's first part which is a completely win win situation for everybody i'm just happy to be here and buddy me you stayed me around me me of you got to keep straight me i'm just really for you to fight thank you for your support thank you. i get a phone call from a guy whose voice i recognize but not not somebody i really know but you know he said look somebody saw i should give you a call to let you know. that a made. that the fight wouldn't. i'm trying to remember how he described i think he told me the fight won't go it's not going to go ninety seconds it was you know it was a million dollar bet and the fights not going to go ninety seconds somebody thought you might be interested in there was want was we were eighty nine seconds at which point in talking on the steps. between the ropes to prop the end into the five was it was it was was checking on me who really have this thing figured out understood that it was crucial that there be no finding of impropriety because tyson was the machine on which boxing rep by far the biggest are in the world and. you know when when he fights in vegas. they generate a billion dollars and added revenue i mean not from boxing per se but you know for from all of the ancillary revenue so it has to be ok and vacuuming also so he gets his payday whatever it is and i don't know what it is and never did know what it was. and i get a phone call from from him. and i was still in puerto rico say you got to come to the house i got to see you and i said i can't do it i'm still out of the country and he says send somebody you trust and when that somebody got there. he was cute and. put my son through college i got it you know i don't knock down the man's quick yeah it's hard. i felt like the for i felt like the first not thousand a good good quick podge of all my part is a little bit of a flash knockdown i was ok the second knockdown as the film was show all i was shaking i slipped i fell in the role of and i tweeted i twist the part of i need you see the right way you see to fail look at the film. look at the film look at the film my need buckled my need buckled under to get me here most of them. imagine that you're up against a very well placed. high profile machine that is capitalized to a degree that you can't even begin to imagine a billion dollar multibillion dollar industry so this guy was nothing except for his brain and his fear of. that is the greatest single underdog score that. that i've ever seen in all of my years in boxing you know the single most savvy maneuver that i've ever seen. it. was. half. that. was. my car was. was. the. car was. her. first thought was oh yes i did say something. to the fucking looking for my secret. for. the. car i eat chipotle is a plus thanks for a pill feel it's evolved while the two bone has skin is there with you one fish called yankee mice fall economical it doesn't want you were a thing. was my wooden house called the day rule. holds the movie key thing for those soulful voice things she was so sick she. when you die young boy the secret of the simpler suppose you have this is the you can win you guys just. like you to hell you have bookish chaos as we are all the us. other possible perceptive one why did you was there he say it was the mark say that you all are that touch us she and drew orders. which will be for the other what caused us to fit in to save us from in full in this group because as you see who we think of my life in their city as a child of a sphere that was their father figure it was i me it was yes ever was there the judge of the scene i would say mine in my life and i have to limit to the. one who survived cause a she might act and then she thought she was in love was fozzy it was if you want but she lived well with that was so nice in that then i think well my life and i think well i was tired of the war to the bone of the world. the ocean because of her my friends become we should. act keep push think when we. like and how would you feel was easy to be this was even for the poor kid it could be august so i can get to work when so who knows when to both a kill somebody called with no poison my eyes. don't know what you do if it went to the room saw the kid about asus and i want to know my niece is do they can see on what i said that the opposition from july. if you think about the stadium as a reflection of the city we can say that the poorest fans have been expelled from the magic on up violently they've had their places literally taken away from them. all around brazil people are asking this person hope brock and i can who is this really benefiting of course you know the answers and it's the elites really politicians it's a very narrow strata of the brazilian the highest classes that are the world compass for not for the vast majority of resigned people were hypnotized by what's happening in the narrative the football and no one wants to talk about issues because they just want to join the circus now that the circus has gone we can talk about these things again and so it's a suspension of critical thought it's a time of suspended animation where it's not just the country that stops it's as if people is brain stop working as well. and so this is the depression the dissent and debate about is this worth the time we do this shouldn't you do it's always a pleasure for when the ball is rolling those questions were largely eliminated from public discussion. clearly an illegally meaning believe me. i am. that's always the most vulnerable people this happens when we go back to soledad eighty eight to see the forced removal of tens of thousands of people from their homes their barcelona ninety two forced removal of immigrants quarters in. atlanta in one thousand nine hundred six forced removal of two african-american neighborhoods near the olympic sites. not so much in sydney but then the forced removal of tens of thousands of roma people from from athens two thousand and eight two million people moved from the center of all beijing. london similar tastes of displacement and then again you'll see this in rio two thousand and sixteen similar in south africa so this is a repeating theme that has different power to curation some particular places. thomas bach is saying we need reform because the olympics are in a slow motion crisis right now and you only need to look at the bidding for the two thousand and twenty two olympics to realize that because voters who any voter who had the chance to vote on it in a referendum said we don't want the olympics from munich to stockholm to krakow to cuba canton in switzerland they got to vote on it so he is in a crisis comparing fee for in the i.o.c. because they're in a crisis at the i.o.c. they know they need to change human rights need to be part of the equation for both the olympics and for fifa i mean right now it's not at all a part of the way things are decided i mean just look at the evidence beijing two thousand and eight sochi two thousand and fourteen then there's russia two thousand and eighteen qatar two thousand and twenty two you can't tell me human rights are serious consideration when you make those selections. the idea that politics and sports don't mix is a fairy tale that people at the i.o.c. and fifa tell themselves to console each other around the evening fire is just totally untrue and it's ridiculous to say so and it really shows a selective ethics on their part the way it plays out for politicians in beijing or glad i'm here putin in sochi is they get to stand on the world stage and look legitimate alongside this incredibly popular event known as the olympics and so they get to sort of enjoy the olympic halo effect if you will and meanwhile brushed aside all their human rights violations and all their problems you know with their democratic practice. one thing that we've seen is that independent of the global economy which has periodic fluctuations the fluctuations of the profits a few for the i.o.c. only go like this they only go up and up enough and that means that they're completely disassociated from any economic reality for the of the places where they go. and the olympic motto bigger stronger faster also could apply to the size of the games. everywhere reports it's always bigger it's always more sort of this idea that the event itself has to reflect the competitive nature of sport and stomach. veteran n.b.a. referee is under investigation for allegedly betting on his own games the gambling scandal has ties to the gambino crime family. tonight a former n.b.a. referee accused of betting on his own games and working for the mob fears for his new life. one year three months behind bars for this great day to be a referee hamdani. my name is tim donaghy i'm a former n.b.a. basketball referee i was involved in their gambling scandal in two thousand and seven to where i used information that i changed from other referees in the league office based on relationships that existed between referees and owners referees and coaches and referees and flyers and use that information knowing what was going to happen and that n.b.a. team and used that information to pass along to people associated with organized crime for monetary gain. it all fell apart because at the end of the year. you know some of the people associated with organized crime are heard talking over a wiretap so it got back to the f.b.i. and they started a big investigation and when i got there i basically told them the truth that i you know was somebody like gambled a lot. in general gamble on n.b.a. basketball games and they want to know how i was able to win so many games without fixing anything it's a while and several meetings but i explained to them that the relationship. that existed both positive and negative between the referees and the players and the coaches and the owner spilled out onto the floor through their investigation speaking to help coaches in owners and players and former referees they came to this inclusion of what i was telling them was the truth. we have here a rogue isolated criminal. the n.b.a. reacted by basically saying that i was just one bad apple in the boche and you know trying to throw me under the bus but what happened was just they they did it using best a geisha and the f.b.i. came out and supported me one hundred percent and said that everything that i said was truthful and that the n.b.a. had a lot of problems that they needed to clean up. and the remains are basically packed with twenty thousand people it's like a broadway show and you have beautiful cheerleaders you have the greatest athletes in the world running up and down the court doing things that most people could only dream of so it's packed with excitement and people love to be a part of. the sixty seventy thousand dollars additional per year tax free. level especially during the playoffs the league would really dictate what they wanted calls in a game and that would put a team at a huge advantage or disadvantage moving forward in a playoff series and it was always a situation where they were extending a playoff series because the amount of revenue an additional game would be in a seven game series was always something that was in the back of the referee's mind . everything's fuelled by money and they know each additional game is you know tens of millions of dollars into the now league office so it's a culture of you know the bottom line which is money. it's just a commonly known practice that the stars around the league in the n.b.a. the star so sold the shoes in the jerseys and the bigger market team is what got the n.b.a. global attention and better ratings so we all knew that you know we need to give them an advantage you know in some way shape or form and that's what a lot of the veteran referees did and that's what a lot of the veteran referees passed along to the younger referees. as a young referee in philadelphia the balls from town to play in seventy six or so and that year they gave us points of emphasis as referees that they wanted to call during a game and one of them was a spin move on the baseline and on there forget i was the referee on the play that which is possible to call that if a top place and michael jordan did it went up and you know how to monster stocks and i waved it off and i called the travel and right after i made that call there was a timeout jordan rushed up to me phil jackson came at me twenty thousand people and the stadium booed me even though it was an away game for the chicago bulls and jordan said you know what what do you call not for i said you know you got the same training tape we've got that's the move that they want call the travel and both phil jackson and michael jordan said to me they may want that call to travel but they certainly don't want to call on me and phil jackson pointed to him and said they don't want that called on him and it was something that really stuck in my mind was it bothered me that twenty thousand people were blowing at me the whole bulls team was coming at me and everyone was kind of amazed that i made that call so i spoke to the elite referee in the locker room and he said yeah you have to realize that you know you don't call that against a star you let that go and you call that against the lesser players when they have a point of emphasis that they want cleaned up in the n.b.a. he don't do it against the star players. i think when you talk about gambling in the n.b.a. with the referees or even those players obviously the referees like to go to the casinos would you like there's a gamble even on the n.b.a. floor with that anyone who would call the first valid an n.b.a. game basically when you are refereeing an n.b.a. team with two of your good friends that you would bet twenty dollars because that's what the tip was for the ball boy so we would say whoever calls the first valley game have to put up the twenty dollar tip for the other two guys so we do well on the floor and we run up and down the. and we you know be letting phallus go because nobody wanted to call the first phallic game because then you are responsible to pay that ball boy so now we have bodies flying all over the place nobody would be wanting to blow the whistle you know two three minutes into a game which is unheard of a foul mouth game called because of a twenty dollars bet a locker room the supervisor of officials at the time came in the locker room at halftime and faceplate said what the hell happened at the beginning of the game don't you guys are blowing the whistle i didn't want to blow the whistle they didn't blow the whistle either because we had that twenty dollars and he just said well i don't want to know anything about that and walked out but nothing was ever done about it so the league office knew that they had taken place at times. i believe for sure that the n.b.a. didn't sue me because the last thing made wanted to do was having some of their referees or owners or league personnel testify under oath that a lot of the things i was saying did take place and were true and to be very detrimental to the league so what they want. do was just you know hopefully put me in jail for a long period of time as this thing blow over but it kind of backfired on them a little bit given fifteen months in prison and i was able to write the book and tell my story of the trip was something that they tried to squash immediately by going into the offices of random house and getting my book deal squashed at first and going into the offices of sixty minutes and trying to get them not to air the episode. thanks. to. the school exercise book filled with stories of war atrocities. people who want justice a flee come with convention expansion was taken in bomb he announced it's in an exercise book i don't know side many other failed changes being a little more in the news the rape of women and girls who is does to one wanted children. a flick of the award winning documentary starting june fourteenth on d w. e w's program guide on the internet the highlights. the holy month. dot com highlights. how the germans came together in one nation from shall the monument to chancellor although from bismarck. the history of the germans has been shaped by great coolers. ice well always to bring my royal college of bat to protect christendom and spread find truth. if you please we learn to focus on. all we took for the battle before the enemy i'm talking about the book and stand by courageous decisions close to the town halls as he told your master that we have received the crown of our room from god and not from his presumptuous circle the sky his whole blasts are the moving tomorrow we will have defeated the enemy all will never see one another again but. we must piece. audio. of the germans for every week on double good. news. this is. from berlin tonight the new crew on their way to the international space station earlier today a soyuz rocket lifted off from the baikonur cosmodrome in kazakhstan. the crew of three. some in for future missions are also coming out people fully as quantum all is volcano of fire yet again seventy five people are confirmed dead the search is on for severe more.

