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intelligence and heads of the cia, fbi and national security agency will brief the president-elect on alleged russian meddling in the presidential election, certainly he has called repeatedly challenged. he said, well, maybe it's not the case, maybe even sided with julian assange tweeting even last night questioning the validity of the information he's about to receive. well, we have it all covered for you from every angle. kristen welker, what do we expect will go down here? >> reporter: the backdrop to this briefing is very tense, that's for sure. you have the president-elect just last night again questioning the intelligence community. he was infuriated after details leaked out about the report and actually what's in the report and intelligence officials telling us that some of the details in the report include intercepts which prove that top russian officials were celebrating president-elect trump's win. we were also learning they've identified some of the go-betweens who delivered some of that information. the president-elect is saying why is this information leaking out? he's been questioning these people who are going to brief him for weeks now. so this is tensions that have been building. but we're also being told these are career professionals. they're not going in to pick a fight. they're going to be firm in what they know. if the president-elect pushes, they're prepared to push back. will things get heated, that's the other question. is the president-elect going to actually believe the intelligence that he gets? you have experts who are looking at this situation and saying, look, it's critical to national security that he backs up his intelligence community. what we have is this unprecedented moment where a sitting commander in chief is creating a huge rift with the intelligence community that he's about to leave. we're also learning some new details. this meeting's going to take place at 12:30 and vice president elect mike pence is also going to be in attendance. we're going to be tracking it all, steph, the fireworks and everything else. >> it's going to be a party over there. i want to bring in hans nichols in washington, d.c. it sound like moments from now we're going to be getting the public version of this report. what do we expect? >> well, the public version could come out any moment now. we do expect it today. my colleague is reporting it. you'll have the public version and the private briefing that mr. trump will be receiving at 12:30. intelligence officials saying both of very powerful saying russia actively intervened to influential the election for donald trump. the question really is at trump tower is what's the standard of proof, the burden of proof and will donald trump sport upport . joining donald trump will be michael flynn, his incoming national security adviser, head of the nsc. what was important about mr. flynn is throughout his career, he's been very skeptical of intel coming in. look to see if there's any showdown between flynn and some of the folks that they're briefing, namely john brennan, seen of a foreign government trying to interfere with a u.s. election. john mccain calling this an act of war. i think all of that is putting pressure on donald trump. how does he respond to it? that's the key question. a lot of people speculating he's going to come out and say, okay, the findings do point to russia, however, this has been overhyped and overpoliticized. remains an open question, though. >> let's bring in republican strategist and member of trump's national spanish advisory council, steve cortez and strategist david corn. donald trump has publicly been a skeptic of these intelligence agencies and this information. but the fact that there's a lot of pressure there, he's meeting with the intelligence officials, now the public report is coming out. to kristen's point, it's been called an act of war. nancy pelosi said the content is stunning. what is donald trump going to do? >> i don't know but we'll find out shortly today or in the coming days. i think that skepticism of intelligence reports is okay. >> publicly? >> yes. had george w. bush been skeptical of the cia's conclusion, we might never have got i don't know involv gotten involved in that awful embroilio in iraq as we did had he taken a skeptical view. >> without a doubt that's why someone becomes the president because they are the last word but being a public skeptic, goading, antagonizing, calling it "intelligence." who does that help? how does that make america great? >> the reason he's had to go public is because unfortunately there have been so many leaks out of our intelligence commute is they chose to go public. it would be wonderful for american national security if all of this could have been done behind closed doors. >> so two wrongs make a right? >> no, no. hacking is wrong. we can't have it from americans, not from china, russians or anyone, if it jeopardizes our security or our economic security. i think we've been too lax about hacking. whatever the source of the hacks, what was revealed by all indications of the truth and the truth about the democratic party and about hillary clinton and her top staffers, the truth once revealed convinced americans the more they knew about them, the less they liked hersh the less they trusted them. >> david? >> i pity you, steve, to have to defend donald trump on this matter. he has said so many things that are just outright false. not that he's a skeptic. that's a polite way of saying it. he said weeks ago this wasn't an issue during the election, why are we seeing this now? >> david, don't talk ko condescending to me this way. i know exactly what they are. >> gentlemen, we're going to end this right now if you can't be respectful to one another. david? >> he just sort of made it up that this was a post-election issue. he said julian assange knows more than the intelligence community does. he hasn't prove i don't knn tha. he said he knew something special about the hacking he would tell us this past tuesday and wednesday. he didn't do that either. he's been spinning or fabricating and saying false and misleading statements on this issue for months and it all ties into the mystifying approach he has towards russia and putin and trying to dismiss this intervention. >> it's what the mainstream media has been saying for weeks is that the election was hand. that's not true. the dnc was hacked. >> steve. steve. steve. steve. steve, i'm not going to let you before we go, steve, you basically said or as i understand donald trump has done this in response to all the leaks that are out there. but if you could help me understand why is it that donald trump continues this tweet storm, today alone going after arnold schwarzenegger and the apprentice and ratings. this is the president-elect. doesn't he have anything better to do? >> of course. listen, no one can doubt his work ethic and how hard he's been working at this transition. >> yes, you can. >> the president-elect is a very unique politician, right. he's our first -- >> please answer my question. >> he didn't come from the military -- >> please answer my question. >> i am. part of what makes him unique is the way he speaks so candidly and such authenticity to the american people. >> about trivial matters. >> and he has an extensive past as a television celebrity. it's important to him and important to his brand. it's part of what made him -- >> he's not a grownup. >> it's part of what made him run for president in the first place. the media thinks he doesn't talk like a politician -- >> so going after the ratings of the apprentice. >> the guy in charge of our nuclear codes, who is being briefed on whether the russians intervened, he has nothing better to do than to sort of go on this sort of i'm better than you tweet storm against arnold schwarzenegger. >> he's not speaking to you. he's speaking to the american people. >> he needs to grow up. >> he's not speaking to washington, d.c. or new york, he's speaking to the american worker who has been forgot i don't know -- forgotten. >> and if you live in new york, you count, too. >> we'll have michelle obama's final speech as first lady. her last public address before the transition to trump. but first, four african-americans charged with streaming the attack of a white teen-ager. they're going to appear in court today to face hate crime charges. doll? 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>> it's common. and i hate saying that and giving the world the information because so many of these children are doing crimes, committing crimes for attention. they do it on facebook live, they record it, they take pictures of themselves, whether it's a jewel thief or a burglar or a robber, they're trying to get attention and likes and that is the fuel behind something like this. >> the fact that it was recorded, that there's a 28-minute video, does that make it a slam dunk case? >> it does in certain aspects. the only potential issue is the hate crime statute. you have to prove that it was because of race or his disability at that it was a hate crime. on the surface it definitely appears that way, which i do expect the prosecution to start making offers and deals, this is almost a race to the prosecutor's office for them to get their client a deal before the others. >> is there where they'll turn on one another and point the finger at the ring leader? >> absolutely. the canaries are going to start singing very shortly. you may be my best friend but if we're going to prison, i need to get the best deal for me. >> could this video get thrown out? >> i doubt it. of course the defense lawyers are going to challenge the video -- >> except they are the ones that put the video out there. >> they are. i believe this would be admissible in court. i don't see a reason why it would not be admissible. but the defense attorneys will try to keep it out, benefit their client and get them the best deal. this is a slam dunk case because these young children were on camera doing this crime. >> can i say one thing? they don't get to be called children. they're adults. >> they're 18. they're 18. >> old enough to know better. >> and i agree with that. this is the type of thing that society -- >> one of them is 24 years old. >> i think the others are 17. >> if you're 17 or 18 years old, i hope to heaven that you know better than that kind of behavior. >> absolutely. that's where we have to get to the home values and the things we teach these children. this is not acceptable by anyone regardless of where you're from or what you do. this is sick. >> this is sick, this is what it is. >> we're going to take a break. just in, a brand new interview with donald trump answering questions about the u.s. intelligence assessment of russia's hacking. he is calling it a political witch hunt. what else did he have to say? plus my colleague andrea mitchell just sat down with outgoing secretary of state john kerry. she'll join me live with highlights of their one-on-one. on the outside you have to feel healthy at your core. trubiotics a probiotic from one a day. naturally helps support both your digestive and immune health. feel a difference in two weeks or your money back. take the trubiotics 2 week challenge. will your business be ready when growth presents itself? american express open cards can help you take on a new job, or fill a big order or expand your office and take on whatever comes next. find out how american express cards and services can help prepare you for growth at open.com. if this intelligent report is indeed unimpeachable. it's him showing you what he's going to say. he's telling the times he thinks this is a political witch hunt. this is donald trump, the next president of the united states basically saying he's an assignment editor here upset about the amount of coverage that news organizations are giving to this, basically saying it's sour grapes. in that interview with my friend over there at the "new york times," michael sheer, great job getting donald trump on the phone saying the chinese hacked the white house, there wasn't that much attention there. it says two times in the interview this is a political witch hunt. we are going to get this report, the public version of it within the hour we thing. we've already heard from nancy pelosi. and pelosi seemed a little upset the report didn't go farther. going forward i think we'll have two conversations, one, what trump wants it to be and that is is there too much information on this and how unassailable is the information prevented in the public side of this report. as we always reveal, our roaring tactics, we need to find michael sheer, get his cell phone and he likes to play poker, maybe we can get his cell phone. sheer's a great guy. >> i love that, hans nichols always working i want to stay on donald trump but something else that he is up to, all of this very, very serious business, he's in a different kind of twitter battlea twitter war with former california governor arnold schwarzenegger. i can't even believe we're talking about this, the terminator versus the donald with the president-elect about to be briefed on the potential russian hacking. what is he doing? >> these tweets went down as the gang of eight were briefed on this on the hill. so here you go. this was about four hours ago. president-elect donald trump also by the way executive producer of the show -- >> currently. >> while the ratings are in and arnold schwarzenegger got swamped, look drain the swamped or destroying the ratings machine by himself. now compare him to my season one, we'll do that in a second. but who cares? great question. so arnold comes right back at him and writes there's nothing more important than the people's work. keep in mind movie superstar arnold schwarzenegger/former governor of california. please study this quote from lincoln's inaugural, it inspired me every day as governor and i hope it inspires you. he posted a video. >> i'm not sure i want to hear me read lincoln speeches in my accent. here we go -- we are not enemies but friends. we must not be enemies. we are not enemies, we are neighbors and most importantly we are all americans. >> this is the famous inaugural address where lincoln said the better angels of our nature, stephanie. >> what do the ratings look like? >> he's not wrong but he's not right, which is kind of tich ca -- typical of the twitter thing. if you compare it to the first episode of 2004, yes but that was novel. if you compared it to the last time donald trump debuted a season, it's 6.5 versus almost 5, so not a big difference. but again, he's the boss. he's the executive producer of the show, which makes you wonder why the whole thing is going on anyway. >> or maybe they're all playing us. guess what we're all doing today? >> talking about "the apprentice." that's what donald trump wants to us do, talk about "the apprentice." >> we're going to talk to you more about this planet and another one. a live look outside the international space station right this moment, i love these videos! two astronauts are upgrading the space station's electrical power system by swapping out batteries that have been in place for a decade or longer. the walk began at 7:00 this morning and is expected to last until 2 p.m. and back on earth, more than 90 million americans are bracing for a winter storm over the next two days. part of 29 states from the south into new england will be hit with snow, sleet or ice. north carolina could see up to a foot of snow. >> and just moments from now, michelle obama will give her last speech as first lady. her good-bye speech coming up. we're going to bring that to you live. please stay with us. . cheesy chipotle pork quesadillas? 