anniversary. right now, i m in buffalo, new york. having reached at two churches on a very solemn sunday for the city. today marking the one year anniversary of the racist mass shooting at the top supermarket that left ten black residents dead. president biden also addressed the anniversary. where he lamented the played of gun violence that appears only be exhilarating in the wake of the buffalo massacre. telling the american people, he is doing everything he can to reduce gun violence. but congress must do more. new york governor kathy hochul is here in her hometown of buffalo. she will join me in a minute. before participating in a memorial event tonight for those lost in the mess shooting. that tragedy is just one of the things they are contending with this weekend. the governor is calling for more federal aid to help care for an expected influx of asylum seekers. tensions in the southwest border have been declining in the days since the covid days. they re already straine
it s 1:00 out in pacific time. [laughter] i m eric shawn, fox news live. arthel: hello, everyone, i m arthel neville. the numbers are stunning. this week alone deputies rescued nearly 80 migrants from a tractor tractor-trailer in texas. the texas department of public safety says it seized more than 300 million lethal doses of fentanyl. texas governor greg abbott says his operation lone star has caught more than 300,000 illegal immigrants, and those are just snapshots of a much bigger picture. griff jenkins is life at the border live at the border in eagle pass with the latest on this. griff? reporter: hey, arthel,ed good afternoon. and you put it correctly, it is stunning numbers just a week boo this first fig call year of 202. there s no signs of it slowing down, and make no mistake, this is a humanitarian crisis. take a look at the video we re going to show you now. just a couple of hours ago when i was talking with you and eric, it is three migrants from nicaragua cr
talk. [speaking spanish] joining me now is sam brock in uvalde with the latest on the shooting. also he s in houston where the show must go on for the nra. first use them, it s very hard to watch, to hear, and process what happened there. then we learned of the injured children calling 9-1-1 for help. didn t get there in time. it all feels impossible and we are not even there. here in the studio. but you there on scene? what are you learning sam? well certainly it s gut wrenching alex. you talk to parents here, and they say it feels like the floor falls from underneath them every time they hear these press conferences. the changing narratives. also that the help was there on. time there were 90 law enforcement officers inside at 12:03, that s the same time the 9-1-1 calls were coming from the classroom. the incident commander based on the volume of shots, and initially they re 100 shots fired in the first few minutes, and then slowed down, that incident commander made
uvalde, texas, community. there s no details here about the police response at robb elementary. police called and waited for back-up and tactical teams. those teams didn t arrive until an hour later. we re now hearing from the shooter s family. our correspondent spoke to the gunman s grandfather about the tragedy. [speaking foreign language] tragedy. [speaking foreign language the shooter s grandfather sending blessings to the family and facts. he also criticized the gun laws that allowed his grandson at 18 to get a gun. we re also hearing from survivors, including the lengths one little girl went to. she had a friend next to her that she was pretty sure was already dead and laying on the ground bleeding out. she put her hands in her friend s blood and then smeared it, she said, all over her body. she wanted to look like she was dead. she was scared the gunman was going to come back through that adjoining door back to the classroom and she wanted to be able to play dead.
this morning. welcome to with sunday morning futures, i m maria bartiromo. today, political persecution. president trump gears up for the fight of his life after what he called a rigged trial and and election interference. just ahead, trump organization executive vice president and president trump s son, eric trump is here on next steps after the former president is found guilty of falsifying business records. plus, the verdict sparking a wave of support for the 45th president with money flooding in to his campaign. the campaign locking up $50 million in 24 hours after the verdict. capped with an additional $100 tomillion from a major donor if as a 45 goes to bright with blue new jersey for the ufc fight, and the crowds rally behind him. [cheers and applause] maria: coming up, former u.s. attorney and director of martial intelligence john ratcliffe on why the guilty verdict does not seem to matter to trump s supporters. plus, former white house senior adviser and america fi