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Transcripts For DW DocFilm - Dirty Games - The Dark Side Of Sports 20180607

and i. see. that. as you know some of. this really is a little bit. but still a little. but i'm. just here if it gets to. cuba. so. that's also not zero zero zero zero zero zero zero. zero zero zero but i thought that was all that was going on. was. a little. oh oh. oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh i don't want to focus on. the the states. when you turn. in the if you can turn into. the thousand twelve thousand fifteen lead you see one on four hundred forty two this is from going to that eventually by our office officer i mean if you speak about this you really see one machine and you don't think this is true three hundred nineteen used. in this case what. are you promise to do that you have got into for somebody to be out sally but didn't get anything just get back in after maybe one streak of anything. worth of wood on lopping off you know that australia disk by it was a disk will likely go to. a movie and i'm very good as the lives of two bio merely are really. the most open throughout but you are. welcome to the new group ground from that old routine i'm going to be seeing as you said it was a facility come not only switching to what i did but also for a little while u.t.c. was a real. swell pitot on the work of bullets out of that a man to turn gray difference of good achieved. to believe me but only one led to me and then on a minute not that i would do him a lot so thank you should use. tempers. more that was hearing it on a song called got a neighbor that. just the. thought of months here i do when up and get up on the world more often feeling my swing and after thinking as i sat on the opening probably other plans in the atoms of an engine and at last. sorry but i'm over. the contacts and go well. yeah i mean just a good side to that because it would really stand that much everybody think that he didn't either just i would just be a conduit of don't. know just to get out of this without. him would not let him down on this note i just love to see them with the possible i need to him and be political sino but it's obvious. and down and i always. did simplest put in so out of ideas among those that have their nose in the sand in the air i mean. a lot of flood you. see on the ground there just the vista blom i let them do this for the long way on me so i just did a prince or two if it's all they have you should know better you need bits. do you have a pond in to do would need to go and sit there. i can see it would mean you didn't hear and see then you didn't do any kind of kind of out of africa and what to do i once was on a mighty good harness and was in the end it damn it didn't look at it will be a percentage that did out on me hard on me and the shadow i've done is to mark and then when i don't know then i must see day i was four hundred or so in my head and . i knew killing the day that i thought it might have an edge and say i didn't go i would get in that i don't want to do she descended. so that in order to do that unless they wanted us to learn how many new immigrants also i was willing to in the lead up to. the major index and to live. a. long. tough luck. in concluding we are facing a complex investigation because many international implications. the prosecution is only growing and you'll take time. it would not be professional to communicate to you today the details. the world of football needs to be patient. by its nature this investigation will take more than three ninety minutes. the fact of the matter is that what has been revealed so far is a mafia style crime syndicate in charge of this sport my only hesitation and using that term is that it is almost insulting to the mafia because. the mafia would never have been so blatant over and out again in its corruption. trial to our europe puerto rico if you tell me but i want you to get ahold of me now which way i had a half fish tank but not a fed up one day or two weeks. at irony of birth conaway. for them. now well great i meant it when i get to it and you autocue that he actually. didn't want to talk about some of you know why you have a. job like that. and there's the on sphinx for me which is meant as time goes from a cruise which you have. jr bill which imposter drayton featherweight champ freddie gordon. and for the briefest of p.r. is a guy named jose rivera who is welterweight champion. you think fights to make betty. you six fights to get a fight or a championship you think fights to maneuver a fighter up the ranks toward a championship fight you fix fights to win. in order. again to position someone strategically. you fix fights to lose. in order to get paid and make you know betting coups the way you fix fights varies greatly. you fix fights by buying judges that's and you know that's one easy way to do it you fix fights by having the referee working for you so that if there's any way that the ref can stop a fight in your guy's favor he does you fix fights by colluding with the fighters generally the loser so as almost always a loser. winners almost never both fighters face. one of the things that you're cognizant of when you are fixing fights. is that you're doing something illegal something that theoretically can wind you up you know they want you in jail on get people angry at you so you never really say anything. you know nothing that's culpable. so there's a code. and if you're in boxing for a while you know the code everybody knows the code. to go into egypt. where there is either a trainer or manager and you're looking for somebody your god to beat this up these guys make their money and it's interesting that people who lose in boxing generally speaking if they're professionals can make more money than winners. when cost money losing makes money no that's not true obviously at an elite level but almost every other level is the case. so what you do is you say i've got a guy. and he is looking for. looking for because the first ok so that means that. he needs to win you know you want to keep him busy. the response to that is i've got somebody and generally the second phrase is but he hasn't been in the gym to watch. ok so the subtext there is he's he's not good shape and so you're horny and i don't where this thing is going to go and you see the other that's ok you know. like i got to get in a few routes i mean it's going to knock out at which point he goes well you know ok i can do that but really my bike guys didn't seem to go more than three or four. that's ok so you just fix the fight. nobody's done anything illegal nobody's done anything where they've come out and stand in anything explicitly. but that's a done deal. and you get. you get what you pay for. it is how many fights you fix. hundreds how many i'm not sure but hundreds. i see it all the time now i mean i don't make our living in boxing anymore but i see faces all the time sure it will always exist it always has. i pads easier we go with our men out the evening when the earth must be countries in six continents to begin it. shuts up. take is i think tends toward the sensational irish hurricane peter mike. and keep laughing keep laughing. bill through funny how the few who if any want to you because you respect me for what i'm doing know what i've been to the last three months and seen them now just going against a guy like this you have been dumping the opinion it's. tough to prove. i'm hard to peter billy from midfield mass on sunday night for free kicks faces yes. but if you have a good trip a few reagents not take them soon because remember what happens when i refuse my truck. big milage measure was going in fin thank you thank you i had no money so i for a while was bankrolling what they were doing i was breaking mcneely and sometimes and actually don't need to new york. for various things you know and i was making fights for peter so i mean i knew them very well and i was very involved in what was going on so i bring them here only to help raise his office it's time to structure a process and we work out a deal for me kelly to be tyson's first apart which is a completely win win situation for everybody i'm just happy to be here and bite me if they've made. nearly any cute statement on get rid of me to fight thank you for your record thank you. i get a phone call from a guy whose voice i recognize but not not somebody i really know but you know he said look somebody thought i should give you a call to let you know. that up that god made that the fight wouldn't. i'm trying to remember how he described. i think he told me the fight won't go it's not going to go ninety seconds it was you know it was a million dollar bet and the fights not going to go ninety seconds somebody thought you might be interested and want was want it was were eighty nine seconds at which point then vicki you know he steps. between the ropes to prop them and the fight was you know he who really had this thing figured out understood that it was crucial that there be no finding of impropriety because tyson was the machine on which boxing rep by far the biggest are in the world and. you know when when he fights in vegas. they generate a billion dollars and had revenue i mean not from boxing for say but you know for from all of the ancillary revenue so it has to be ok and think you know he knows so he gets his payday whatever it is and i don't know what it is and never did know what it was. and i get a phone call from from him and i'm still in puerto rico so i got to come to the house i got to see you and i said i can't do it i'm still out of the country and he says send somebody you trust. and when that somebody got there. he was given the. put my son through college i got it you know i got knocked down the match quicky it's hard. i felt like the for i felt like the first night thousand a good good quick podger on my part is a little bit of a flash not that i was ok the second knockdown as the film osho all i was shaking and i slipped and i fell in the role of and i tweet i trust the part of i need you see the right way to see it affected look at the film. look at the film look at the film my need for gold my need buckle don't even get me here most of them. imagine that you're off against a very well placed. high profile machine that is capitalized to a degree that you can't even begin to imagine a billion dollar multibillion dollar industry so this guy with nothing except for his brain in the spirit. that is the greatest single underdog score. that i've ever seen in all of my years in boxing in the single most savvy maneuver that i've ever seen. think that it. was the. half. that. was. far. was. the. car was. loaded. the fun stuff was stuff so yes i did sit still. for the fun looking for must wait. for. the. car i eat chipotle is a plus thanks for phil phil it's evolved while the ball has commenced with you whether it's called yankee mice fall economical he doesn't want to wear a thing was a man's wooden house called am getting. old he'll be cute thing to do is sold those things she was so sick she. and then you die young boy are they sick of the acim for supposedly doing this you could be if you can when you guys just. like ha ho you we are going to show chaos as we are all friends. other possible sceptical and why did you was there you say it was the mark say that you all are that touch us seeing is really orders. which we do for the other what caused us and if it is to save us from ill feeling this how catching ruby can cause as you see as you to see who only a few of my like and in there such as each other have a sphere was there five feet it was i mean it was yet another was a of the judges who said i would save money my wife and i mother how cool and me to the. one who survived cause a she might act and then she she with my boy fozzy missive it was by she lived well then with that was so nice in that then i think well my like an ion think well i would start with the one to the one of the one. the ocean was a for my first become we should. act keep push i think when we. while i can i would you feel was easy to dish this was given for the poor kid the august so i can get to work and so he wants to win for both a kill some of the old with no poison might come to it though can she do it when you think one should do something about the source and i want to know that my niece is do they see what i think the opposition from what. if you think about the stadium as a reflection of the city we can say that the poorest fans have been expelled from the matter kind of violently they've had their places literally taken away from them. all around brazil people are asking this question back and can't fool is this really benefiting and of course you know the answers and it's the elites believe politicians the very narrow strata of the brazilian the highest classes that are the world cup is for not for just majority of brazilian people we're hypnotized by what's happening in the narrative the football and no one wants to talk about issues because they just want to enjoy the circus now that the circus is gone we can talk about these things again and so it's a suspension of critical thought it's a time of suspended animation where it's not just the country that stops it's as if people brain stop working as well. and so this is the depression the dissent and debate about is this worth the can we do this should you do this who is the call for when the ball is rolling those questions were largely eliminated from public discussion. there. was. clearly an illegally meaning believe me when i married him. that's always the most vulnerable people and this happens when we go back to soledad eighty eight to see the forced removal of tens of thousands of people from their homes their barcelona to force removal of immigrants quarters in. atlanta in one thousand nine hundred six forced removal of two african-american neighborhoods near the olympic sites. not so much in sydney but then the first removal of tens of thousands of roma people from from athens two thousand and eight two million people moved from the center of all beijing. london similar cases of displacement and then again we'll see this in rio two thousand and sixteen similar in south africa so this is a repeating theme that has different power to kill asians some particular places. thomas bach is saying we need reform because the olympics are in a slow motion crisis right now and you only need to look at the bidding for the two thousand and twenty two olympics to realize that because voters who any voter who had the chance to vote on it in a referendum said we don't want the olympics from munich to