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[ male announcer ] join the millions of people who have already enrolled in the only medicare supplement insurance plans endorsed by aarp, an organization serving the needs of people 50 and over for generations. remember, all medicare supplement insurance plans help cover what medicare doesn't pay. and could save you in out-of-pocket medical costs. call now to request your free decision guide. and learn more about the kinds of plans that will be here for you now - and down the road. i have a lifetime of experience. so i know how important that is. i wanted to know where i did my ancestrydna. the most shocking result was that i'm 26% native american. i had no idea. it's opened up a whole new world for me. ♪ historically we would have considered anything below 5% pretty good. the problem is that we've got a low unemployment rate relatively but haven't seen wages push up all that much. in president obama's eight years in office, the tally per year has averaged to 1,419,000 jobs created every year of the eight years. here's how that stands. this is the 1.4 million in relation to the last six presidencies. jimmy carter created an environment in which the most jobs were produced, 2.5 million, reagan 2 million, george bush the first, 659,000, clinton 2.8 million. stephanie, as you know very well and our viewers know, presidents don't create jobs and sometimes they don't even create the environment. it could be something that happened before them but this is what the tally looks like. >> we shouldn't forget, it's not just the unemployment number. it's the underemployment number. all of those people who aren't even looking anymore. >> that's why normally this would be good, the 4.7%. because we have so many people who either have two jobs or are not satisfied in the job they've got or not working enough hours, this is not giving you the answer you actually want. >> not giving us the picture we want. thank you, ali. next to the white house. michelle obama about to give her last speech as first lady. a look at her legacy next. it worked better than plavix. >>don't stop taking brilinta without talking to your doctor since stopping it too soon increases your risk of clots in your stent, heart attack, stroke, and even death. brilinta may cause bruising or bleeding more easily, or serious, sometimes fatal bleeding. don't take brilinta if you have bleeding, like stomach ulcers, a history of bleeding in the brain, or severe liver problems. tell your doctor about bleeding, new or unexpected shortness of breath, any planned surgery, and all medicines you take. >>talk to your doctor about brilinta. i'm doing all i can. that includes brilinta. if you can't afford your medication, astra zeneca may be able to help. east room of the white house where michelle obama is about to deliver what will be her final speech as first lady. it follows a series of powerful and highly praised speeches over the last six to seven months. the first lady's remarks today will be at an event honoring the 2017 school counselor of the year. it's a tradition she started two years ago as part of her reach higher initiative. as we wait for the first lady, i'm joined by nbc news chief washington correspondent chris jansing and amanda turkle. people on the stage right now are the finalist for the school counselor of the year. clearly this is a big day, a big moment for them. chris, you want to start with you. this is also a big moment for michelle obama. what do we expect to hear from her? >> expect passion. we saw it on the speeches she did on behalf of hillary clinton, particularly one where she answered some of the things that had been said by president-elect donald trump. she minced no words. remember, politics is not her first love, far from it. she is somebody who in fact has always loved working in a different kind of process, in community leadership and education is a big deal for her. so we shouldn't be surprised that the last event that she does in a public forum le this is honoring school counselors, is going to honor the counselor of the year. and we're also listening very closely for some clues about her post-white house plans. she's talked very little about them, but i do know from talking to people close to her, she will focus heavily on women and girls. it's been a passion for her, even from the time that she was very young, and for her it's very personal as someone who grew up on the south side of chicago in a one-bedroom house, within a stone's throw of one of the best universities in the country but she felt as a young girl of color the opportunities were not there for her. she was wait listed at harvard law school. of course she got in and graduated. everything that she could possibly want to do is out there for her, one of the things she will clearly focus on is education, stephanie. so we're waiting to hear some of those details today. >> amanda, do we think that passion could be paired at all with pessimism? in her last interview where she sat down with oprah winfrey, she talked about a feeling of hopelessness as she talked about the new administration. >> that may be true but especially recently her speeches have been incredibly optimistic. you look at the speech at democratic national convention, her main line has been "when they go low, we go high." that has encapsulated especially how she has approached especially the end of her tenure. she gave another remarkable speech during the campaign when she talked about what a strong man actually looks like and that they don't need to put down women, obviously responding to some of the remarks that donald trump made and she has really tried to be out there, be a role model for children because education is such an important issue to her. you know, i think we will see more of that tone perhaps. >> ron, what does this mean to michelle obama? we know she's spent a lot of time in the last few months on the campaign trail for hillary clinton, something she didn't want to do. politics isn't something she likes. but at the time she thought it was so important, specifically the messaging, what she needed to do for women and girls and hillary clinton was not elected to be the next president. so what does this speech today mean to michele? >> the program retire is about inspiring young people, especially young girls to do that, retirach higher, aspire beyond high schools, two year colleges, trade schools. it's her position that to succeed in society these days, you need more than a high school diploma. i think she has a lot to say, the first lady does. she has a lot to get off her chest. i think she'll be a fascinating person to talk to once the obamas leave the white house because she has played this role of first lady, which i think has restrained her in some ways. i think it will be a lot of optimism, a lot of positivity. i think some of the most enduring aspt of the obama legacy is the role model that they have been to so many young people of color in this country, who see them in the white house, who see them as the first family, who see them as a family with two very accomplished young children, who are now older of course. but i think that's what this event is. she likes to be in this kind of an environment where there are young people around, where she can be inspiring, where people will look up to her and where she can tell them essentially you can be me, you can do this. you just have to get past all these obstacles that are in your way. and the obamas are some of the first to say that there are in fact obstacles, that it is different for young people of color to get ahead in this society and they're very proud as well of some of the policies and education space, like the high school graduation rate of being the highest in the nation. the president set a goal of trying to increase the number of americans in college to a higher level than it's been in the past. again, i think this is an vant for the first lady really to just be the inspiring person that she's been, to set the example, to fill the room with optimism, with hope, with a positive vibe as we go through yet another of these last and final moments here at the white house for the past week or so. it seems like every day there's been a last farewell, final moment. it's a very emotional time here for a lot of people, for the staff, for the obamas i'm sure. i think you'll see some of that come throughs well. the christmas event a month ago, she was very, very emotional when talking to military families. military families are another cause, another group she's really tried to support wholeheartedly in her time at the white house. >> if i can tell you a personal story, at the christmas parties, you have your picture taken with the president and first lady and last year i brought one of my brothers with me as my date. you're moving through fairly quickly, you don't have a time for real conversation. as we were walking away, she was thanking my brother. and i said for 30 years he was a school teacher. she stopped everything and spoke with him. that tells you a little bit how education is a priority for her. and she talked about the privacy of her daughters as much as she could. and we don't see a tremendous amount of her children. they are children of privilege and -- >> i need to stop you. michelle obama, the first lady, giving her last public speech. [ cheers and applause ] >> what's going on? thank you all so much. you guys, that's a command. rest yourselves. we're almost at the end. hello, everyone, and may i say for the last time officially welcome to the white house. [ applause ] yes. well, we are beyond thrilled to have you all here to celebrate the 20 national school counlor of the year, as well as all of our sta counselors of the year. these are the fine women and a few good men -- one good man who are on the stage and they represent schools from across this country and i want to start by thanking terry for that wonderful introduction and her right-on-the-spot remarks. i'm going to say more about terry in a few minutes. first i want to introduce our outstanding secretary of education, john king. [ applause ] as well as our former education secretary arnie duncan. [ applause ] i want to take this time to thank you both publicly for your dedication and leadership and friendship. we couldn't do this without the support of the department of education under both of your leadership. so i'm grateful to you personally and very proud of all that you've done for this country. i also want to acknowledge a few other special guests we have in the audience. we've got a pretty awesome crew. as one of my staff said, you roll pretty few good friends. we have with us today ted allen, lala anthony, cony britton, andy cohen, yeah, andy cohen is here. karla hall, coach jim harbaugh and his beautiful wife who is a lot better looking than him. lana pariya, my buddy jay farrow, kelly roland, usher. keep it down. keep it together, ladies, waleh is here and of course allison williams and her mom are here and all these folks are here because they're using their star power to inspire our young people and i'm grateful for you for stepping up in so many ways on so many occasions. i feel like i've pestered you over these years asking time and time again where are you going to be? i'll be in new york. can you come here, can you do this, take that, ask for that, can you come? can we rap? can we sing? so thank you all so much. it really means the world to this initiative to have such powerful respected and admired individuals speaking on behalf of this issue. so congratulations on the work that you've done and we're going to keep working. and today, i especially want to recognize all the extraordinary leadership team that was behind reach hire from day one and this isn't on the script so they don't know this. iant to take time to personally acknowledge a couple people, executive director eric waldo. [ cheers and applause ] where is eric? he was in the -- you got to step out. [ cheers and applause ] step out there. there we go for eric. eric acting like he's a ham but he likes the spotlight. he's acting a little shy. i want to recognize our deputy director, stephanie sprouse. stephanie. [ cheers and applause ] stephanie. back there. and he's really not going to like this because he tries to pretend like he doesn't exist at all but our senior adviser greg darneter. [ cheers and applause ] there you go. greg has been a leader in education his entire life. i've known him since i was a little organizer person, and it's just been just a joy to work with you all. these individuals, they are brilliant. they are creative. they have worked miracles with hardly any staff or budget to speak of, which is how we roll in the first lady's office. and i am so proud and so grateful to you all for everything that you've done so let's give them a round of applause. and finally i want to recognize all of you who are here in this audience. we have our educators, our lead leaders, our young people who have been with us since we launched reach hire back in 2014. when we first came up with this idea, we had one clear goal in mind. we wanted to make higher education cool. we wanted to change the conversation around what it means and what it takes to be a success in this country. because let's be honest, if we're always shining the spotlight on professional athletes or recording artists or hollywood celebrities, if those are the only achievements we celebrate, then why would we ever think kids would see clem as a p college as a priority so we decided to flip the script and shine a big bright spotlight on all things educational. for example, we made college signing day a national event. we wanted to mimic all that drama and excitement traditionally reserved for those few amazing football and basketball players choosing their college and university teams. we wanted to focus that same level of energy and attention on kids going to college because of their academic achievements, because as a nation, that's where the spotlight should also be, on kids who work hard in school and do the right thing when no one's watching. many beating daunting odds. next, we launched better make room. it a social media campaign to give young people the support and inspiration they need to actually complete higher education, and to really drive that message home, you may recall that i debuted my music career rapping with jay about getting some knowledge by going to college. [ cheers and applause ] we are also very proud of all that this administration has done to make higher education more affordable. we doubled investments in pell grants and college tax credits. we expanded income-based loan repayment options for tens of millions of students. we made it easier to apply for financial aid. we created a college scorecard to help students make good decisions about higher education and we provided new funding and support for school counselors. [ cheers and applause ] >> thank you. >> you're welcome. >> all together we made in this administration the largest investment in higher education since the gi bill. [ cheers and applause ] and today the high school graduation rate is at a record high, and more young people than ever before are going to college, and we know that school counselors like all of the folks standing with me on this stage have played a critical role in lping get there. in fact a recent study showed students who met with a school counselor to talk about financial aid or college were three times more likely to attend college, and they were nearly seven times more likely to apply for financial aid. so our school counselors are truly among the heroes of the reach higher story, and that's why we created this event two years ago, because we thought that they should finally get some recognition. we wanted everyone to know about the difference that these phenomenal men and women have been making in the lives of our young people every day, and our 2017 school counselor of the year, terry trcyzinskcy a perfect example. terry works at the calhoun area career center, career and technical education school in michigan, and here's what terry's principal said about her in his letter of recommendation. he said "once she identifies a systemic need, she works tirelessly to address it." so when students at terry's school reported feeling unprepared to apply for higher education, terry sprang into action to create a school-wide top-to-bottom college readiness effort. under terry's leadership students attended workshops on resume completion, fasfa completion, and ierview preparation, i can barely say it. they did career and personal personality assessments, they helped plan a special college week and organized a military day, hosting recruiters from all branches of our armed forces, and because of these efforts today, 75% of calhoun's seniors now complete key college application steps and terry's school has one state and national recognition, and all of this is just one small part of what terry does for her students each day. i can go on and on about all the time she spends one on one with students helping them figure out their life path. terry told us, as you heard, she told us about one of those students. we reached out to kyra, and here's what kyra had to say in her own words. kyra wrote that "mrs. trcyzinski has helped me grow to love myself. she helped me with my doubts and insecurities." she said, "my life has changed for the better in all aspects." kyra said "she held my hand through my hardest times." she said "mrs. trcyzinski is my life saver." that's what kyra said. and this is what each of you do. every single day. you see the promise in each of your students. you believe in them even when