stockholm to krakow to kill the canton in switzerland they got to vote on it so he is in a crisis comparing fee for in the i.o.c. because they're in a crisis of the i.o.c. they know they need to change human rights need to be part of the equation for both the olympics and for i mean right now it's not at all a part of the way things are decided i mean just look at the evidence beijing two thousand and eight sochi two thousand and fourteen then there's russia two thousand and eighteen qatar two thousand and twenty two you can't tell me human rights are are serious consideration when you make those selections. the idea that politics and sports don't mix is a fairy tale that people at the i.o.c. and fifa tell themselves to console each other around the evening fire is just totally untrue and it's ridiculous to say so and it really shows a selective ethics on their part the way it plays out for politicians in beijing or glad i'm here putin in sochi is they get to stand on the world stage and look legitimate alongside this incredibly popular event known as the olympics and so they get to sort of enjoy the olympic halo effect if you will and meanwhile brushed aside all their human rights violations and all their problems you know with their democratic practice. one thing that we've seen is that independent of the global economy which has periodic fluctuations the fluctuations of the profits a few for the i.o.c. only go like this they only go up and up enough and that means that they're completely disassociated from any economic reality for the of the places where they go. and the olympic motto bigger stronger faster also could apply to the size of the games. every will be it's always bigger it's always more and so this idea that the event itself has to reflect the competitive nature of sport has to some. veteran n.b.a. referee is under investigation for allegedly betting on his own games the gambling scandal has ties to the gambino crime family tonight a former n.b.a. referee accused of betting on his own games and working for the mob fears for his life. one year three months behind bars for his great there to be a referee hamdani. my name is tim donaghy i'm the former n.b.a. basketball referee that was involved in the gambling scandal in two thousand and seven to where i used information that i've changed from other referees in the league office based on relationships that existed between referees and owners referees and coaches and referees and flyers and use that information knowing what was going to happen and n.b.a. game and used that information to pass along to people associated with organized crime for monetary gain. it all fell apart because at the end of the year. you know some of the people associated with organized crime are heard talking over a wiretap. after the f.b.i. and they started a big investigation and when i got there i basically told them the truth that i you know somebody who like gambled a lot. in general gamble on n.b.a. basketball teams and they wanted to know how i was able to win so many games without fixing them and it took a while and several meetings but i explained to them that the relationship. that existed both positive and negative between the referees and the players and the coaches and the owner spilled out onto the floor and through the investigation and speaking to help coaches in owners and players and former referees they came to this inclusion of what i was telling them was the truth. that we have here a rogue isolated criminal. the n.b.a. reacted by basically saying that i was just one bad apple in the bunch and you know trying to throw me under the bus but what happened was is they they did it using best a geisha and the f.b.i. came out and supported me one hundred percent and said that everything that i said was truthful and that the n.b.a. had a lot of problems that they needed to clean up. and the remains are basically packed with twenty thousand people it's like a broadway show when you have beautiful cheerleaders you have the greatest athletes in the world running up and down the court doing things that most people could only dream of so it's packed with excitement and people love to be at our best. fifty sixty seventy thousand dollars additional three year tax free. will be a level especially during the playoffs the league would really dictate what they want to call it in the game and that would put a team at a huge advantage or disadvantage moving forward in a playoff series and it was always a situation where they were extending a playoff series because the amount of revenue an additional game would be in a seven game series was always something that was in the back of the referee's mind . everything is fueled by money and they know each additional game is you know tens of millions of dollars into the league office sell it so it's a culture of you know the bottom line which is money. it's just a commonly known practice that the stars around the league in the n.b.a. the star so sold the shoes and the jerseys and the bigger market team is what got the n.b.a. global attention and better ratings so we all knew that you know we need to give them an advantage you know in some way shape or form and that's what a lot of the veteran referees did and that's what a lot of veteran referees pass along to the younger referees. as a young referee in philadelphia the balls from town to play in seventy six or so and that year they gave us points of emphasis as referees that they wanted to call during a game and one of them was a spin move on the baseline add on there forget i was the referee on the play that was your sponsor was a call that if it took place and michael sure did it went up and you know how to monster stopped and i waved it off and i called the travel and right after i made that call there was a timeout jordan rushed up to me phil jackson came at me twenty thousand people and the stadium booed me even though it was an away game for the chicago bulls and jordan said you know what what do you call not for i said you know you got the same training tape we've got that's the move that they want call the travel and both phil jackson michael jordan said to me they may want that call to travel but they certainly don't want to call on me and phil jackson pointed to him and said they don't want that called on him and it was something that really stuck in my mind was it bothered me that twenty thousand people were booing at me the whole bulls team was coming at me and everyone was kind of amazed that i made that call so i spoke to the elite referee in the locker room and he said yeah you have to realize that you know you don't call that against a star you let that go and you call that against the lesser players when they have a point of emphasis that they want cleaned up in the n.b.a. he don't do it against the star players. i think when you talk about gambling in the n.b.a. with the press release or even those players obviously the referees like to go to the casinos we live there's a gamble even on the n.b.a. floor with betting on who would call the first ballot in the n.b.a. game basically when you are roughly an n.b.a. team with two of your good friends that you would bet twenty dollars because that's what the tip was for the ball boy so we would say whoever called the first valley game had to put up the twenty dollar tip for the other two guys so we did well on the floor and we run up and down the court and we you know be letting phallus go because nobody wanted to call the first phallic game because then you are responsible to pay that ball boy so you know we don't bodies flying all over the place nobody would be wanting to blow the whistle you know two three minutes into a game which is unheard of a foul mouth being called because of a twenty dollars bet on a locker room the supervisor of officials at the time came in the locker room at halftime and faceplate said what the hell happened it's beginning of the game don't you guys were blowing the whistle i didn't want to blow the whistle they didn't blow the whistle either because we had a bet twenty dollars and he just said law i don't want to know anything about that and walked out but nothing was ever done about it so the league office knew that it had taken place at times. i believe for sure that the n.b.a. didn't sunidhi because the last thing they wanted to do was having some of their referees or owners or league personnel testify under oath that a lot of the things that i was saying did take place and were true and to be very detrimental to the league so what they want. do was just you know hopefully put me in jail for a long period of time and have this thing blow over but it kind of backfired on them a little bit given fifteen months in prison and i was able to write the book and tell my story of the trial was something that they tried to squash immediately by going into the offices of random house and getting my book deal squashed at first and going into the offices of sixty minutes and trying to get them not to air the of the show. business. german companies want to children i would ngs win best lots of time. and money. too often for them to see that go. with no guarantee of success. going to. them thirty minutes w. . called 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Transcripts For DW DocFilm - Dirty Games - The Dark Side Of Sports 20180608

i. feel. that there. is you know. this area is living in a mess people still licata. but i. just still hear it but refuse to. so. let's also talk of. the oh. my god that was our fault that. was left to go. oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh. oh. oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh god you got the. most votes in the. winter. in the country in two. thousand and twelve two thousand fifteen b.d.c. one on four live in tokyo this is from going to a third visit by our office officer i mean if you speak about this you really see one machine you don't use for three hundred ninety exists in this case what. i want to promise to do that we have got to do for sandra levy out sally but didn't get anything just get back in the after line one straight up and if you have. a look of wood on lopping off you know that australia descript by it was a disk will likely go to. a two prong movie and i'm ready for others to live up to ride of nearly half believe. the most open throughout the two are. welcome to the new group around them that will do to. me the same as you said it was a facility come not only is ritchie the way what i did but also when you go to a were you to see what most of your. snapped out of the world cup were like it's out of. ten great idea to insert. a different political rally but only one led to me and then on a monument wrote to i'm a large. tempers are. putting it on a song called gotten me going to. the. top of the month here to run up and get up on the world but often feeling my swing and after thinking so i was out of an open imbroglios appearance in the atoms of unusual at lax. rule. of law. sorry but on a milder maybe it's because it's an over. yeah i mean this took the under side to that because it was the stuff that morning i think that you were getting i would just come would have. noticed of you know what's real. and would not let you down on this note i was. doing within the past for i need to even be able to sign no but it was somebody doing well and down the aisle way out of. its simplest put into one of the idea. of yeah no cinemas i mean let an e. name room a lot of. them seen on the wrong day to study this and lamela. this for a long way on me so i just did a prince or two if it's already said number two you need to get said get him there you have a pond in to do would need to go and sit down. i'm going to go to didn't hear and see then you didn't do any kind of kind of out of african what what i do i want to slow down and i say again thomason was in. and then mitt romney didn't look at it cambodia percentage that he had out on i mean tanya and the shadow news talk to mark i'm done with i don't know and i must say i was a soft fighter jet and i have done. a new killing the day that i thought it might have a dead if it ends or didn't go i would dig in there are some want to do. have an ordinance to do that i wasn't even going to learn how many new immigrants also i was going on to the development of. michael jackson to do with. her. mother. would. you. please. oh. please. in concluding we are facing a complex investigation because many international implications. the prosecution is only growing and will take time. it would not be professional communicates to you today the details time to. the world the food bowl needs to be patient. by its nature this investigation will take more than the legendary ninety minutes. the fact of the matter is that what has been revealed so far is a mafia style crime syndicate in charge of the sport my only hesitation and using that term is that it is almost insulting to the mafia because. the mafia would never have been so blatant over and out again. and it's corruption. trial back now you're a puerto rico if you tell me but i want you to get ahold of me now which way are heading up this thing but not a fed of a problem one day or two weeks. at i probably a public trial where everywhere i go i want more of them. now the outbreak of money if i get in the way that you want folks that people actually. want to talk about don't want any of them out crying. and there's the auspex for me which are a menace tyrone whose former crews were a champ. jr bill which imposter drayton featherweight chance freddy toward. and for the briefest of p.r. is a guy named jose rivera who is well to each of. you thinks fights to make betty. you thinks fights to get a fight or a championship you think fights to maneuver a fighter up the ranks toward a championship fight you think fights to win. in order. again to position someone strategically. you fix fights to lose. in order to get paid and made you know betting cool is the way to fix fights varies greatly. you fix fights by buying judges that's and you know that's one easy way to do it you fix fights by having the referee working for you so that if there's any way that the ref can stop a fight in your guy's favor he does you fix fights by colluding with the fighters generally the loser it's all it's almost always a loser. winners almost never go fight is fixed. one of the things that you're cognizant of when you are fixing fights. is that you're doing something illegal something that theoretically can wind you up you know want you in jail or i'm going to get people angry at you so you never really say anything you know nothing that's culpable so there's a