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Transcripts For FOXNEWSW FOX Friends 20180801 10:00:00

A morning show that highlights the latest headlines in news, weather, sports and entertainment, and is known for the cohosts' casual and spontaneous... they have 200 sets of remains. that's a small portion of the roughly 7,700 u.s. service members missing in action during this brutal korean war from 1950 to 1953. you wonder in the '55 there is only one set of dog tags. some have estimated so many different countries fought in this war. some think it could be a french. australians had a major presence. you don't know unless they allow us to go what we know some much these military sites were and some of these battles took place, you don't know what they gave us. ainsley: several thoughts came to mind when i was watching the ceremony. it happened our time 4:00 a.m. i thought how wonderful that the south koreans are celebrating our veterans our heroes or at least honoring them. 70 years later and our forensic teams are able to piece this back together and figure out who these marines belong to. >> surely this has been a A morning show that highlights the latest headlines in news, weather, sports and entertainment, and is known for the cohosts' casual and spontaneous... in a peace time war effort. then we have to bulk up and try to save the peninsula. world respond. in come the chinese. they have their prisoner camps were americans were held. they lost over 400,000 people. the russians had a will presence. 72,000 helping but not officially in the war. this was truly the first battle of the cold war. ainsley: this was something that was extremely important to the president. pete hegseth is actually traveling with the vice president to hawaii. we will go to him live. he will have reports also tomorrow morning because it is very important, obviously, to cover this. but the vice president is going to meet these remains in hawaii and then our president was down in florida because another big issue is making sure republicans go out and vote during the midterm elections. he was there to stump for several of the republicans running for the governor's race or for congressional positions down in the state of florida. he walls at the fairgrounds in tampa. if you missed the rally, here's a little bit of it from last night. >> u.s. economy grew at 4.1% last quarter. we're in the longest positive job growth streak in history. democrats want to raise your taxes. they want to destroy your jobs. democrats want open borders, which equals massive crime. [crowd boos] >> we want maximum border security and respect for our heroes. ice, border patrol, and law enforcement. [cheers] >> we're going to have tremendous border security that will include the wall. look at judge kavanaugh. so farther democrats vice president given us any votes and that's because they will do anything they can to not help the trump agenda. under previous administrations we never won. we got used to never winning. the economy is too good. the jobs are too strong. on air force one to campaign for his opponent. the reason the president showed up in tampa yesterday, was because mail ballots have stearated to arrive, tens of thousands of homes all across florida. they have a very active early voting program. and the president wanted to make sure every republican knew he was aligned with mr. desantis. >> he has helped some candidates. some in georgia. we saw what happened in south carolina. in alabama. he saw -- yesterday he said we need to elect more republicans to restore american strength and keep up the momentum. he also said when people come into the oval office, even if they didn't vote for him or didn't like him. he said i hear the same thing over and over and over. it's thank you, mr. president, for what you have done for this economy. brian: a couple of things. everyone keeps reporting that general kelly is out. he used to have such control over the white house. he will doesn't have any control. he is so unhappy. when we have reached out in the past he says it is just not true. i'm not unhappy. things are going great. and then you hear that on july 31st it's going to be one year since he took the job and then after july 31st not only is he going to keep the job but has been offered 2020. he accepted yesterday all those rumors not true. steve: #fake news? brian: not true news. i know that. steve: meanwhile, this was true. yesterday, the judiciary subcommittee on border security and immigration had a hearing. democrats called because they wanted to know more about family separation. john cornyn great senator from the state of texas he was asked one of the experts who will suffer most if democrats abolish ice because there have been a number of democrats who have called for just that and surprisingly, the authority from ice said minority communities will be victimized the most because the people who are not removed are involved in gangs activity and criminal activity and generally commit crimes against people in the communities where they live. ainsley: there was one democratic senator maizy terry back in the united states and will face a judge today. the suspect extradited from arizona to medication co. back in 2010 he and his crew were trying to rip off drug smugglers when he and his partner were shot dead. fast and furious. help criminals buy guns in helping to track them into mexico. two of those guns were found at the scene of terry's murder. overnight, two new wildfires erupting. about 60 homes near san francisco forced to evacuate. this as we learn the carr fire was most likely started by a car with mechanical issues. it has claimed the lives of at least six people and is now considered the sixth most devastating fire in state history with more than 1200 buildings destroyed. election interference will take center stage on capitol hill today. a congressional hearing on foreign actors trying to influence voters on social media comes hours after facebook suspended 32 fake how does it work? the results just in. ♪ this is the part when i say i don't want ♪ [ sobs quietly ] new laptop with 24/7 tech support. yep, thanks guys. i think he might need some support. yes start them off right. with the school supplies they need at low prices all summer long. save $200 on this dell laptop at office depot officemax. enbrel may lower your ability to fight infections. serious, sometimes fatal events including infections, tuberculosis, lymphoma, other cancers, nervous system and blood disorders, and allergic reactions have occurred. tell your doctor if you've been someplace where fungal infections are common, or if you're prone to infections, have cuts or sores, have had hepatitis b, have been treated for heart failure, or if you have persistent fever, bruising, bleeding, or paleness. don't start enbrel if you have an infection like the flu. since enbrel, dad's back to being dad. visit enbrel.com and use the joint damage simulator to see how your joint damage could be progressing. ask about enbrel. enbrel. fda approved for over 15 years. jogger this week. brian: fox news contributor former detective ted williams has been working the scene in iowa the best he can joins us now with the latest. the press conference didn't give us much information. what can you tell us? >> well, the press conference did not. but it did give us, guys, time line. we know that on july the 18th mollie at around 5:30 in the afternoon was dropped off at her boyfriend's house. from my investigation, i have been able to determine that mollie was supposedly living with her boyfriend and her boyfriend's brother and her boyfriend's brother's fiance. they have been investigated, from what i understand investigators and they have a pretty air tight alibi. but around 7:30 that night on july the 18th, mollie goes running. well, from what we know, this is where it begins to get murky because we don't know if she ever got back to her home or there are relatives that say they saw her around 10:00 that night, heard from her. her boyfriend, as a matter of fact, said he heard from her on snapchat around 10:00 that night from a house. steve: that's right. ted, her boyfriend, dalton, pictured right there, i believe. he was 100 miles away working a construction job in debuck. she was back at the house. the early suggestion was maybe she got grabbed when she was out on the jog. now we know that apparently she may have been doing some homework maybe on the computer after the jog. and that's why it's so unclear what happened. >> well, you know, you just used the right proper term unclear. law enforcement out here have been very, very tight-lipped. they have conducted over 200 interviews. they have certainly talked to the boyfriend as well as his brother and the relatives of mollie. but, everybody is still a suspect in this investigation, guys. it's like a needle in the haystack out here. they are trying to find out what happened to mollie. ainsley: all right. doll ton jack is a boyfriend and his brother is supposed to get married this weekend in the dominican republic. they were all planning heading to the wedding. we hope she is found. she is definitely in our prayers. thank you so much, ted, for following this story. >> my pleasure. brian: meanwhile, 10 minutes before the bottom of the hour. the remains of 55 fallen u.s. service men's in the korean war heading back to the united states. it was a powerful moment in south korea happened hours ago. retired ranger sean parnell joins us live on the significance next. come together at the lincoln summer invitation sales event. get 0% apr on select 2018 lincoln models plus $1,000 bonus cash. (burke) so we know how to cover almost anything.en almost everything even "vengeful vermin." not so cute when they're angry. and we covered it. talk to farmers. we know a thing or two because we've seen a thing or two. ♪ we are farmers. bum-pa-dum, bum-bum-bum-bum ♪ it's a high-tech revolution in sleep. the new sleep number 360 smart bed. it intelligently senses your movement and automatically adjusts on each side to keep you both comfortable. and snoring? how smart is that? smarter sleep. to help you lose your dad bod, train for that marathon, and wake up with the patience of a saint. the new sleep number 360 smart bed, from $999. smarter sleep will change your life. steve: all right. time now for quick headlines on this wednesday morning. a group in favor of california's state's succession has hatched a new plan, give the eastern half of the state to native americans autonomous native nation would create a buffer zone between what they call president trump's america and the new independent california republic. this is the latest attempt in a decade's long push that has resulted in very little progress. meanwhile canada's basic income experiment is getting scrapped. the 110-million-dollar pilot program which provided cash to 4,000 people is ending under ontario's new conservative government. it was mental to determine if giving money to people with lower incomes would impact their lives. officials say it did not and it was too expensive. so it's over. brian? brian: now to a fox news alert. a somber ceremony hours ago in south korea for the reoperatation of 55 american service members killed in the korean war. 50, 60 years ago. vice president mike pence will mark their historic return to u.s. soil with a u.s. ceremony set to take place some time today in hawaii. here to weigh in on the selling cans of this is sean pattern nell a retired u.s. army ranger and author of the upcoming book manual of war and outlaw pla t platoon. what was your reactions in watching that ceremony this morning. >> pride. special thing to watch and behold. imagine losing a loved one in the korean war and praying every single day for their safe return and they never come home. you have to keep in mind that families of missing in action, the only thing they get to capture and remember the legacy of the service member that fought in these wars is a folded flag. so to see the remains of these troops finally coming home it's a special thing to me to watch. but it's also a special thing as a country to behold. our country is a little bit better now having these troops on american soil. brian: you have basically 200 sets of u.s. war remains. they give us 55 back. that's an initial show of confidence for it. what do you think it's going to take to get the rest. and if they real lit wanted to show sincerity, wouldn't you agree, sean, they would let us walk north korea. because we know where those battles took place. we know where to find our men that fought. >> yeah. there is no doubt about it. i think the president needs to keep doing what he is doing and keeping maximum pressure on north korea to keep them honest. and ultimately we need to keep trying to get out there in the field to find these guys to bring them home. we have been doing it for 65 years. it's a hallmark of the u.s. military to never leave a fallen comrade. central tenet of the ethose. i will never says defeat and never quit and never leave a fallen comrade. that's what we do in the military. more than that it's a sacred pac between this country and those who serve it we will not leave you hint behind. to me this ceremony shows these family members who lost loved ones that their sacrifice will not be forgotten. brian: good point. i also think it's going to be interesting to see the quest to find out who is there. and now they are calling on family members, survivors to go to the d.n.a. center to give their d.n.a. almost after 9/11 where people were trying to recover the remains of people trapped in those towers and pentagon they are going to do it. that's how family members can help out now. >> yeah, absolutely. i mean, no doubt about it. there needs to be a full-court press in this country both on the civilian side and on the warrior side. we have a whole entire commands out in hawaii that's dedicated to the forensic analysis of this d.n.a. fight fog bring our servicemen and women home from every war we have ever fought in. anything we can do in this country to bring civilians a little bit closer to the men and women who defend women every day is a good thing and ultimately any time that we can bring our servicemen and women home off of foreign battle fields back to their final resting place here on the greatest country on earth is a good thing. brian: other thing i like we are talking about the korean war for the first time they think of mash. now talking about a war lost 33,000. the chinese fought and lost hundreds of thousands. the north koreans lost hundreds of thousands. this whole world back in that war peninsula seven, eight years after world war ii. no one talks about. this now at least it's in the forefront for a short time. those veterans who wonder if they are ever going to get any recognition maybe have a chance to talk about their war experience because this was brutal. >> yeah. you are absolutely right. and to all of those korean war veterans who are still alive and kicking today. your sacrifice has not been forgotten. brian: absolutely. sean parnell thanks so much. >> thank you for having me. brian: here we are 30 minutes before the top of the hour. straight ahead. remember this official who sparked national outrage after taking a knee during the pledge of allegiance? she's back at it and the crowd not happy. >> i pledge allegiance. [crowd boos] brian: unbelievable. tomi lahren fired up. she is live next. plus, you know about washington crossing the delaware. have you seen trump crossing the swamp? well, look. happy birthday to the lead singer of def leppard joe elliott. he is 59 years old today. and somewhere he is wearing a tight outfit ♪ pour some sugar on me ♪ cleaning power of three bottles of this other liquid. a drop of dawn and grease is gone. so let's promote our summer travel deal on choicehotels.com like this. surfs up. earn a $50 gift card when you stay just twice this summer. or, badda book. badda boom. book now at choicehotels.com last night they