code. and if you're in boxing for a while you know the code everybody knows the code. you go into a shop. where there is either a trainer or manager and you're looking for somebody your guy can be this happy guys make your money and it's interesting that people who lose in boxing. generally speaking if they're professional losers can make more money than winners. when it costs money losing makes money that's not true obviously at an elite level but almost every other level is the case. so what you do is you say i've got a guy. and he is looking for people looking for just the first ok so it means that. he needs to be you know having to want to keep him busy. the response to those i've got somebody and generally the second phrase is but he hasn't been in the gym to watch. ok so the subtext there is he's he's not good shape and so you're horny and i don't where this thing is going to go and you say the other that's ok you know. like i got to get in a few routes i mean it's going to knock out at which point he goes well you know ok . i can do that but really mike by guys in shape to go more than three or four. that's ok so you just fixed a fight. nobody's done anything illegal nobody's done anything with it come out and stated anything explicitly. but that's a done deal. and you get. you get what you pay for. it is a great fight just six. hundred . how many i'm not sure but hundreds. i see it all the time now i mean i don't make our living in boxes anymore but i see fixes all the time sure will always exist and always households. my kids here we go with are many many that evening with the burden not the countries it was six continents to begin the. shutdown. biggest i think tends toward the sensational irish hurricanes here mike. and keep laughing keep laughing. you'll feel funny a. few go if anyone to you because you respect me or what i'm doing or what i've been do of last three months since you've been announced to go against a guy like this you have nothing to pin. protrude. on her to feel to be clearly from the field passed on sunday night what are we to take since yes. but if you have it it took a few recruits not take them soon because remember what happens when i refuse my cuckoo. uli's measure was found in fin thank you thank you i had no money so i for a while was bankrolling what they were doing i was breaking mcneely and sometimes and actually don't need to new york. for various things you know and i was making fights for peter so i mean i knew them very well and i was very involved in what's going on so i bring if you don't have to help or if it's office it's done to its director of boxing and we work out a deal for me only to be tyson's first part which is a completely win win situation for everybody i'm just happy to be here everybody me can speak me down nearly every keep statement on do you really need a fight thank you for your for good thank you. i got a phone call from a guy whose voice i recognize but not not somebody i really know but you know he said look somebody thought i should give you a call to let you know. that a bet that made that the fight wouldn't. because i'm trying to remember how he described. i think he told me the fight won't go it's not going to go ninety seconds it was you know it was a million dollar bet and the fights not going to go ninety seconds somebody thought you might be interested in the want was want which were eighty nine seconds which point then vicki on the steps. between the ropes to prop the ending to the five was only who really had this thing figured out understood that it was crucial that there be no finding of impropriety because tyson was the machine on which boxing rap by far the biggest are in the world and. you know when when he fights and vegas. they generate a billion dollars in added revenue i mean not from boxing for say but you know for from all of the ancillary revenue so it has to be ok and vicky and you know. so he gets his payday whatever it is and i don't know what it is and never did know what it was. and i get a phone call from from him and i'm still in puerto rico so i got to come to the house i got to see you and i said i can't do it and still out of the country and he says send somebody you trust. and when that somebody got there. he was still full of a little put my son through college i got it you know i got knocked down the match quick yeah it's hard. i felt like the for i felt like the first nine thousand a good good quick podge of my part is a little bit of a flash not that i was ok the second knockdown as the film will show i was shaky i slipped i fell on the rope and i twisted i twist the part of i need you see the way. you see to fit look at the film. look at the film look at the film my knee buckled my knees buckled on to get me hit mogul don't. imagine you're up against a very well placed. high profile machine that is capitalized to a degree that you can't even begin to imagine a billion dollar multibillion dollar industry so this guy with nothing except for his brain in the spirit of. that is the greatest single underdog score. that i've ever seen in all of my years in boxing you know the single most savvy maneuver that i've ever seen. was. half. that. was. the r. . was. the. car. ah. loader on. the phone was the bus stop so yes i did sit still. for the fucking looking for my secret. my mum. for. the. car i yanked she was of course thanks for a pill feel free to both schwab to my home has it is there with you with this quality into my shawl that canonical new doesn't want to wear a thing was a mug would know it's quality and they only. holds the movie key thing who is sold to the shrugs see if she. and then you die young boy are they sick of the simpler suppose you thought of this the d.d.e. because when you die. like a fish a whole year you have bookish chaos as we're all friends every other possible perceptively why did you as excited as them are say that tomorrow or the thought. of us seeing green your dish. which will do for the other what was in your face a surprise for me and for you in this group because they feel she has you to see who hear your mother in there says she'll have a sphere was there five feet of those i mean you. ever was there the judge who said i would say my life and the mother cannot fool him with a new. one will survive because a she might act and then she thought she would love war fozzie the most if you want but you lived well then with that was so much nothing of the well my life and i think while i was there you are the one to the bone if you will. the ocean opposes are my friends for coming to. act keep pushing not think when we. whack and how would you feel was injured through the this was given for the kick at the auger so i can get the weapon so who knows when to move but i would kill some of the old with no poison my eyes. it don't know what you do if you think which of them will start to care about the source and i want to know why is this do they see on what i found the one question which was. if you think about the stadium as a reflection of the city we can say that the poorest fans have been expelled from the mount of kind of violently they've had their places literally taken away from them. all around brazil people are asking this question comes back in i can't who is this really benefiting and of course you know the answers and it's the elites really politicians the very narrow strata of the brazilian highest class is that for the world cup as for not for the vast majority of brazilian people we're hypnotized by what's happening in the narrative the football and no one wants to talk about issues because they just want to enjoy the circus now that the circus has gone we can talk about these things again and so it's a suspension of critical thought it's a time of suspended animation where it's not just the country that stops its is a few falls brain stuff working as well. and so this is the depression the dissent and debate about is this worth it trying to do this should you do this who's there for when the ball is rolling those questions were largely eliminated from public discussion. who are. clearly being illegally meaning me i mean. it's always the most one of the people this happened to. go back to soledad in eighty eight to see the forced removal of tens of thousands of people from their homes their barcelona ninety two forced move immigrants quarters in. atlanta in one thousand nine hundred six forced removal of two african-american neighborhoods near the olympic sites. not so much in sydney but then the first removal of tens of thousands of roma people from from athens two thousand and eight two million people moved from the center of all beijing. london similar tastes of displacement and then again we'll see this in rio two thousand and sixteen similar in south africa so this is a repeating theme that has different power to killers in some particular places. thomas bach is saying we need reform because the olympics are in a slow motion crisis right now and you only need to look at the bidding for the two thousand and twenty two olympics to realize that because voters who any voter who had the chance to vote on it in a referendum said we don't want the olympics from munich to stockholm to krakow to cuba canton in switzerland they got to vote on it so he is in a crisis comparing fee for in the i.o.c. because they're in a crisis of the i.o.c. they know they need to change human rights need to be part of the equation for both the olympics and for fifa i mean right now it's not at all a part of the way things are decided i mean just look at the evidence beijing two thousand and eight sochi two thousand and fourteen then there's russia two thousand and eighteen qatar two thousand and twenty two you can't tell me human rights are serious consideration when you make those selections. the idea that politics and sports don't mix is a fairy tale that people at the i.o.c. and fifa tell themselves to console each other around the evening fire is just totally untrue and it's ridiculous to say so and it really shows a selective ethics on their part the way it plays out for politicians in beijing or glad i'm here putin in sochi is they get to stand on the world stage and look legitimate alongside this incredibly popular event known as the olympics and so they get to sort of enjoy the olympic halo effect if you will and meanwhile brushed aside all their human rights violations and all their problems you know with their democratic practice. one thing though he seemed is that independent of the global economy which has periodic fluctuations the fluctuations of the profits a few for the i.o.c. only go like this they only go up and up enough and that means that they're completely disassociated from any economic reality for the of the places where they go. and the olympic motto bigger stronger faster also could apply to the size of the games. every olympics it's always been your it's always more sort of this idea that the event itself has to reflect the competitive nature of sport has to some a. veteran n.b.a. referee is under investigation for allegedly betting on his own games the gambling scandal has ties to the gambino crime family. tonight a former n.b.a. referee accused of betting on his own games and working for the mob fears for his life. one year three months behind bars for disgraced and be a referee tim donaghy. my name is tim donaghy i'm the former n.b.a. basketball referee that was involved in their gambling scandal from two thousand and seven to where i used information that i've seen from other referees in the league office based on relationships that exist between referees and owners referees and coaches and referees and flyers and use that information knowing what was going to happen and that n.b.a. team and used that information to pass along to people associated with organized crime for monetary gain. it all fell apart because at the end of the year. you know some of the people associated with organized crime or heard talk you know where the wire top selling back to the f.b.i. and they started a big investigation and when i got there i basically told them the truth that i you know was somebody who had gambled a lot. in general gamble on n.b.a. basketball games and they wanted to know how i was able to win so many games without fixing them and it took a while and several meetings but i explained to them that the relationship. existed both positive and negative between the referees and the players and the coaches and the owner spilled out onto the floor and through the investigation and speaking to help coaches in owners and players and former referees they came to this inclusion of what i was telling them was the truth. we have here a rogue isolated criminal. the n.b.a. reacted by basically saying that i was just one bad apple in the boche and you know trying to throw me under the bus for what happened was just you know they they did it using best a geisha and the f.b.i. came out and supported me one hundred percent and said that everything that i said was truthful and that the n.b.a. had a lot of problems that they needed to clean up. and the reviews are basically packed with twenty thousand people it's like a broadway show where you have beautiful cheerleaders you have the greatest athletes in the world running up and down the court doing things that most people could only dream of so it's packed with excitement and people love to be a part. of the sixty seventy thousand dollars additional per year tax free you know. a level especially during the playoffs the league would really dictate what they want to call it in a game and that would put a team at a huge advantage or disadvantage moving forward in a playoff series and it was always a situation where they were extending a playoff series because the amount of revenue one additional game would be in a seven game series was always something that was in the back of the referee's mind . everything's fueled by money and they know each additional game is you know tens of millions of dollars into the league office selig's it's a culture of you know the bottom line which is money. it's just a commonly known practice that the stars around the league in the n.b.a. the star so sold the shoes and the jerseys and the bigger market team is what got the n.b.a. global tension and better ratings so we all knew that you know we need to give them an advantage you know in some way shape or form and that's what a lot of the veteran referees did and that's what a lot of the veteran referees pass along to the younger referees. as a young referee in philadelphia the bowls from town the play in seventy six or so and that year they gave us points of emphasis as referees that they wanted to call during a game and one of them was a spin move on the baseline add on there forget i was the referee on the play that for sure sponsor was a call that if it took place and michael sure did it went up and you know how to monster stopped and i waved it off and i called the travel and right after i made that call there was a timeout jordan rushed up to me phil jackson came at me twenty thousand people in the stadium booed me even though it was an away game for the chicago bulls and jordan said you know what do you call not for i said you know you got the same training tape we got that's the move that they want call the travel and both phil jackson michael jordan said to me they may want that call to travel but they certainly don't want to call on me and phil jackson pointed to him and said they don't want that called on him and it was something that really stuck in my mind was it bothered me that twenty thousand people were booing at me the whole bulls team was coming at me and everyone was kind of amazed that i made that call so i spoke to the elite referee in the locker room and he said you know you have to realize that you know you don't call that against a star you let that go and you call that against the lesser players when they have a point of emphasis that they want cleaned up in the n.b.a. he don't do it against the star players. i think when you talk about gambling in the n.b.a. with the referees or even those players obviously the referees like to go to the casinos would like there's a gamble even on the n.b.a. floor with betting on who would call the first ballot an n.b.a. game basically when you were refereeing an n.b.a. game with two of your good friends that you would bet twenty dollars because that's what the tip was for the ball boy so we would say who ever called the first valley game had to put up the twenty dollar tip for the other two guys so we did well on the floor and we'd be running up and down the court and we'd you know be letting phallus go because nobody wanted to call the first falcon game because then you are responsible to pay that ball boy so you know we got bodies flying all over the place and nobody would be wanting to blow the whistle you know two three minutes into a game which is unheard of a foul mouth being called because of a twenty dollars bet on a locker room the supervisor of officials at the time came in the locker room at halftime and faceplate said what the hell happened at the beginning of the game then you guys were blowing the whistle i didn't want to blow the whistle they didn't blow the whistle either because we had a bet twenty dollars and he just said well i don't want to know anything about that and walked out but nothing was ever done about it so the league office knew that it had taken place at times. i believe for sure that the n.b.a. didn't sue me because the last thing they wanted to do was having some of their referees or owners or league personnel testify under oath that a lot of the things i was saying did take place and were truly to be very detrimental to the league so what they want. it was just you know hopefully put me in jail for a long period of time and have this thing blow over but it kind of backfired on them a little bit given fifteen months in prison and i was able to write the book and tell my story of the trial was something that they tried to squash immediately by going into the offices of random house and getting my book deal squashed at first and going into the offices of sixty minutes and trying to get them not to air the episode. dream go. forward. journalists discuss the topic of the week the world's most powerful leaders assemble in canada the g seven looks to be at risk of devolving into what she six plus one truck goes it alone to europe at a loss that's our topic on china. on. global inequality. what does inequality mean. connecting well. to the media. joining the discussion and helping. media following the trends in a. climate change. waist length pollution says. isn't it time for good. eco africa people and projects that are changing no ones are meant for the earth so to us to make a difference let's. go into the farming magazine. d.w. . we make up over three quarters of our folks that found out that if we all of the seven surfaces. want to shape the continent's future priests to be part of the burden youngsters as the share their stories their dreams and their challenges. of the seventy seven percent. platform for such. claim by. the lead. this is news coming to you live from berlin donald trump says he'd like to invite north korea's leader kim jong il into the white house 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Transcripts For DW DocFilm - Dirty Games - The Dark Side Of Sports 20180616

and i. see. nasa. as you know. the story is a little. bit but still a little excited. but i'm. just here just refuse to. cuba. so. let's also talk a. little oh. my god that was all that. was left to go. oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh . oh. oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh i don't want to talk to. the states these. winter. in the rain contrary to two. thousand and twelve to toss in fifteen leadership one on four hundred and forty two this is from going to. eventually by our office officer and we. speak oh it's young leaders in the machine and you think this is from three hundred ninety and used. in this case what. i want to promise them that they have got me to forgive somebody out salary but they didn't get anything just get back in after nine one straight up and we have. don't wapping i do know that australia discreet by this when i go to. do. it i'm ready for others to live so too proud of me awfully. good myself. for tomorrow well what's the good down doing. that will do to come with me the same as if you said it was a city to come not only switching to whatever deep but also a little were you to see them as a little. slow but out in the open like it's out of that a man to turn graded on so many would achieve. to believe but only one living in their own money from abroad to a mulatto that was sure to sundown tempers are. more than putting it on a song called got a nigger. just the. man to man up and get up on the world made off and feeling mighty and up and thinking as i sat on the open imbroglios or passing vehicles or when using the right laughs. mean we believe it to be contacts and go. down the list of the order side to that because it would mean that the stuff that might be that he did in the article would just come would have to put on. notice to do that let's you know. none of us here down on this note i just love to see my father and we didn't pass for a need to even be political sino but it's all very well and down the aisle way out of. its simplest. of idea. of do not sit in the sunlight a knee. room a lot of. i'm going to sing. on the wrong dick to study this to blow my luck. this from number a an e e just did if it's a two if it's ok if you should number two you need it said get him to you the pond into on you to do would need to humans. i'm going to go to didn't hear and see on your did you an incredible have a kind of out of african what fred. thompson was a man the family didn't look at it her family did to service their dad out on me tanya in michigan donna's talk to mark and then i don't know them and marcia day i was she had to sign up for her to have. a new killing the day that i thought it might have to bury it and so i didn't go although it did in one of them was a do she did. have an ordinance did and then i wasn't even going to learn how many new immigrants also i wasn't on the deal isn't. that my child it's only if you live. your life. you. you're. you're. you're bleeding. off the top of the. police. in concluding we are facing a complex investigation because many international implications. the prosecution is only growing until take time. it would not be professional communicates to you today the details to. the world of food bowl needs to be patient. by its nature this investigation will take more than three ninety minutes. the fact of the matter is that what has been revealed so far is a mafia style crime syndicate in charge of the sport my only hesitation and using that term is that it is almost insulting to the mafia because the mafia would never have been so blatant over and out again. and it's corruption. trial back now in europe puerto rico if you tell me but i want you to get ahold of me help what you a i fed me have to think what not a fed up one day or two weeks. at i probably at the very conaway everywhere i go for a lot of them. now well great if i get to do it at you autocue that people actually. want to write and want to talk about it on any other. stuff like that. and then you see on sphinx for which a man is tyrone goes former crew switching out. junior bill which imposter drayton featherweight chance freddy toward. and for the briefest of p.r. is a guy named jose rivera who is a well to a champ. you think fights to make. you fix fights to get a fighter a championship you think fights to maneuver a fighter up the ranks toward a championship fight you fix fights to win. in order. again to position someone strategically you fix fights to lose. in order to get paid and make you know betting to lose the way you fix fights varies greatly. you fix fights by buying judges that's and you know that's one easy way to do it you fix fights by having the referee working for you so that if there's any way that the ref can stop a fight in your guy's favor he does you fix fights by colluding with the fighters generally the loser so as almost always a loser. winners almost never go to the fight was fixed. one of the things that you're cognizant of when you are fixing fights is that you're doing something illegal something that theoretically can once you're out you know they want you in jail or and get people angry at you so you never really say anything you know nothing that's culpable. so there's a code. and if you're in boxing for a while you know the coach everybody knows the coach. will go into asia. where there is either a trainer or manager and you're looking for somebody your guy can beat this up these guys make their money and it's interesting that people who lose in boxing generally speaking because they're professional losers can make more money than wonders. when cost money losing makes money no that's not true obviously at an elite level but almost every other level it's the case. so what you do is you say i've got a guy. and he is looking for people looking for clues in the first ok so it means that. he needs to be you know i mean you want to keep him busy. the response to that is i've got somebody and generally the second phrase is but he hasn't been in the gym to watch. ok so the subtext there is he's he's not good shape and so you're honing in on where this thing is going to go and use it other that's ok you know. like i got to get into a few routes i mean it can be a knockout at which point he goes well you know ok. i can do that but really mike by guys in shape to go more than three or four. that's ok so you just fix the fight. or he's done anything illegal nobody's done anything where they've come out and stated anything explicitly. but that's a done deal. and you get. you get what you pay for. it is how great fights are six. hundred. how many i'm not sure but hundreds. i see it all the time now i mean i don't make our living in boxes anymore but i see faces all the time sure it will always exist and always ask. for both. hands here we go with our main event of the evening with the first the country's name seems positive still being in a. small town. state is i think tends toward the sensational irish hurricane here mike. and keep laughing keep laughing. bill through funny how. few go if anyone to you because you respect me or want to do what i've been to the last three months it seems announced to go against a guy like this you have been dumped in the pits. tough to prove. i'm hurtin peter billy for good field mass on sunday don't push me to cases yes. but if you have it took a few reagents yet take them soon because remember what happens when i refuse my cuckoo. thank you liz manager was gone he'd been vecchio vacuum he had no money so i for a while was bankrolling what they were doing i was breaking mcneely and sometimes and actually don't need to new york. for various they you know and i was making fights for peter so i mean i knew them very well i was very involved in what's going on so i bring if you need to help raise his office it's time to structure boxing and we work out a deal for me kelly to be tyson's first part which is a completely win win situation for everybody i'm just happy to be here and buddy me if they've made me believe you have to keep state me i'm going to really need a fight thank you for your record thank you. i get a phone call from a guy whose voice i recognize but not not somebody i really know but you know he said look somebody thought i should give you a call to let you know. that a bet that made up the fight wouldn't. i'm trying to remember how he described. i think he told me the fight won't go it's not the co ninety seconds it was you know it was a million dollar bet and the fights not going to go ninety seconds somebody thought you might be interested in that it was you want me and i was three and eighty nine seconds it was point in vacuo he steps. between the ropes to prop them and the two five i was thinking only who really have this thing figured out understood that it was crucial that there be no finding of impropriety because tyson was the machine on which boxing rap by far the biggest are in the world and. you know when he fights and vegas. they generate a billion dollars in added revenue i mean not from boxing for say but you know for from all of the ancillary revenue so it has to be ok and vacuuming also so he gets his payday whatever it is and i don't know what it is and never did know what it was and i get a phone call from from him and i'm still in puerto rico so i got to come to the house i got to see you and i said i can't do it i'm still out of the country and he says send somebody you trust. and when that somebody got there. he was killed in the foot my son through college i got it you know i got knocked down the match quick yeah it's hard. i felt like the for i felt like the first not dollars up a good good quick podgorica on my part is a little bit of a flash knockdown i was ok the second knockdown as the film was shot i was shaky and i slipped i fell in the role of and i tweet i twist the part of i mean you see the right way you see it affected look