had another meeting. what happened? let's take you back to had damn connecticut. >> i pledge allegiance. [crowd boos. [. brian: they were booing. >> did you see the girl in the back she came around the table to see if her colleague was going to kneel. >> colleagues everywhere. veterans in the audience scream at her to stand up telling their personal stories how offended they are. doesn't seem to bother her. she is against the flag and the pledge of allegiance in particular. steve: in particular she is against donald trump. she have. so reaction some of the people there last night. let's play some of that. >> what were you thinking when you kneeled down for the sacred pledge of allegiance what those people died for gives you the right to do that and disrespect. i think it's -- >> i wholeheartedly respect your right to protest if that's what you would like to do, do that on your own time. [applause] >> kneel and turn your back on that flag. you turned it on half of this town. steve: a lot of folks in haddam would like to see her resign. she said she would not. ainsley: she has no plans to seek a higher office, she says. she has received harassment and threats over her protest and calls for her resignation. brian: is this about freedom or is this about disrespect? tomi slarn contributor up early for us or out late. we're not sure. tomi, what's your reaction to the reaction? the reaction i find heartening. >> well, the citizens of that town really said it better than i ever could. you could see their emotion and operatism which is patrioti. we have to remember that just because she has the right doesn't make her right. and it also doesn't mean that she is going to be shielded from criticism. she is choosing to do this and choosing to disrespect the flag, clearly. veterans in the crowd feel that she is disrespecting them and she deserves to be called out for it. ainsley: it's hard really to watch this in my personal opinion. we have been watching awflg the remains that are in caskets coming home to america. families without their loved ones, they made the ultimate sacrifice. we had a guy on the show the other day didn't see his dad after he was 4 years old because he was missing in action. dad never came home. doesn't have answers. so, i mean, when you hear these stories and then you see people kneeling for the flag, knowing what our servicemen and women have done for this country, i mean, to me, it's just so sad. >> it's sad and it's disheartening. i think you hit the nail on the head there because we have some americans fought and died for this country. it just shows there are some, usually on the democratic side of the aisle this disdain for this president is greater than their love for this country. we need remember that whatever their issue is with this president and with this administration or republicans or trump supporters, it shouldn't trump, if you will, their love of this country and their respect for those who fought and died for this country. why that has become something the democrats have embraceside beyond me. i don't understand it why is patriotism not something that all americans believe in. you can dislike this president and administration can you use the other 28 hours and 58 minutes a day to show that disdain for this president and administration. you don't have to use anthem and pledge of allegiance. steve: fellow right behind her who we had on the show a week ago larry magi. that's him right there in the solid green shirt with the hand over the heart right there, he said he was so shocked that she had done it, he kind of lost his place in the pledge of allegiance. fast forward, he told us on our air that apparently she has been doing this for a while. and in fact this is the first month or so she has taken a knee. she has removed flags from different events, the american flag and i believe the connecticut flag as well. meanwhile here is her reaction to the folks in the audience calling her out. listen to this. [inaudible] steve: the town doesn't like it but it's fascist and racist she says. >> somebody choosing to represent her town and discontinue citizens has such disdain for her town and citizens and her country. at the end of the day, if she is removing american flags and kneeling for the pleedges, has disrespect for the stars and stripes. why is she choosing to represent her city, her town, her country as an elected official. that's i don't understand. if she doesn't like it so much and has so much disdain for the country in which she lives, why doesn't she just leave like the rest of the anti-trump crowd who promised to move. it's really interesting when you look at this debate and ongoing protesting it, just goes to show that even the people that claim to hate this country refuse to leave it. it must be a pretty great one, right? brian: or do what california is doing and trying to succeed. half the state they are talking about to the american indian nation and then begin succession noises. >> yeah, welcome to california, right? steve: those are your people. that's where she is broadcasting from right now. tomi larnl thank you for joining us on this wednesday. ainsley: thanks, tomi. jillian has more headlines for us. jillian: following a number of stories this morning. let's get you caught up on this. something a lot of people are talking about. principle 3-d gun prints go online today go on hold. block a june settlement between the company and state department that would have made the plans accessible today. the company is vowing to fight. >> i believe that i am championing the second amendment in the 21st century. i think access to a firearm is a fundamental human dignity. fundamental human right. jillian: critics are concerned it could help put weapons in the hands of criminals. entire police force resigns on the same day over unsafe working conditions. the plan ford police department in massachusetts claims cruisers barely run. bullet proof vests are expired and don't fit and radios don't work. officers had no choice and not risking their own lives for $15 an hour. the state police will respond to emergencies in the small town of about 1200 people. a sour situation just got a little sweeter. new york governor andrew cuomo is helping a boy whose lemonade stand was shut down over a lack of a permit. vowing to pay for any fees or permits that brendan mulvaney needs. the 7-year-old's business was shut down by the health department after vendors at the saratoga fairgrounds complained he was undercutting their business. he was only charging 75 cents. a look at your headlines. steve: they were charging like 5 bucks. jillian: we cover these stories all the time it's instain. steve: what are they thinking? it never ends well. jillian: what about the good old days just had a lemonade stand on the ticket. brian: remember first time went downtown and got permit and filed for lance. that's the way we used to do it. steve: anxiously, check him for a fever. brian: 101. ainsley: just go. go to the hospital. brian: janice dean wants me to toss to her. janice: hi, brian, welcome back my friend. brian: good to see you. janice: it's not the same without you. janice: why do you have an umbrella? janice: it is raining out here. >> my name is you scott and i'm from louisiana. janice: you know what? i was going to tell you that you were here last year, right? >> i was in december. janice: it was snowing? >> snowing and cold, yes, it was. janice: nicer now. >> cool and wet. janice: fantastic, get under the umbrella with me and take a look at the map. we have 75 here in new york city. 72 in buffalo. up and down the coast we have the potential for rainfall. a lot of it, unfortunately, from florida all the way up towards the northeast. and the potential for flooding as well. we have flood watches and warnings from florida all the way up towards the northeast and the potential for several inches of rain. not only that but we could see also some severe storms later on this afternoon for parts of the northeast. thanks for coming out. do you want to say hello to your wife still sleeping. >> my wife jessica is still sleeping and my church back at home. janice: back inside. the team is all here. steve: thank you very much. that's nice. steve: meanwhile, straight ahead, the trump administration now warning about the growing cyber security threat from china. so how do we counter their cyber attacks and how is north korea involved? we're going to talk about that with an expert next. brian: plus, what do the voters think of president trump's rally last night? griff jenkins is having breakfast with friends in florida. hey, griff. i did not know you had friends in florida. >> i have friends. here in 2016 when the president was here he was back for the first time. we have the wiz. we have diana. and we have the home of the hillbilly skillet. that's coming up next. ♪ a majority of adults lowered their blood sugar and reached an a1c of less than seven and maintained it. oh! under seven? 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(vo) a two-year study showed that ozempic® does not increase the risk of major cardiovascular events like heart attack, stroke, or death. oh! no increased risk? ♪ ozempic®! ♪ ozempic® should not be the first medicine for treating diabetes, or for people with type 1 diabetes or diabetic ketoacidosis. do not share needles or pens. don't reuse needles. do not take ozempic® if you have a personal or family history of medullary thyroid cancer, multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 2, or if you are allergic to ozempic®. stop taking ozempic® and get medical help right away if you get a lump or swelling in your neck, severe stomach pain, itching, rash, or trouble breathing. serious side effects may happen, including pancreatitis. tell your doctor if you have diabetic retinopathy or vision changes. taking ozempic® with a sulfonylurea or insulin may increase the risk for low blood sugar. common side effects are nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, stomach pain, and constipation. some side effects can lead to dehydration, which may worsen kidney problems. i discovered the potential with ozempic®. ♪ oh! oh! oh! ozempic®! ♪ (vo) ask your healthcare provider if ozempic® is right for you. overhaul packaging shifting to greener alternative. all packets will be recyclable by 20205. there have you it. steve: they are going to catch up. there yohow serious are the cyber attacks and what are we doing to counter them? today we focus on china and cyber security threat and north korea is also playing a role. part of three part china china friend or foe here to talk talk about it morgan or taking gus. gooor taortakingortagus. >> they have been at it for decades. what's really important is not only attacking american government entities we can go through what we all know how they steal federal information from all our people with security clearance holders. what they're really aggressively doing now is going after american corporations in silicon valley. stealing our technology there. steve: they don't want to invent stuff. they want to steal our stuff. >> they are also using human spies to do this. is there is a big report in politico about this where the chinese human spy also go in and recruit someone at a company and get that person at the company to hand over company secrets. they do it via hacking and also via using human spies. steve: we have a big screen, horgan, we are going to show folks some of the big famous hacks that the chinese have perpetrated. chamber of commerce. look at that. >> the reason why that chamber of commerce is so important is the 3 million members are all-american businesses. steve: across the board. >> aggressively attacking american businesses with no response. and i might add, vice president's pence was so important yesterday because he hit right on this. >> and then nafta, they have a missile program. they have got a rocket program steal our ideas. >> this here on fec federal election commission we hear about russia, russia, russia. way back in 2014, the chinese were in the fec. steve: look at the post office they stole the data of 800,000 employees and the national oceanic and atmospheric administration that's all about science and office of personnel management. opm one was really important thousands of people top secret security clearances stole their information. 22 million personnel files. >> i was one of them. me and my husband were former government employees we got the letter. steve: they stole data on undersea warfare data as well. meanwhile what about north korea? >> the north koreans are also incredibly so he 50's at this indicated in cyber espionage as well. we talk about nuclear weapons. icbms also very important. whenever the sony hack came out that was the first time the public learned about how sophisticated the north koreans actually are in cyber attacks. individual companies in america you have to have systems to protect against hacking. but we really need -- what we need to do is the chinese have not paid the public price from what they have been doing for us for 10 or 20 years as it relates to hacking our government and hacking our businesses. they -- i'm sure that the u.s. government has done things behind the scenes. but there has been nothing public. i thought vice president pence's announcement yesterday was so important about taking the stuff on publicly and drawing a line in the sand and saying you are no longer going to do this. >> i will tell you what, it is very important and a lot of people don't think about china, they think about russia, russia, russia. >> chinese are even more sophisticated. way more. steve: our series continues tomorrow as we examine china's economic threat to the united states and what's going to happen with trade and tariff and all that stuff. we will see you then. >> can't wait. steve: meanwhile, what did the voters think of president trump's valley last night in tampa? griff jenkins is having breakfast with friends in florida. we are going to check in with him as he pours some hot coffee down in florida ♪ bobbing up down ♪ up down, up down ♪ we got what we got ♪ we don't need the rest ♪ sheriff, law enforcement officer, chief of police, i'm sorry. what did you think of the president's speech? >> i thought it was great. i thought he done good. and i hope he can get the congress to go with him on building the wall and letting the people to come in legally. griff: immigration. >> immigration because that's a very important. griff: moving along here, leland you as well got to see some of this. what do you think of what the president is doing and what did you think of the speech. >> i think he did great. i think he needs to stand his ground and not back off too much. and we know that he will take care of the country. griff: all right, leland, we are moving over here. steve, also in law enforcement formerly. now i see you have got the hillbilly feeling. we will talk about that in a second. what did you think of the president last night and how is he doing as president? >> i think he is doing a great job. i wish congress would work with him a little better. i think it's a shame he has to fight for everything he wants to do. awful he is trying to do is improve over what we have had in the past. griff: if the president had to shut the government down to get border security. would you be behind that? >> absolutely. i think we have a little bit too much government anyway in our country. i think the people need to have a little bit more say. griff: how long is it going to take to you eat the hillbilly skillet? >> it will take a while. that's quite a meal. griff: a lot of the people tirng out. the presidents had a full house last night upwards of 20,000 like did he in 2016. we will bring you more. brian: big screen on the outside for those who could not get in. ainsley: outside of the rally. steve: i read in the local paper it wasn't actually there. brian: the president said it and it didn't happen. steve: that's what i read in the tampa bay paper. brian: you get it delivered every day? steve: there is a thing called the internet. brian: pete hegseth arrived in hawaii moments ago as the remains of 55 service members returns to america. he will joins us live next. experience amazing at your lexus dealer. and the wolf huffed and puffed... like you do sometimes, grandpa? well, when you have copd, it can be hard to breathe. so my doctor said... symbicort can help you breathe better. starting within 5 minutes. it doesn't replace a rescue inhaler for sudden symptoms. doctor: symbicort helps provide significant improvement of your lung function. symbicort is for copd, including chronic bronchitis and emphysema. it should not be taken more than twice a day. it may increase your risk of lung infections, osteoporosis, and some eye problems. tell your doctor if you have a heart condition or high blood pressure before taking it. grandpa: symbicort could mean a day with better breathing. watch out, piggy! 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[national anthem] steve: a somber ceremony in north korea for the repatriatation for 55 american service members killed during the korean war. >> our country is a little bit better now having these soldiers and troops back on american soil. >> former trump campaign chairman paul manafort facing charges over an alleged tax evasion and money laundering. >> his crime is be being associated with donald trump. >> the local official who started a firestorm kneeling for the pledge of allegiance before a meeting is at it again. [crowd boos] >> kneel and turn your bag back on that flag you turned it on half of this town. >> he is not acting presidential. >> you are tremendous people and i will leave now because i am boring you to death. thank you. [laughter] ♪ brian: all right. good morning, everybody. we begin with a fox news alert. there you see it. the remains of 55 american service members, we believe, killed in the korean war that ended in 1953. now on their way to hawaii after a somber ceremony but respectful in south korea. [that's] [taps] ainsley: the remains of those heroes and one military dog tag handed over by the united states to north korea. steve: they will be landing in hawaii later today for forensic testing it will be a long arduous process before finally going home to their families that is the hope. meanwhile, the vice president will meet the remains there in hawaii and on air force 2 yesterday, pete hegseth our own "fox & friends weekend" co-host flew with the vice president. pete joining us right now live from honolulu. pete, i understand halfway there you stopped in california and you picked up some people you had not been anticipating. were going to make the trip. pete: yeah. good morning, guys. absolutely. just watching those images there on the screen give me the chills. can i only imagine what it's going to be like at 2:00 p.m. today when that ceremony occurs on joint base pearl harbor hickey, just a stone's throw behind me. on the way there the vice president made intentional stop in california. we picked um probably the two most important passengers on that plane and man and woman who were 4 and 3 years old, little girl and little boy in the 1950s when they sent their father, then young men, both pilots, both first lieutenants, both went to fight in the korean war and they recalled to me and recalled in media reports that last hug and that last kiss to their father before they went to that war and ultimately never came home. both shot down. remains never found. they dedicated their lives for the last 60 years finding out what happened to their fathers, what happened though those patriots, warriors who went to fight for us for every generation of americans. they will be there with the vice president at this ceremony today just grateful that our country cares so much that we keep searching. and that amidst big geopolitical debates and discussions about denuclearization of peninsulas, what still matters to american patriots are getting our boys home and today we are going to get 55 of them. we don't know who they are. it will be a long process to determine who they are. this is all geo politics but it's ultimately personal. and about following through on the promise we made to our warriors. brian: you have got about 7,000 missing in action that we know of. they say they have remains of 200. and the thing that's different about this time as opposed to other times when we have asked for the remains and gotten some here and there, is that the north koreans did not get paid for this. n this case they didn't ask for money that does show somewhat of improvement and thawing between nations, right? >> no. that's right. i had a chance to talk off the record with the vice president on the flight over. he emphasized just that don't under estimate what a powerful statement this is by chairman kim and the north koreans. we didn't give up anything other than the willingness to meet. they said they would delivery mansz. they have. all we can do is take that as a gesture of good faith. and hope that it means that we are continuing down the path toward a better outcome on the korean peninsula. this war is still not over, technically. the conclusion of the war could be an outcome from this process as well. ainsley: looking at pictures with you with vice president pence and karen pence. here are more of the pictures on air force 2. what does this mean to you? i know you are a veteran, you fought for this country gone overseas, several deploimentsz. >> you know, sean parnell put it earlier on the program i would reemphasize that. put in your only context. imagine the guys i went to serve with iraq and afghanistan never found. i could count on the greatest country on earth would be willing through the support of negotiations and tough ones do everything they can to bring those guys back and put them back on american soil where they belong. see, americans have spilled blood on foreign continents for decades. korea being a great example. the forest, the mountain, the riverbed he is, the jungles, the forgotten places in the forgottible war. those men should not and could not ever be forgotten. speaks to the commitment of our government and speaks to the commitment of president trump and vice president pence. the mood on that plane, guys, was as somber and serious and honorable as i have ever seen this vice president personal it's personal to him his father was a combat veteran in korea who did come home. his father told him those heroes are the guys who never came home. we know who to truly remember and today we remember them. steve: absolutely. and as we talk a little bit about remembering them, it's going to be scientifically tough to figure out who those remains belong to. while they sent over 55 small caskets, it is unknown how many sets of bones are in there. how many fragments. the only guarantee was they believe they have removed any animal bones. pete, how are people who are related to those who are lost in action back decades ago going to get themselves into some sort of a d.n.a. data base? >> yeah. i'm told this is the part where there will be need for patience and letting the process play itself out. even the families, i got to speak to those families very, very briefly. there isn't and i have spoken to other folks from the korean war conflict who have family members missing. there isn't always a high expectation that it will be indeed their father or mother that is identified and they will know exactly where they are. it is the overall sense that they are being remembered no matter what and hopefully, the hope still remains for a lot of the them that maybe that is my dad. and maybe i will get to lay him to rest on american soil where he belongs. that's the abiding sense and i think he keeps a lot of them going. they have bonded together. they feel like and have said many times hey, if it's my friend's father i'm just as happy as if it's mine. we have come together as brothers in arms wanting to get an answer about where our dad is this many years ago. steve: indeed. the message is we don't leave anybody behind. pete hegseth live in honolulu not far from hickman air force base. should be arriving in eight hours. you will see it live on fox. ainsley: 55 sets of remains. have we heard that there are more that would be coming later? because i know that were more that were missing in action. brian: i have not heard but you would expect it to be. steve: that's one of the unknowns it is known north korea has said in the past they had 200 sets. they don't know if they have combined them into those 55 small coffins. there are a lot of questions we don't have any answers. to say we do know there is only one piece of positive identification. it's one set of dog tags and the name on the dog tags has not been released. brian: but i do know. this we have again, requested to be able to walk north korea to the sites where we know these explosions or these actions or fire fights took place or where the prinks. were and so far we have gotten that green light yet. obviously they are very suspect when you are in a hermit kingdom u.n. forces or u.s. delegates walking. steve: they don't want us in that country. ainsley: the president, we remember when we sat down with kim jong un. this was something on his platform and list he wanted to get those remain back. when he came home he said the remains are going to be sent back to earthquake in. that's great. the vice president is there as you know. he is going to be accepting those remains. meanwhile, the president, he was working on something else that's extremely important to him. that's getting more republicans elected in the mid terms. he went down to florida to rally for several people that are in tight reyess down there. and at the fairgrounds in tampa. if you missed it yesterday, this is what he had to say. >> u.s. economy grew at 4.1% last quarter. we're in the longest positive job growth streak in history. democrats want to raise your taxes. they want to destroy your jobs. democrats want open borders, which equals massive crime. we want maximum border security and respect for our heroes ice, border patrol, and law enforcement. we're going to have tremendous border security that will include the wall. look at judge kavanaugh. so far, the democrats haven't given us any votes and that's because they will do anything they can to not help the trump agenda. under previous administrations, we never won. we got used to never winning. the economy is too good. the jobs are too strong. we're doing too well. they say he is not acting presidential. anybody can act presidential. you are tremendous and i will leave now because i am boring you to death. thank you. brian: he did point out yesterday that he is the most popular republican president, even put himself lincoln i'm not sure we were doing polls back then and he had the civil war working against him. he does have an economic story that every other president would just be envious of. including more news that came yesterday. america on a whole got the biggest pay raise over the last quarter that they have gotten in 10 years. got wage earners -- wages are going up. they say that's the last thing to go. and it's starting to move. ainsley: all right. >> steve: it's a wide ranging rally. it was the president's 36th time he has rallied down in florida. brian: i think republicans are most optimistic about stealing a seat in florida with rick scott and most worried about losing one in tennessee right now. ainsley: it's amazing when he endorses someone they seem to do pretty well. hand it over to jillian who has more headlines. jillian: following a lot of the stories this morning starting with. this a story we have within following for two weeks now there. investigators are searching for a man who may be linked to a missing college student. 20-year-old mollie tibbets vanished two weeks ago in brooklyn, iowa, after returning to her boyfriend's house from a jog. two hours away in debuick where mollie's proiferred works a man assaulted another jogger. this is the latest information. ted williams has been working the scene in iowa and says this case is still a big mystery. >> everybody is still a suspect in this investigation, guys. it's like a needle in the haystack out here. they are trying to find out what happened to mollie. jillian: the fbi is following hundreds of leads and we will keep you updated. we are gist hours away from day two of the trial against former trump campaign chairman paul manafort. his lavish lifestyle taking center stage during opening statements as prosecutors claim he lied by money ahead of the law. special case against doesn't include any russian conclusion or links to the 2016 campaign if convicted manafort faces 335 years behind bars. one of president trump's favorite sayings. >> going to washington, d.c. and we are going to drain the swamp. jillian: that's the inspiration behind this new painting called crossing the swamp. a rift on the classic painting washington crossing the delaware utah based. instead of george washington and his crew as you can see, the president is there with his administration in washington, d.c. we want to know what you think about this, email us at friends@foxnews.com. brian: or send us your painting. jillian: can you do that as well. ainsley: where is the drain? steve: pulling the plug. ainsley: another step towards dismantling obamacare. hhs secretary alex azar is going to tell us about the new rule coming up next. learn more at theexplorercard.com the toothpaste that helps prevent bleeding gums. if you spit blood when you brush or floss you may have gum problems and could be on the journey to much worse. help stop the journey of gum disease. try parodontax toothpaste. ♪ a hotel can make or break a trip. and at expedia, we don't think you should be rushed into booking one. that's why we created expedia's add-on advantage. now after booking your flight, you unlock discounts on select hotels right until the day you leave. ♪ add-on advantage. discounted hotel rates when you add on to your trip. only when you book with expedia. dismantle parts of oklahoma. a new rule goes into effect today gives americans a more choice lower cost gott the green light from the office of management and budget. what does this mean for the average american? joining us with more is health and human services secretary alex azar joining us from d.c. good morning alex. >> good morning, steve. steve: tell us about the new plan. >> the president is delivering on promise to deliver more affordable options for health insurance to americans. these plans we are rolling out today can deliver affordable options for people at 50 to 80% lower costs than what the obamacare exchange insurance options have. this is relief, perhaps, for millions of americans. because they have been left behind by the affordable care act's false promises that they would have insurance. everybody would have affordable insurance. it would cover every doctor they wanted, et cetera. it left 28 million americans behind without access to affordable insurance or without choices of insurance. premium us doubling even before the president took office in the obamacare market. so these are called short-term limited duration plans. steve: okay. >> you can get them up to 12 months. what we are doing is allowing those to be renumber up to threrenewable up. you have to qualify for this type of insurance. you have to go through what's called medical underwriting where the insurer would have to decide to take you. they may not cover every condition. but it's a really important option for a lot of people in transition between jobs. those gig economy workers who work on their owns a independent contractors. folks struggling with three part time jobs and don't get insurance from any one employer really important option. that's what we are about is putting the individual and the states back in the driver's seat here. steve: there you go. you said there are still 28 million americans who don't have insurance. given the fact that this is, what did you say, 50 toe 80% cheaper. the whole idea is to get them back into the system even though this doesn't have the very expensive essential benefits that all of the affordable care act different policies did have. >> that's right, steve. we have tried to be very clear about this option that it may not be right for everybody. we have actually required more significant and transparents disclosures of all of these provisions than the obama administration has. so we are trying to make sure that people go in with their eyes open but for many people this may be the right option for them. in those transition periods. what if you are in rural area and only have one obamacare plan there and it doesn't cover the hospital or doctors in your area. this may be an option for you also. for many who have preexisting conditions or who have other health worries, the obamacare plans might be right for them. we're just providing more options and putting them in the driver's seat. steve: that sounds good to the folks watching right now. they will be able to check it out with their healthcare provider. alex azar, the secretary of health and human services, thank you very much for joining us live. >> thank you, steve. steve: what do you think about universal income. it's flopsd in other countries. would it work here? a debate next. the amount of damage that water could do. we called usaa. and they greeted me as they always do. sergeant baker, how are you? they were on it. it was unbelievable. having insurance is something everyone needs, but having usaa- now that's a privilege. we're the baker's and we're usaa members for life. usaa. get your insurance quote today. as the most watched network in all of cable. 