at the film. look at the film look at the film my knees buckled my knees buckle would only get me here most of the. imagine if you're up against a very well placed high profile machine that is capitalized to a degree that you can't even begin to imagine a billion dollar multibillion dollar industry so this guy with nothing except for his brain in this pair of. that is the greatest single underdog score. that i've ever seen in all of my years in boxing you know the single most savvy maneuver that i've ever seen. it. was. like oh my god. oh. oh oh. oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh. oh oh oh. oh. oh oh. oh oh. oh oh oh oh oh oh oh. oh oh. oh oh oh oh oh oh oh god must i say it's a small. city thunder leaking all must wait. for. the. i.e. actual rise above thanks for the feel feel free to ball fish while the two ball has commenced with you went to school here in cuba is for all economical he doesn't want you weak thing was my good english well the thing. holds the key thing to do is sold those strange wild says she and then you die young boy they sit told me the same for supplying the youth of this he did you leave you for when you die. like h. a whole year we are going to show chaos as we're all friends every other possible perceptive one why did you was there he saved them of say the tomorrow that thought she was she and drew orders. which will do for the other what caused us to fail to save us from in full in this group because as you watched she has yet to see who will be a thing of my life and nasa has she'll have a sphere was there father figure it was i me it was. ever was there the judge of the scene i would say money my wife and the mother cannot fool them with a leader. who will survive. as a she might act and then she she will love war fozzy you will see if you want but she lived while the mother was so much nothing of the well my back and i think while i was there you the one for the one of the one. the ocean was are my friends for come we should. act keep push i think when we. what i can oh would you feel. for these this was given for the poor here it could be august so i can get to work with softness in a room for both kill somebody old with no poison might come to god it don't quit you know if which of them will start kid without a source of value for the mind is this do they see what i found that the opposition from what. if you think about the stadium as a reflection of the city we can say that the forest fans have been expelled from the mark and of violently they've had their. places literally taken away from them . all around brazil people are asking this question come back and go back and cool is this really benefiting and of course you know the answers and it's the elites believe politicians it's a very narrow strata of the brazilian the highest classes that are the world cup is for not for the vast majority of resign people where hypnotized by what's happening in the narrative the football and no one wants to talk about issues because they just want to enjoy the circus now that the circus is gone we can talk about these things again and so it's a suspension of critical thought it's a time of suspended animation where it's not just the country that stops it's as if people brain stop working as well. and so this is the depression the dissent and debate about is this worth the trade we do this shouldn't you do it's always a call for when the ball is rolling those questions were largely eliminated from public discussion. you. know you're. not. clearly you're leaning mean you know me i mean in america my. view. is always the most vulnerable people. this happened to. go back to soledad in eighty eight to see the forced removal of tens of thousands of people from their homes their barcelona ninety two forced removal of immigrants quarters in. atlanta in one thousand nine hundred six forced removal of two african-american neighborhoods near the atlantic science. not so much in sydney but then the first removal of tens of thousands of roma people from from athens two thousand and eight two million people moved from the center of all beijing. london similar tastes of displacement and then again we'll see this in rio two thousand and sixteen similar in south africa so this is a repeating theme that has different power to kill asians some particular places. thomas bach is saying we need reform because the olympics are in a slow motion crisis right now and you only need to look at the bidding for the two thousand and twenty two olympics to realize that because voters who any voter who had the chance to vote on it in a referendum said we don't want the olympics from munich to stockholm to krakow to cuba canton in switzerland they got to vote on it so he is in a crisis comparing fee for in the i.o.c. because they're in a crisis at the i.o.c. they know they need to change human rights need to be part of the equation for both the olympics and for fifa i mean right now it's not at all a part of the way things are decided i mean just look at the evidence beijing two thousand and eight sochi two thousand and fourteen then there's russia two thousand and eighteen qatar two thousand and twenty two you can't tell me human rights are serious consideration when you make those selections. the idea that politics and sports don't mix is a fairy tale that people at the i.o.c. and fifa tell themselves to console each other around the evening fire is just totally untrue and it's ridiculous to say so and it really shows a selective ethics on their part the way it plays out for politicians in beijing or of lattimer putin in sochi is they get to stand on the world stage and look legitimate alongside this incredibly popular event known as the olympics and so they get to sort of enjoy the olympic halo effect if you will and meanwhile brushed aside all their human rights violations and all their problems you know with their democratic practice. one thing that we've seen is that independent of the global economy which has periodic fluctuations the fluctuations of the profits a few for the i.o.c. only go like this they only go up and up enough and that means that they are completely disassociated from any economic reality for the of the places where they go. and the olympic motto bigger stronger faster also can apply to the size of the games. everyone reports it's always bigger it's always more and so this idea that the event itself has to reflect the competitive nature of sport has to stop. bettering the n.b.a. referee is under investigation for allegedly betting on his own games the gambling scandal has ties to the gambino crime family. tonight a former n.b.a. referee accused of betting on his own games and working for the mob fears for his life. when you hear three months behind bars for disgrace to be a referee hamdani. my name is tim donaghy i'm a former n.b.a. basketball referee i was involved in the game one scandal in two thousand and seven to where i used information that i obtained from other referees in the league office be a team and used that information to pass along the people associated with organized crime for monetary gain. it all fell apart because at the end of the year. you know some of the people associated with organized crime are heard talking over a wiretap so it got back to the f.b.i. and they started a big investigation and when i got there i basically told them the truth that i you know was somebody who i gambled a lot. in general gamble on n.b.a. basketball games and they wanted to know how i was able to win so many games without fixing them and it took a while and several meetings but i explain to them that the relationships that exist that both positive and negative between the referees and the players and the coaches and the owner spilled out onto the floor to the investigation and speaking to elko. chizen owners and players and former referees they came to this inclusion of what i was telling them was the truth. we have here a rogue isolated criminal. the n.b.a. reacted by basically saying that i was just one bad apple in the boche and you know trying to throw me under the bus for what happened was just you know they they did it using best a geisha and then the f.b.i. came out and supported me one hundred percent and said that everything that i said was truthful and that the n.b.a. had a lot of problems that they needed to clean up. and the remains are basically packed with twenty thousand people it's like a broadway show when you have beautiful cheerleaders you have the greatest athletes in the world running up and down the court doing things that most people could only dream of so it's a lot of excitement and people love to be at our best. to. get the sixty seventy thousand dollars additional per year tax free. level especially during the playoffs the league would really dictate what they want to call it in a game and that would put a team at a huge advantage or disadvantage moving forward in a playoff series and it was always a situation where they were extending a playoff series because the amount of revenue an additional game would be in a seven game series was always something that was in the back of the referee's mind . everything fueled by money and they know each additional game is you know tens of millions of dollars into the league office so it's a culture of you know the bottom line which is money. it's just a commonly known practice that the stars around the league in the n.b.a. the star search sold the shoes and the jerseys and the bigger market team. it's what got the n.b.a. global attention and better ratings so we all knew that you know we need to give them an advantage you know in some way shape or form and that's what a lot of the veteran referees did and that's what a lot of veteran referees passed along to the younger referees. as a young referee in philadelphia the balls from town to play the seventy six ers and that year they gave us points of emphasis as referees that they wanted to call during a game and one of them was a spin move on the baseline add on there forget it i was the referee on the play that for sure is possible to call that if it took place and michael sure did it went up and you know how to monster stocks and i waved it off and i called the travel and right after i made that call there was a timeout jordan rushed up to me phil jackson came at me twenty thousand people and the stadium booed me even though it was an away game for the chicago bulls and jordan said you know what do you call not for i said you know you got the same training tape we've got that's the move that they one called the travel and both phil jackson michael jordan said to me they may want that call to travel but they certainly don't want to call on me and phil jackson pointed to him and said they don't want that called on him and it was something that really stuck in my mind because it bothered me that twenty thousand people were booing at me the whole bulls team was coming at me and everyone was kind of amazed that i made that call so i spoke to the elite referee in the locker room he said you know you have to realize that you know you don't call that against a star you let that go and you call that against the lesser players when they have a point of emphasis that they want cleaned up in the n.b.a. he don't do it against the star players rules. i think when you talk about gambling in the n.b.a. with the referees or even the suppliers obviously the referees like to go to the casinos there's gamble even on the n.b.a. floor with betting on who would call the first ballot an n.b.a. game basically when you are refereeing an n.b.a. team with two of your good friends that you would bet twenty dollars because that's what the tip was for the ball boy so we would say whoever called the first team had to put up the twenty dollar tip for the other two guys so we did well on the floor and we ran up and down. and we you know be letting phallus go because nobody wanted to call the first fallon a game because then you are responsible to pay that ball boy so you know we got bodies flying all over the place and nobody would be wanting to blow the whistle you know two three minutes into a game which is unheard of a foul not being called because of a twenty dollars bet a locker on the supervisor of officials at the time came in the locker room at halftime and faceplate said what the hell happened at the beginning of the game you guys were blowing the whistle i didn't want to blow the whistle they didn't blow the whistle either because we had a bet twenty dollars and he just said well i don't want to know anything about that and walked out but nothing was ever done about it so the league office knew that they had taken place at times. i believe for sure that the n.b.a. didn't sue me because the last thing they wanted to do was having some of their referees or owners or league personnel testify under oath that a lot of the things that are saying did take place and were true and to be very detrimental to the league so what they wanted to do was just you know hopefully put me in jail for a long period of time and have this thing blow over but it kind of backfired on them a little bit and i was given. fifteen months in prison and i was able to write the book and tell my story of the true was something that they tried to squash immediately by going into the offices of random house and getting my book deal squashed at first and going into the offices of sixty minutes of trying to get them not to air the episode. thanks. for. bringing humanity and to be a clear you see rescue ship morning son's voice twenty sixteen. dedicated crew helping . the new comer. just harmonise are limited but to come on the forehead mishmosh to recall i was on the mentioned so much aquarius mystique in. this in fifteen minutes on the job of. crimes against humanity. civilians becoming witnesses come on. their recorded images travel around the globe just social media. jammed up the fiction of what is fact. digital investigators combing through the flood of images and they combine sources trying to reconstruct what happened and to substantiate claims of crimes suspects to this video recording of the soldier who shot the young man is on trial now. forensics between bits and bytes. typing again. it's. evidence. is it is chance a because justice is about to truth. truth detectives starts june thirtieth on g.w. law. this is d.w. news live from berlin a glimpse of peace and afghanistan taliban fighters to celebrate and take photos with security forces and residents in the capital kabul as the government extends a ceasefire until after the eid holiday. also coming up. the lady protests german chancellor angela merkel faces.