25 months, guys. it is all thanks to you, the incredible viewer. our network topped cnn and msnbc as the most watched cable news network for the 199th straight month. thank you so much for keeping us employed. we love you all. brian? brian: and keeping us number one i should add. let's hope for 26. take it a month at a time. thank you, viewers. some on the left. some democrats want universal basic income with some programs already in liberal cities and countries. liberal cities like california. but it's already falling and failing all over the globe. you have finland and in their two year experiment with a guaranteed income ontario, canada, just abandoning their plan of a guaranteed income because it's not working. too expensive. so, why is universal basic income, money for nothing so popular and why has it failed so prevalently? with us now is jenna ellis, the director of policy public for the james dobson institute and capri cafaro resident at the american university school of public affairs. welcome to both of you. capri. >> good morning. >> we want to give people money for nothing because we care about people and they are in tough situations. why doesn't it work? >> well, call dire straits, you said money for nothing, the next thing is chicks for free. a little bit of levity this morning. brian: you got it. >> 13 years ago before i was in office i actually worked with the united nations ngo and did research on their. really, universal basic income is not suited for a developed economy like finland, like canada, like the united states. the places where it does actually have some validity and some value is in the developing world. and places like the african continent where, for example, an entire generation was wind out by aides. so you had grandparents raising grand children, right? so these grandparents basically aged out of being able to work in any meaningful way but they had to raise these kids, so they didn't have the skills, so universal based income was able to help these people sustain their family. in a place like finland the united states or canada. we are better off trying to spend this money on workforce development. on affordable child care and other things. just not enough money to get the job done. brian: capri i appreciate the research on this. something else missing. people want to have value, if you can't appreciate something fundamentally that you get for free even if your heart is in the right place, the execution never works. why is that jenna? >> well, universal basic income is essentially a form of socialism. there is a reasonable why socialism has always failed that's because incentives and value as you said brian are meaningful for americans and opportunities that we have to pursue happiness. our founding fathers understood that capitalism and the american dream was built on the fact that we don't just get something for nothing. we have an opportunity to work. and work is not a bad word. work is something that is born in the human spirit. it's in the reality to which we are presented. i think that's why president trump's economy has been so successful. i mean, we are seeing lower taxes. we are seeing a boost in the economy. we have the 4.1% g.d.p. rate. that's because everyone understands that merit-based achievement and those incentives will always increase productivity in the economy. it's not going to be something for free. that always has to come from somewhere. and when you are taxing people and redistributing wealth without merit, that encourages laziness. that's what we saw in finland. it's not going to work in a westernized country particularly in the united states where we all take really great pride four work. brian: a capri critics said doesn't work not enough money. give somebody $10,000 not enough livable wage therefore the cycle isn't broken. does that resonate with you? >> what we saw, for example, in the finland case was that it was not enough money in order to sustain even affording, you know, basic living accommodations. that's not necessarily the solution because, you know, ultimately again in the case of finland, the entire government budget to be able to provide universal basic income. in my view it, would be better off to invest strategicfully things like workforce development to deal with the skills gap to help reduce unemployment. i can say this, too. when it comes to a developed economy where we do take pride in work as liz said, when i was a state senator in ohio and we were hitting hard times, people, when they called for wanting benefits, they were ashamed. they wanted to work. they didn't want a handout. brian: it's a mind set. >> let's give people tools to be able to get in the workforce. not to sit around. brian: jenna, real quick because we are up against it. do you believe that if a democrat wants to run on this that the democratic party will get nervous about that because that is not something the democratic party believes? >> well, the democrats are actually adhering to the forms of socialism that's really surprising and is going to be very damaging. again, if you look at president trump's economy, people on the average american worker are really incredibly excited about the tax return, the economy is boosting. the democratic party is really hanging their hat on socialism. that's going to be a losing issue for them. brian: correct. >> why are we turning to the government for solutions here when really humanitarianism has always been out of the church and the family and those individual relationships. this isn't the solution that we need to go to government for. and that's what conservatism actually stands for and that's why the g.o.p. platform is actually going to win in the primary. brian: by the way, you two are so good at your job i'm a minute over. thanks so much for doing your research. we will be discussing it over and over. it's a common theme. we have a right to pursue happiness. we don't want to fix the results. straight ahead, ladies. >> thank you. brian: i have lens so bad in chicago parents are forced to hide their kids and they've had enough. >> police to walk the street like they used to. >> mayor needs to come here, bring the u.s. marshals and let our kids play down the street like they're supposed to and not being shot at. brian: have the president bring the national guard. will rahm emanuel listen? this official sparked national outrage after kneeling during the pledge of allegiance. guess what? she is doing it again. >> i pledge allegiance to the flag. 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[crowd boos] steve: that was last night. she knew that she was going to take heat. there were over 100 people in attendance. it looks like that's inside a fire station up in haddam. the folks during her display and afterwards made it very clear many of them, most, perhaps, don't think it's a good idea. >> what are you thinking when you kneeled down to the sacred leedges that what those people died for gives you the right to do that and disrespect that? >> i wholeheartedly respect your right to protest, if that's what you would like to do, do that on your own time. [applause] >> turn your back on that flag, you turned it on half of this town. ainsley: i say more than half of that town. steve: given the fact that so many people there were wearing the red, white, and blue. they knew they were there to see if she took a knee and she did. brian: see what kind of she has at the democratic national convention how many people back her. melissa schlag had this to say. listen to this. brian: it's been worse in town and fascist and racists. steve: one of the people that represents the town and feels people in her town are racist and fascist. we asked you what you thought. we got a tweet from matt who says respect our flag, our country, our veterans selectman melissa schlag of haddam should resign immediately. we have received many like that. ainsley: dan said although i don't agree with what schlag did she does have the right to stand or kneel during the pledge of allegiance. the voters will have the right voting her out. that's what's great about this country and this is your country. stand up. brian: just showing off we have another vehicle for you to get in touch with us. it's called email. this is from dave. i find it disrespectful that a public servant on deuteronomy would kneel for the pledge of allegiance exclamation point. she is wrong exclamation point again. nothing wrong with protesting and certainly wrong to protest as a public serve vanity. ainsley: you have the right to do it. that's why these men and women did it on the battlefield. but the flag. it's the national anthem. it's the one thing in our country that unites all of us. brian: this is the pledge. steve: she has been saying she has been doing it to protest donald trump's policies and in particular the putin meeting and then the separation of families. last week a fellow by the name of larry maggi right behind her during the pledge, he said she has been taking down the flags for years. before donald trump was president of the united states might be saying now it's all about donald trump. a while back he wasn't in the equation and she was doing it then. ainsley: don't feel like that's the time to protests during the national anthem. during the pledge of allegiance it's just knot the time. feel like that's a slap in the face to all the people who have died. steve: as you said she has got the right. ainsley: she does. steve: what do you think? continue the conversation. brian: talking about freedom. jillian you were scheduled to do the update. you are free to leave if you want. steve: bad career move. brian: whatever you. jillian: pretty sure my bosses would have a problem with that. ainsley: just like that guy said you are free to do it but they are free to let did you go. jillian: jill i think i will stay right here and do the news. talking about gun violence in chicago is so bad right now the parents are resorting to hiding their children. it comes after a recent shooting at a basketball court that left three children hurt. >> it's time for the police to walk the street like they used. to say the mayor needs to come here, bring the u.s. marshal and let our kids play down the street like they are supposed to and not being shot at. ainsley: activists will hold a march against violence for tomorrow. democratic mayor rahm emanuel is not invited. >> we, the people, are not asking and do not want your backing nor sanctions. the chant of the people is resign rahm. jillian: the city has seen more than 1200 shootings this year. a miracle in mexico all 103 people on board a passenger plane are alive after it crashed just moments after take al-jaafari. investigators say bad weather forced one wing of the arrow mexico jet to hit the ground and quickly burst into flames at the end of the runway in durango. 85 people were injured. including an american priest from chicago. just take a look at this video. it's insane. a parking garage swallows 21 cars when the top level suddenly collapses. watch this. jillian: isn't that crazy? you can see part of the concrete platform had already given way hours earlier when another section crashes down in irving texas outside of dallas. thankfully, nobody was hurt. people had expressed concerns about the structure saying it shook as they drove by. an 18-year-old pizza delivery driver delivering a whole lot more than just pizza. ♪ jillian: that's bryce playing beethoven's moonlight sonata by memory. dropping off a pie to a family outside of detroit noticed baby grand piano and asked if they could play. that must be a very trusting town if you are like sure, just come on in my house, stranger. steve: apparently it was so great, the music, some of the kids who were elsewhere in the house playing video games, they stopped to actually listen to the piano. jillian: it's cool. he is very, very good. it's come on in. ainsley: i noticed she used the word pie to describe the pizza. did i not know what that meant until i moved to new york. a pie is a pizza. in athe south they call it a pizza. steve: when the moon hits your eye like a big pizza pie that's amore. jillian: or in pennsylvania they call it a tray. ainsley: do you know what they call a shopping cart in the south too? a buggy. jillian: look at brian. brian: i didn't see it in the run down nothing about a pizza pie. ainsley: it's not an apple pie it's a pizza pie that's amore. steve: speaking of amore janice has love out on the streets in new york city today. january january no, i don't. nobody is here. i don't know what's going on. steve: why? janice: it's raining. rain in the forecast. i'm confident someone will come and ask me for a hug. take a look at the maps real quick. we do have rain in the forecast across the east coast. here it is across flashing flood warnings across florida and way up northeast. could see the potential for severe storms as well. heavy rainfall in areas that have seen too much rain over the last few weeks. speaking of rain, not enough of it across the west where we have 88 large wildfires. not getting a lot of moisture in these areas, especially along the coast. where is the love? where are my friends? what is going on? back inside. steve: i think you are right. it is a little rainy. so supreme are running to work. janice: i guess. so. steve: thank you, j.d. brian: i have never seen that before by the way. i have never seen her alone. she usually has a posse. steve: not today. it's a little rainy. brian: write us. tell us why you aren't there. steve: meanwhile. 