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Transcripts For DW DocFilm - Dirty Games - The Dark Side Of Sports 20180616

i. see. that. there's you know. this really is a little bit of. people so late. but i'm. just here if you are reduced to. cuba. so. that's also not zero zero zero zero zero zero zero zero. that's. what i thought that was how far that was left to go. oh my. god. oh oh oh oh oh oh. oh. oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh did you got the the. states . winter. it even contributes to two. hundred thousand drought told in fifteen believe just one on four hundred forty two cases from going to the top visually by our office officer i mean if you speak about this year if you see one machine and you don't think this is true three hundred ninety five used. in this case what have. the added for a mistake that they have got into trucking sounded really out salary but they didn't get anything just get back after nine months without anything. from what i'm laughing i do know that i asked a little a discreet biogas this will likely go to. to follow. the money for others to live so to buy out of nearly are really. the most open. but you are. welcome what's he going to go down from that order to come with me the same as you said it was a necessity to come not only through to the well whatever deep but also a little way due to this he was a little. slow but out on the couple like it's out of that a man to turn gradient on so good. to belittle me but only one let him in then on a minute not that i would do him a lot so that you should use. tempers are. more backward saying it on a song called gotten me going about. the. tuttles out of months here i do when the premier are on a well made often feeling lasting and after thinking as a sort of an opening probably other plans in the atoms of an engine i'd love to. rule. on. sorry but i'm over. the contacts and. yeah i mean just a good side to that because it would really stand that much because you know if you did we would just i would just come out of the plot on. the list of you know what's going on. in what do you know that you know down all this no i just love to see them with. a need to even be able to cause i know but it's obvious. and down and i always. did simplest put into one of what i do you know saturday nights in the i mean let me. name whom a lot of flooding a mood limousine tell on the ground there to study this and lamela. this from a long way on me so i just did if it's up to you if it's already said number two you need it said get him to you the pond into on the you know to do would need to do. i'm going to go to dinner here on c.n.n. you didn't do any kind of kind of out of african what to do all this was on and i see a gay thomason was in and then mitt romney didn't look at it download the percentage that he had out on the i mean tongue in the shed and done this to the mark i'm done with younger than them on she day i was she had four hundred or so and i have done about. and you giving the day that i thought it might have been it ins or didn't go i would get in that islam was a dual citizen that should have been not and didn't then i wasn't even across the land how many illegal immigrants also i was going on in the village and. let me tell you it's on to live. a. long. talk. at the top of the. in concluding we are facing a complex investigation because many international implications. the prosecution is only growing and will take time. it would not be professional to communicate to you today the details time. the world of football needs to be patient. by its nature this investigation will take more than the legendary ninety minutes. the fact of the matter is that what has been revealed so far is a mafia style crime syndicate in charge of the sport my only hesitation and using that term is that it is almost insulting to the mafia because the mafia would never have been so blatant over and out again. it's in it's corruption. trial back now you're a puerto rico issue tell me but i want you to get ahold of me now which way i bet you have to think what not a fed of a one day or two a day. at the top of the above but i don't wear white so i put a lot of them. now well great if i get to do it and you want to help people actually. probably want to talk about how old you know i have a. tough time. and there's the on spanx for me which meant as time goes former cruise way champ. jr bill which imposter drayton featherweight champs freddy gordon. and for the briefest of p.r. is a guy named jose rivera who was the welterweight champion. if . you think fights to make betting money. you fix fights to get a fighter a championship you fix fights to maneuver a fighter up the ranks toward a championship fight you fix fights to win. in order. to get into position someone strategically. you fix fights to lose. in order to get paid and made you know betting coups the way you fist fights varies greatly. you fix fights by buying judges that's and you know that's one easy way to do it you fix fights by having the referee working for you so that if there's any way that the ref can stop a fight in your guy's favor he does you fix fights by colluding with the fighters generally the loser so all is almost always a loser. winners was never called the fight was fixed. one of the things that you're cognizant of when you are fixing fights. is that you're doing something illegal something that theoretically can wind you up you know want to jail and get people angry at you so you never really say anything you know nothing that's culpable. so there's a code. and if you're in boxing for a while you know the coach everybody else the coach. will go into a job. where there is either a trade or a manager and you're looking for somebody your guy can be just up these guys making money and it's interesting that people who lose in boxing. generally speaking if they're professional losers can make more money than winners. when in cost money losing makes money that's not true obviously at an elite level but almost every other level is the case. so what you do is you say i've got a guy. and he is looking for. looking for clues in the first ok so it means that. he needs to win you know you want to keep him busy. the response to that is a got somebody and generally the second phrase is but he hasn't been in the gym to watch ok so the subtext there is he's he's not good shape and he said you're horny and i don't where this thing is going to go and he said other that's ok you know. like i got to get in a few routes i mean it's going to knock out at which point he goes well you know ok . i can do that but really my bike guys didn't seem to go more than three or four. that's ok so you just fix the fight. nobody's done anything illegal nobody's done anything with it come out and stand in anything explicitly. but that's a done deal. and you get. you get what you pay for. it is how great fights are six. hundred. how many i'm not sure but hundreds. i see it all the time now i mean i don't make our living in boxing anymore but i see success all the time sure it will always exist and always households. were. right fans here we go with our. evening on the verge of the country's music's positives to begin a. shutdown. fake is i think tends toward the sensational. average hurricane here might. keep laughing keep laughing. bill through funny. few who if anyone do you because you respect me or what i'm doing or what i've been to the last three months since you've been announced to go against a guy like this you have been dumped in your pants. come true. i'm hard to predict ily from midfield pass on saturday night let me take a since yesterday. but if you haven't paid you're it's not big then suv because remember what happens when i refuse my cuckoo. thank you liz measure was a kind of invent your documentary had no money so i for a while it was bankrolling what they were doing i was breaking mcneely and sometimes and banking on me to new york. for various things you know and i was making fights for peter so i mean i knew them very well i was very involved in what's gone on so i bring if you only to celebrate this office it's time to structure a boxing and we work out a deal for me kelly to be tyson's first part which is a completely win win situation for everybody i'm just happy to be here everybody me estate me me me me of you keep statement i'm just ready for me to fight thank you if we have to go it thank you. i get a phone call from a guy whose voice i recognize but not not somebody i really know but you know he said look somebody thought i should give you a call to let you know. that a bet that made that the fight wouldn't. because i'm trying to reveal how he described. i think he told me the fight won't go it's not going to go ninety seconds it was you know it was a million dollar bet and the fights not going to go ninety seconds somebody thought you might be interested in that was you want which you were eighty nine seconds which point in vicky on the steps. between the ropes to prop the ending to the five was thinking only who really have this thing figured out understood that it was crucial that there be no finding of impropriety because tyson was the machine on which boxing rep by far the biggest are in the world and. you know when he fights and vegas. they generate a billion dollars in added revenue i mean not from boxing for say but you know for from all of the ancillary revenue so he has to be ok and vacuuming also so he gets his payday whatever it is and i don't know what it is and never did know what it was. and i get a phone call from from him and i'm still in puerto rico so i got to come to the house i got to see you and i said i can't do it i'm still out of the country and he says send somebody you trust. and when that somebody got there. he was given full of a loaf put my son through college i got it you know i got knocked out of the match quicky it's hard but. i felt like the for i felt like the first not dollars of a good good quick podger on my part as a little flash not that i was ok the second knockdown as the film will show i was shaky and i slipped i fell on the rope and i tweet i twist the bottom i mean you see the right. you see to fit look at the film. look at the film look at the film my knee buckled my knees buckled under to get me here it looked good to. imagine you're up against a very well placed. high profile machine that is capitalized to a degree that you can't even begin to imagine a billion dollar multibillion dollar industry so this guy was nothing except for his brain in the spirit. that is the greatest single underdog score. that i've ever seen in all of my years in boxing in the single most savvy maneuver that i've ever seen. i. think that it. was. half. of. the our was. was. was. my son was on the side face he did sit still. not looking for must see great. my love. for. each one is a plus thanks for the feel feel it's evolved to bond has commenced with you what is called the a q my shawl that canonical does a thing on doing thing was a mild wooden house call the thing. holds the movie key thing to do is soul luis things shrugs see she. and i knew that your boy had a sick over the ice if i suppose you thought of this he he because when you guys just. like h. a whole year you have bookish chaos as we all drinks the other possible perceptible and why did you was there he say it was the might say that tomorrow that touch seeing is really orders. which will do for the what waters and if it's a survive in this group because as you watched he has yet to see only a king of malacca in there says she'll have a sphere was there five feet it was i mean it was. ever was there the judge of the scene i would say one in my life and the other cannot fool him with a new. one to survive because a she might act and then she thought she would love war fozzy will save you want by stealing while i am with him was so nice and then i think well mother and i think well my wish for you to want to live for the one of the one. who is it or my friends become we could. act keep pushing think when we. like and how would you feel oh wow cause injury to these this was given for the poor kid it could be august so i can get to work when someone's going to move but i would kill somebody on the board with no poison my skin because it don't want to do it near to which of them will start kids without a source and i want to know that my niece is