70 illegal immigrants now charged in a brazen jewelry heist all caught on surveillance video. is this another sign that we need tougher border laws, more than ever? we're going to talk about that. ainsley: plus, griff jenkins is having breakfast with friends in florida. we are going to check with him coming up. ♪ trout. alright. you don't think i need both? why does he have that axe? make summer go right with ford, america's best-selling brand. now get 0% financing for 72 months plus $1,000 ford credit bonus cash on a great selection of suvs. during the ford summer sales event, get our best offer of the season: 0% financing for 72 months plus $1,000 ford credit bonus cash. gathered here are the world's finest insurance experts. rodney -- mastermind of discounts like safe driver, paperless. the list goes on. how about a discount for long lists? gold. mara, you save our customers hundreds for switching almost effortlessly. it's a gift. and jamie. -present. -together we are unstoppable. so, what are we gonna do? ♪ insurance. that's kind of what we do here. ♪ ainsley: the feds revealing the suspects in an attempted robbery of a texas jewelry store in the country illegally. seven mexican men arrested in connection with that heist and once the suspects complete their sentences, they will be turned over to the customs and border protection agency. is this a sign that we need our border enforcement agencies like ice more than ever? here with insight former acting director of ice 2008 to 2009 john torres, thanks for being with us. >> good morning, ainsley. >> good morning. is this another sign of why we need ice? >> yeah. in fact, not only is it a sign of why we need more of border protection agents like cvp and ice, but what you see in some of the bigger cities is they are cooperating less with ice. so what that means is you need more ice agents out on the street to arrest people that could have been arrested in the jail and could have been turned over to ice. today they are being released back out to the street and you need agents to go in the community and find them. brian: with althem.brian. ainsley: what's your impression of democrats or what are your feelings when you hear they want to abolish ice? >> i think it's a little bit misguided and misinformed at best and politically motivated at worst. i used to prepare the agents every election year by saying get ready, we're getting into the political crazy season. you're going to hear some pretty tough rhetoric against ice. and what you really need to do is stay focused and enforce the law. defend the constitution and be professional about it. and keep your head down, watch your back and be safe and try ignore all the noise going around. this year it's crazier than ever, it's really really crazy. ainsley: you say they are miss informed. i want to show you video. ice official matthew albence on the hill. he was explaining the laws to democratic senator maizy hirono. she didn't understand the law. she starts to question him and he teaches her a lesson. listen to this. >> will will law only as deemed so by the president. >> they are in those frcs pending the outcome of that civil immigration process. they have broken the law. there were criminal proceedings when the border patrol prosecuted them but at the conclusion of that process, once the individual came into ice custody, they would go through administrative proceedings. >> i'm confused. ainsley: john, she says she's confused. she is saying the law is basically trump's law, which is the no tolerance law he is saying no, no, no, no. they are breaking the law violated under title 8 of the u.s. nationality act is that an example of how many of these individuals that want to abolish ice are misinformed. >> sure. they believe by being here illegally that people have not committed a crime. that these immigrants are here legally and trying to abide by the law other than the fact that they're here illegally. in reality though as matt albence said though yesterday, when you cross the border or you are present here without. it's a violation of title 8 of the united states code section 1325. it's a misdemeanor. multiple -- if you read it multiple times you can be also convicted of reentry after deportation, which is a felony. ainsley: okay. thank you so much mr. torres. great to see you. >> thank you. ainsley: you're welcome. democrats always say there is no such thing as voter fraud. but we just found out how easy it is for non-citizens to register to vote. plus, griff jenkins is having breakfast with friends down in the great state of florida. we're going to check in with him coming up next. ♪ ♪ feel the clarity. and live claritin clear. where we're changing withs? contemporary make-overs. then, use the ultimate power handshake, the upper hander with a double palm grab. who has the upper hand now? start winning today. book now at lq.com. ainsley: we should ask them. let's go down to florida. our fox news correspondent griff jenkins is talking to them live at march that's family restaurant and diner in seffner, florida. hey, griff. griff: hey, guys, good morning. it's a reason they call it martha's family restaurant. some of the staff joelle married to jason. she works here. he works security. they took their child and saw the president. what do you want the president to work on. >> thus far is he doing a great job, i think. i support him as does my family. the border, i think the border is the most important issue for them to be working on right now, securing our nation is pretty important to me and my family. griff: jason, the president talked about building the wall and how he's to do whatever it takes to do it. how do you feel? do you think that's a priority to build this wall? >> whatever it takes to get it done. the security of our nation is important. without our nation secure, i mean, we're in trouble. i mean, your house has to be secure. business has to be secure. why not our nation? griff: joelle let me ask you. your husband is in her having breakfast you work here. how did i roll the napkin. >> did you a good job. you got the zoom down. griff: have you three children. how is he doing for your family and how is he doing as president. >> we are doing better. the economy is doing better. i would like to see, like my husband said the borders tighten up a little bit and not allowing people in our country that don't belong here, terrorists, drug dealers and all that. it's just not good for us. we're america. we need to be america. >> legal immigrants, fine. i wouldn't be here without that most of us. griff: all right. as promised, i'm trying to talk to wizard brown, i'm not sure he is a political. wizard, would you talk to me? >> i'm thinking about it but since brian asked, i guess i will do it. griff: all right, listen, you built all that steel in here. stainless steel and five years ago, you told me you sold equipment to save your house; is that right? >> yes, i did. griff: and now, how is your business now? >> it's thriving and i have got more work that i have been turning some down there is so much going on right now. griff: apolitical guy but so far this administration has been good for you have financially. >> yes, i'm surviving. griff: well, i'm trying to also make sure in case i lose my job with you guys well joelle might give me a job here at martha's diner voted the best diner in seffner two years ago. steve: griff, thank you very much. brian: 8 years since he died today brian terry's killer will face a judge for the first time. will his family finally get the justice they deserve. steve: michelle malkin is going to join us live. we have a busy "fox & friends" for this wednesday. stick around, folks. ♪ ♪ in a study with ozempic®, a majority of adults lowered their blood sugar and reached an a1c of less than seven and maintained it. oh! under seven? 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(burke) abstract accident. seen it. covered it.ce music) we know a thing or two because we've seen a thing or two. ♪ we are farmers. bum-pa-dum, bum-bum-bum-bum ♪ new laptop with 24/7 tech support. yep, thanks guys. i think he might need some support. yes start them off right. with the school supplies they need at low prices all summer long. save $200 on this dell laptop at office depot officemax. ♪ >> the u.s. economy grew at 4.1% last quarter. we want maximum border security and respect for our heroes. ♪ steve: somber ceremony in south korea for the repatriation of 55 american servicemembers killed during the korean war. >> our country is little better having these soldiers and troops back on american soil. >> former trump campaign chairman paul manafort over alleged tax evasion and money laundering. >> his crime is being associated with donald trump. >> the local official who started a firestorm kneeling for the pledge of allegiance before a meeting is at it again. >> their disdain for this president is greater than love for this country. why is patriot itch is something not all americans believe in. >> i will leave now because i am boring you to death. thank you. [laughter]. ainsley: good morning. we begin with a fox news alert. the remains of american servicemembers killed in the korean war now on their way to hawaii after a somber ceremony in south korea. [playing of taps] steve: the remain of an unclear number of heroes. a military dog tag handed over to the united states by north korea. brian: they land in hawaii for days of forensic testing. could take years. there are no proof they are not necessarily all american remains. they could be international remains. as happened other types in tradeoffs like this, there may be animal bones in the mix. no one is committed for anything. one thing for sure we did not pay. past years they wanted money or trade for this. this was not requested forgiven. stuart: right. steve: we know 55 small coffins handed over. as you can see they had the united nations flag on them. they are being flown to hickam air force base not far from where our own pete hegseth is. pete flew with the vice president of the united states yesterday on air force one from new york. pete, you made a stop in california you didn't know about. reporter: that's right. we made a stop in california on our way to hawaii at travis air force base and we picked up two individuals who will be there do for the ceremony happening 2:00 local time who have a direct connection. it was powerful to meet them. you could see the vice president affected by their very presence. one was a 4-year-old girl when her father left for the korean war. another a 3-year-old boy. both said good-bye to their young father. both first lieutenant, one to be a pilot, one part of a aircraft crew. neither of their fathers ever came back. for 60 years, her name is diane, his name is rick, they have been wondering where their father is, where his remains will be and if the government remains committed to do everything they can to bring him home. they both traveled with the vice president. we'll get a chance to talk to the vice president today about it, but you can feel the gravity, feel it on the plane. i know we'll feel it tomorrow because this ceremony demonstrates the commitment our country has to bringing every single person home, if they're not just number, not just boxes, these are young men that left everything behind. in their case a 3, 4-year-old daughter, 3-year-old boy. there are many other americans whose mother and fathers left for korea. i get chills seeing video there. i can't imagine what it will feel like today to welcome these boys home. steve: pete, because the bones have not been analyzed using dna, i just got an email from somebody, apparently people across the country are taking part in the korean war project, you can submit a dna sample. you can do that state by state. because the bones have not been eye feed do you think the two people picked up in california are related to one set of dog tags being returned? >> they don't know honestly. they would admit that but what they also, both of them are committed not just to finding out where their own father was but helping and working, networking with other families of korean war vets. to make sure our government never forgets them. these are often forgotten men and women and forgotten families. they said even remains of other families, never just the same as your family means a ton to them. being a part of the symbolism to this is part of welcoming home these forgotten men and women, remember, for 50, 60, 70 years, were in a forest, hillside, riverbed, valley, covered in snow or south of north korea, largely forgotten, until part of geopolitical back and forth, in exchange for no money, as part of an outreach their remains are being brought back. hopefully we get a chance to talk to both of them today. we get a chance to talk with the vice president, and his general comments, when we talked to him privately yesterday, don't downplay the significance of this. this is significant symbol from the north koreans they're trying to work in good faith in the larger and bigger push about the denuclearization of the peninsula. brian: brings back to highlight what that war was, it was so brutal. we had to fight our way on to the peninsula. push the north koreans back beyond the 38th parallel, to the point where chinese come flooding in. they lose hundreds of thousands. we lose 33,000. we have 20 nations fighting with us. because it ends without a definite winner or loser, even though north korea was forced back, no one really talks about the war. for people that fought in it, they knew what it took to be successful in this war. >> it was the first salvo of the cold war, after having fought world war ii, that generation was hoping an era of peace was upon us. with the red menace and the soviet union they threw down the gauntlet in korea, we did as well. a military largely unprepared. a lot of casualties on all sides. some families admit their remains of servicemembers could be in china or russia or camps where americans were brought as well. should never be forgotten. for my generation, if there were men left in iraq and afghanistan, we had a chance to bring them back 50 or 60 years later i would welcome them home the same way today i would, that day i would if they came home with us. vice president mike pence said it really well. he said his father served in the korean war as combat veteran. real heroes are the twice that never came back. that is utterance of warriors from every single generation. today these boys come home. i say, welcome home, boys. and america can't wait. ainsley: they took their last breath on foreign soil, but did that for america. they deserve to be back here on american soil finally so they can rest in peace. brian: mcarthur wanted to drop the atomic bomb on red china. steve: this so important. you will see the service ceremony later this afternoon live from hawaii. ainsley: thank you, pete. thanks for going to cover this. brian: meanwhile in florida last night the president did bring up north korea a little bit. says they're making progress but of course we do know those reports that they have not stopped building up their nuclear program and pictures reveal that is indeed the case but the president brought up a lot of things but most of all he was there to bolster the opportunity for ron desantis to become the next governor, get the republican nomination first. for rick scott, a popular governor, two-term governor who wantings to unseat bill nelson who has been there for an eternity, that would be a upset get the republicans closer to 60. steve: one of the things about a trump rally, this is the 60th one he had in florida, out at the state fairgrounds. like all the rallies there is script going in, then he goes off the script. it is wide-ranging and last night did not disappoint the people waiting for that. listen. >> the u.s. economy grew at 4.1% last quarter. [cheers and applause] we're in the longest positive job growth streak in history. democrats want to raise your taxes. they want to destroy your jobs. democrats want open borders, which equals massive crime. [booing] we want maximum border security and respect for our heroes. i.c.e., border patrol, and law enforcement. we're going to have tremendous border security that will include the wall. look at judge kavanaugh. so far the democrats haven't given us any votes and that is because they will do anything they can to not help the trump agenda. under previous administrations we never won. we got used to never winning. the economy is too good. the jobs are too strong. we're doing too well. it is, he is not acting presidential. anybody can act presidential. you are tremendous people. [cheering] i will leave now because i am boring you to death. thank you. [laughter]. steve: there you have got him being a typical president. meanwhile griff jenkins who this morning is at a diner. last night he was in the crowd. what did they think? here is his report. >> continue focusing on what he has been doing, the economy, the economy, the economy. everything else will fix itself. this is the man. he keeps his promise. there has never been another president like him. there will never be another one. >> i'm a small business owner. my business has tripled since the tax cut. >> i like continued efforts with the veterans and our farmers. and his, but what i like most is what he is doing in the foreign countries now. steve: amazing two sound bites ago, since tax cuts that guy's business has tripled. show you the impact. ainsley: president said it last night. a lot of people come in the oval office. a lot of people don't agree with me. they always say same thing, thank you for what you're doing with the economy. brian: president campaigns, six, seven times a week. the house, a lot of seats in jeopardy, he might be only one able to keep the house at this point. steve: he will be busy. started last night. 