due they can see on whether or not the opposition from one. if you think about the stadium as a reflection of the city we can say that the poorest fans have been expelled from the mount of kind of violently they've had their places literally taken away from them. all around brazil people are asking this question called back and. who is this really benefiting and of course you know the answers and it's the elites really politicians it's a very narrow strata of the brazilian the highest classes that are the world cup is for not for the vast majority of resigning people we're hypnotized by what's happening in the narrative the football and no one wants to talk about issues because they just want to enjoy the circus now the circus is gone we can talk about these things again and so it's a suspension of critical thought it's a time of suspended animation where it's not just the country that stops it's as a few balls brain stuff working as well. and so this is the depression the dissent and debate about is this worth the can we do this should you do this who is there for when the ball is rolling those questions were largely eliminated from public discussion. good. luck to you. clearly believe me i mean you know me i mean. that's always the most vulnerable people this happens when we go back to seoul to mediate to see the force move of tens of thousands of people from their homes their barcelona to force removal of immigrants quarters in. atlanta in one thousand nine hundred six forced removal of two african-american neighborhoods near the olympic sites. not so much in sydney but then the first removal of tens of thousands of roma people from from athens two thousand and eight two million people moved from the center of all beijing. london similar tastes of displacement and then again we'll see this in rio two thousand and sixteen similar in south africa so this is a repeating theme that has different power to killers in some particular places. thomas bach was saying do we need reform because the olympics are in a slow motion crisis right now and you only need to look at the bidding for the two thousand and twenty two olympics to realize that because voters any voter who had the chance to vote on it in a referendum said we don't want the olympics from munich to stockholm to krakow to cuba canton in switzerland they got to vote on it so he is in a crisis comparing fief in the i.o.c. because they're in a crisis of the i.o.c. they know they need to change human rights need to be part of the equation for both the olympics and for i mean right now it's not at all a part of the way things are decided i mean just look at the evidence beijing two thousand and eight sochi two thousand and fourteen then there's russia two thousand and eighteen qatar two thousand and twenty two you can't tell me human rights are serious consideration when you make those selections. the idea that politics and sports don't mix is a fairy tale that people at the i.o.c. and fifa tell themselves to console each other around the evening fire is just totally untrue and it's ridiculous to say so and it really shows a selective ethics on their part the way it plays out for politicians in beijing or lattimer putin in sochi is they get to stand on the world stage and look legitimate alongside this incredibly popular event known as the olympics and so they get to sort of enjoy the olympic halo effect if you will and meanwhile brushed aside all their human rights violations and all their problems you know with their democratic practice. one thing that we've seen is that independent of the global economy which has periodic fluctuations the fluctuations of the profits a few for the i.o.c. only go like this they only go up and up enough and that means that they're completely disassociated from any economic reality for the of the places where they go. and the olympic motto bigger stronger faster also could apply to the size of the games. every little reports always bigger it's always more in sort of this idea that the event itself has to reflect the competitive nature of sport has to stop. better in the n.b.a. referee is under investigation for allegedly betting on his own games the gambling scandal has ties to the gambino crime family. tonight a former n.b.a. referee accused of betting on his own games and working for the mob fears for his life. one year three months behind bars for his great to be a referee tim donaghy. my name is tim donaghy i'm a former n.b.a. all referee i was involved in the g.m. wants scandal from two thousand and seven to where i used information that i've changed from other referees in the league office based on relationships that existed between referees and owners referees and coaches and referees and flyers and use that information knowing what was going to happen and be a game and used that information to pass along to people so she did it with organized crime for monetary gain. it all fell apart because at the end of the year. you know some of the people associated with organized crime are heard talking to her wiretap selling after the f.b.i. and they started a big investigation and when i got there i basically told them the truth that i you know somebody who had gambled a lot. in general and gambled on n.b.a. basketball games and they wanted to know how i was able to win so many games without fixing them and it took a while and several meetings but i explained to them that the relationship. that existed both positive and negative between the referees and the players and the coaches and the owner spilled out onto the floor through their investigation and speaking to help coaches in owners and players and former referees they came to this inclusion of what i was telling them was the truth. we have here a rogue isolated criminal. the n.b.a. reacted by basically saying that i was just one bad apple in the boche and you know trying to throw me under the bus for what happened was is they they do it usually best occasion and the f.b.i. came out and supported me one hundred percent and said that everything that i said was truthful and that the n.b.a. had a lot of problems that they needed to clean up. and be a very nice are basically packed with twenty thousand people it's like a broadway show when you have beautiful cheerleaders you have the greatest athletes in the world running up and down the court doing things that most people could only dream of so it's the excitement and people love. the sixty seventy thousand dollars additional her ear tax. you know the n.b.a. level especially during the playoffs the league would really dictate what they want to call it in the game and that would put a team at a huge advantage or disadvantage moving forward in a playoff series and it was always a situation where they were extending a playoff series because the amount of revenue one additional game would be in a seven game series was always something that was in the back of the referee's mind . everything fueled by money and they know each additional game is you know tens of millions of dollars into the now league office selig's it's a culture of you know the bottom line which is money. it's just a commonly known practice that the stars around the league in the n.b.a. the star so sold the shoes and the jerseys and the bigger market team is what got the n.b.a. global attention and better ratings so we all knew that you know we need to give them an advantage you know in some way shape or form and that's what a lot of the veteran referees did and that's what a lot of the veteran referees passed along to the younger referees. as a young referee in philadelphia the balls were in town the players seventy six ers and that year they gave us points of emphasis as referees that they wanted to call during a game and one of them was a spin move on the baseline add on there forget i was the referee on the play that which is possible to call that if it took place and michael sure did it went up and you know how to monster stocks and i waved it off and i called the travel and right after i made that call there was a timeout jordan rushed up to me phil jackson came at me twenty thousand people and the stadium booed me even though it was an away game for the chicago bulls and jordan said you know what what do you call not for i said you know you got the same training tape we've got that's the move that they one called the travel and both phil jackson michael jordan said to me they may want that call to travel but they certainly don't want to called on me and phil jackson pointed to him and said they don't want that called on him and it was something that really stuck in my mind was it bothered me that twenty thousand people were booing at me the whole bulls team was coming at me and everyone was kind of amazed that i made that call so i spoke to the elite referee in the locker room and he said you know you have to realize that you know you don't call that against a star you let that go and you call that against the lesser players when they have a point of emphasis that they want cleaned up in the n.b.a. he don't do it against the star players. i think when you talk about gambling in the n.b.a. with the referees or even those players obviously the referees like to go there to see you know those who would like to gamble even on the n.b.a. floor with betting on who would call the first ballot and then be a game basically when you are refereeing an n.b.a. team with two of your good friends that you would bet twenty dollars because that's what the tip was for the ball boy so we would say who ever called the first valley game had to put up a twenty dollar tip for the other two guys so we go out on the floor and we run up and down on the floor and we you know be letting phallus go because nobody wanted to call the first fallon a game because then you are responsible to pay that ball boy so now we have bodies flying all over the place and nobody would be wanting to blow the whistle you know two three minutes into a game which is unheard of a foul mouth game call because of a twenty dollars bet on a locker room the supervisor of officials at the time came in the locker room at halftime and faceplates said what the hell happened at the beginning of the game don't you guys but nothing was ever done about it so the league office knew that they had taken place at times. for sure that the n.b.a. didn't sue me because the last thing they wanted to do was having some of their referees or owners or league personnel testify under oath that a lot of the things i was saying did take place and were true and to be very detrimental to the league so what they wanted to do was just you know hopefully put me in jail for a long period of time and have this thing blow over but it kind of backfired on them a little bit i was given. fifteen months in prison and i was able to write the book and tell my story of the trip was something that they tried to squash immediately by going into the offices of random house and getting my book deal squashed at first and going into the offices of sixty minutes and trying to get them not to air the episode. of. law for sick and lacking. more and more americans feel they're being marginalized to mock. these people who want to change that. the. poor people's campaign. when this movement for economic justice is gaining momentum throughout the country the three thousand and thirty minutes on w. . germany state by state. the most colorful. the los angeles times. the most traditional. find it all at any time. check in with a web special. take a tour of germany state by state on d w talk com. fake news alex mcleish is not suitable unsub. the so-called shake up to this concept boosts side by. people who put big dreams on the big screen. movie magazine on d w. yeah to nashville and i think one day this war will be considered a cruel and unjust war abroad. and certainly all citizens of ukraine every man woman and child only friend their own land is the enemy invades. no one wants russia here don't need to nuke which is the same. level against the mighty google news that matters. d.w. made for mines. german chancellor angela merkel is facing a mutiny within her conservative coalition over migration policy interior minister or seo for of bavarians conservative party is reportedly threatening to go ahead with this plan to reject migrants at the german border without merkel's approval.

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