8:11 in studio. jillian has headlines. jillian: sad news. thousands expected to honor a fallen officer and father killed in the line the duty saying their final good-byes to milwaukee police officer, michael murkowski, the 1yearly veteran of the force was shot and killed trying to arrest a suspect wanted on drug and offenses. he leaves behind a wife and three sons. there is growing threat to the united states. it might not be what you think. >> serious capabilities online are simply outpacing our stovepipe defenses. in fact i believe cyber threats collectively now exceed the danger of physical attacks against us. this has forced us to rethink homeland security. jillian: homeland security secretary kirstjen nielsen speaking at a cybersecurity summit in new york her talk talked about recent russian meddling in the previous election. republicans are running to fill the seat left open by retiring jeff flake. kelly ward who tried unseating john mccain two years ago. surprised with a brand new truck. >> it has been an who are no. i want to say from the bottom of my heart, i love you, i thank you. and enjoy your new truck. >> what? jillian: isn't that incredible. the truck bringing stuntman reed to tears. he just returned to the set after injury. the look-alikes have looked together for 17 years. obviously a good friendship there. how great is that? steve: driving away with a dream. that's great. brian: i was wondering why i wasn't the stunt double with the rock. i saw how muscular that guy was. steve: you have to look muscular. ainsley: flex for us. let's see. brian: i wish i could. we have to go to commercial. steve: the media are freaking out over paul manafort's trial. the judge has to remind everybody, the case is not about president trump. don't talk about it. brian: want to smoke pot, want to smoke pot in public? no problem. you won't get arrested in the big city anymore. is that really good idea? think about that in commercial. >> tech: at safelite autoglass, we really pride ourselves on making it easy for you to get your windshield fixed. >> teacher: let's turn in your science papers. >> tech vo: this teacher always puts her students first. >> student: i did mine on volcanoes. >> teacher: you did?! oh, i can't wait to read it. >> tech vo: so when she had auto glass damage... she chose safelite. with safelite, she could see exactly when we'd be there. >> teacher: you must be pascal. >> tech: yes ma'am. >> tech vo: saving her time... [honk, honk] >> kids: bye! >> tech vo: ...so she can save the science project. >> kids: whoa! >> kids vo: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace ♪ whoooo. you rely on tripadvisor so you don't miss out on the perfect hotel... but did you know you can also use tripadvisor so you don't miss out on the best price? tripadvisor searches over 200 booking sites to find the hotel you want for the lowest price. saving you up to 30%! so you can spend less time missing out... and more time paddling out! tripadvisor. visit tripadvisor.com or download the app! ♪ steve: just got a note from our producer down in washington, d.c., paul manafort is inside the court for day two. yesterday there was a reason they referred judge t.s. ellis's court as the rocket docket because they were able to seat a jury before noon. they started taking off with opening statements. brian: in opening statements something unprecedented many people think happened. that is the government's case was being read out and they were talking about everything that paul manafort owned and had in his -- he goes it is not a crime to have money. to have a lot of money. which by the way is true. ainsley: well he bought expensive watches, expensive cars. paid cash for his brownstone, $3 million. they're trying to find out if he got money from the ukraine president and did not pay taxes on it. said has nothing to do with president trump. they said it is not a crime to have money. they want to make sure he paid taxes. steve: he has been charged last year by special counsel robert mueller with bank fraud and tax evasion as well. but because he was, for a period of time donald trump's campaign manager, the media are making a big deal out of this. listen to this. >> the case against manafort is also the first high-profile test of special counsel robert mueller. >> if, for example, mr. manafort is found guilty, that makes it a real problem for the president of the united states. >> we're going to learn the nitty-gritty details about paul manafort's financial situation. >> a jury has been seated in u.s. versus paul manafort. >> did you see what color tie paul manafort is wearing? we did not either because he sat with his back to us. steve: the alleged crimes happened years before he worked with donald trump. according to abc news, witnesses are told, whatever you do, don't mention donald trump. ainsley: right. brian: here is the quote from judge t.s. ellis who seemed dubious about the case to begin with. you don't really care about mr. manafort's bank fraud. he said they willer. you care about what information mr. manafort can give you that would reflect on mr. trump, which will lead to the prosecution or impeachment or whatever. steve: that is him talking to the prosecution, the mueller team. brian: he thought about it more, he gets his day in court, this case, got another case coming up against him. ainsley: day two, we'll follow this. steve: what do you think about that? let us know. friends at foxnews.com. brian: congress is battling over food stamp requirements and passing a required farm bill and running out of time to get it passed. congressman dave brat has a message for his colleagues. he is up next. ainsley: mexico's murder rage is surging as president trump fights for funding for a wall. is this proof we need tougher immigration laws? michelle malkin coming up on that. precision machinery and high-quality materials from around the world. nobody else even comes close. it's about delivering a more comfortable shave every time. invented in boston, made and sold around the world. order now at gilletteondemand.com. gillette. the best a man can get. allowing medical marijuana. nine have legalized its recreational use. new york is not one of the recreational use state. brian. brian: congressional committee working to resolve the differences between the house and senate versions of the farm bill. the big difference, in conference, work requirement the for single adults on the food stamp program. the house much stricter. our next guest says republicans must stand up for fiscal responsibility and dignity that cops with work. joining us is virginia congressman dave brat. congressman, so you guys got to work this out. what exactly is the work requirement as the house sees it when it comes to food stamp recipients? >> yeah, it is important no cuts, whatsoever. just able-bodied folks. we want them in the labor force so we incentivize it. they have to find work or 20 hours of getting ready for work preparation, education, technical skills, et cetera but right thing to do fiscally. saves $20 billion. it is right thing to do morally. a great jewish philosopher said highest of virtue is helping someone find jobs. the goal is not to keep people on government dependency. to keep them in the thriving economy. they have 4.1 gdp growth, the economy is booming. 40 million american citizens are not in the labor force. that is the next step. don't go the cheap labor crowd. go this way. to my senate colleagues it 83% popular. you don't get a home run like that. paul ryan is great on the public policy. it's a win-win. getting them out of the welfare trap, into the growing economy where wages go up. it is great for the family structure. solves a lot of other issues we're fighting back home. opioids and trafficking, mental health issues, gives people in the labor force, it gift them dignity, it is positive. we need to teach our kids work is a great thing. it's a win-win all around. brian: cbo says the house bill would cut snap benefits by 20 billion. do you argue with that? >> it is the wrong term. sometimes it get the too political. it will save us 20 billion as we get people out of welfare into the workforce. not only save us 20 billion, they will be contributing to gdp, paying tax, taking care of families, going up the wage ladder over time. so that's the win. that is the problem with d.c. accounting. i did a phd in economics. they miss the dynamics what will happen as a result of this, that is good for the american family. helps us keep promises to constituents we will trim spending, not increase government at the federal level at every turn. brian: right. good point too, you're trying to do the same thing with welfare. over last few years, food stamp recipient numbers gone down at 201,545,000,000, all the way now down to looking at 39,064,000. it is trending in the right direction, you want to make sure republicans don't lose their way in conference. when do you think we'll know? >> we're looking for any word from the senate, they tip their hat on this. we tried to get obama care fixes to lower premiums for people out there. we tried to get a budget. it is not all republican -- we needed nine senate democrats votes on the budget. to get their votes they plussed up the budget by $400 billion. the people back home don't know that we need nine senate democrats to go along with this. that makes it tough. this is the right thing to do for people. to my democrat colleagues, they ban the same thing of the they want good outcomes for these folks. get together, compromise, have a great bill. brian: somewhere, somehow, some politician has to cut spending. i don't know who is going to do it. congressman, thanks so much. >> thanks, brian. brian: two minutes before the bottom of the hour. it has been eight years since he died. today brian terry's accused killer will face a judge for the first time. will his family finally get the justice they deserve? michelle malkin weighs in. you know about washington crossing the delaware but have you seen this? trump crossing the swamp. your comments coming through. ♪ at bayer, our roots run deep. so chances are, you've seen us around the house. or... around the yard. on the shelf... or even... out in the field. your mom knew she could always count on us... and your grandma did too. because for over 150 years, we've been right by your side. advancing the health of the people, plants and pets you love. so, from all of us at bayer... thank you for trusting in us. then... and now. border security that will include the wall. that will include the wall. [cheering] brian: does republicans want to give him that? i think some republicans are against the wall as some democrats are. steve: appears that way. let's talk to michelle malkin covering immigration, since she wrote the book called invasion years ago. host of michelle malkin investigates from crtv. joins us from the beautiful state of colorado. michelle, what do you make of the president and his pitch for border security? sounded yesterday, the day before might actually shut down the government to get the wall. but then we hear, mitch, paul, they cut a deal. if they do shut down the government, that wouldn't happen until after the election? >> well it should be front and center before the midterms and i am glad that president trump is continuing to draw the line and throw doesn't gauntlet in front of these gop establishment types. border security is a commitment that doesn't have an expiration date. it is a constitutional duty. it is a prerogative, it is imperative that never ends, and president trump cited the high, skyrocketing murder rates in mexico. look at the mexican government's response. they don't want him to talk about it, even though it was front and center as a central issue in the recent mexican elections. this is not just a single issue. you will hear the media and the never-trumpers and the open borders faction, lobbyists on both the left and right say, why is he so obsessed with this single issue. it is not just a single issue. it is every issue. it affects our national security, our public safety, our health care, our welfare and our economy and it's a humanitarian crisis. not that we just don't want the chaos and anarchy crossing the border, it is a humanitarian crisis for mexico as well. as long as we have open border we'ren i believing that on their side too. brian: heroin and fentanyl, exactly coming from our southern border, but, michelle, he got 1.6 billion to start on it, they're making progress. five billion in september to get more. 5 billion will keep you busy another four, five, six months. i could see gradually do it. i don't understand why speaker ryan make sure it's in? >> that's right, brian. and look, tell you what, the american people are sick and tired of having these little parsing down paints on the fundamental duty of our government. why is it that the beltway establishment types who answer more to corporate special interests than they do to ordinary citizenss especially the people on the border? the ranchers, the property owners, families who have been waging this war on their own have been abandoned? why is it always we'll give you a little bit here, a little bit there, why don't you just wait, wait? no more waiting anymore. i hope when president trump threatens to shut down this government he is willing, able and ready to do it. ainsley: michelle, brian terry, the border agent killed connected with "fast & furious," his alleged killer will be in court. he was just extradited back from mexico. there is a picture of brian terry. his brother is trying to get the documents in his brother's case released. his name is kent perry. he says my family continues to take emotional beating over not having answers, override sessions, release the documents. you are the president. that is a message from the president. what are your thoughts? >> i would like a amplify everything that kent terry said. i've been covering the day every day since it was reported it was far too long for the terry family to get accountability they deserve. there is no excuse for not releasing those documents which were promised to them back in march. the kent terry, who i communicated with this morning reminds us they were told in march, it would only be 30, 60 days, get documents they have been in litigation for half dozen years to be released. they are not the only ones. i want to remind people, victor a villa, and family of jaime zapate, worked for homeland security, ambushed on the southern border have been stonewalled by the justice department under the obama administration. they are also fighting for documents they're asking the trump administration to release. and, terry has eric holder, going on the stephen colbert show to announce he is thinking about running for president when he was the very one who was held in contempt over these "fast & furious" issues? that is the biggest joke of all. brian: he wants to be on somebody's ticket at very least. steve: michelle, the whole thing about the department of justice with holding these documents, looks like so many other things we've been hearing about. they're trying to cya over something that happen ad while ago but you would think this new president, who was not presiding over the nation during the time of "fast & furious" would say, you know what? the country has a right to know what happened? >> kent terry this morning was tweeting at president trump, asking him, begging him for help. and these are the forgotten men and women and families who were railroaded under the obama administration, now begging for answers. it is unacceptable. brian: you can change it. he can change it today. thanks, michelle. ainsley: jillian has more headlines for us. she is over there. jillian: get you caught up on some news we're following starting with this story. principle 3d gun blueprint set to go online put on hold. a judge blocked it a day after eight states sued. they wanted to block a settlement between the company and the state department that would have made the plans abs sessable today. the company is vowing to fight. >> i believe i am championing the second amendment in the 21st century. i think access to the firearm is a fundamental human dignity. it is fundamental human right. jillian: critics are concerned the plans could help put weapons in the hands of criminals. a driver slam as car right through a store and pinning a employee underneath. shoppers are steps away and the car plows through the shop in are charlotte, north carolina. a customer rushes to his rescue, pulling him out. he is expected to be okay. the driver thought the car was in reverse. she is not facing charges. alarming trend of non-citizens getting to vote. immigrants are showing up on voter rolls throughout the country. a non-profit watchdog group found 5hundred non-citizens were registered in virginia alone last year. they say non-citizens often get registered by signing petitions and many election officials are not verifying their status. one of the president trump's favorite sayings. >> we are going to washington, d.c., and we are going to drain the swamp. jillian: that's the inspiration behind a new painting. you see it right there, called, crossing the swamp. it is a riff on the classic painting, washington crossing the delaware. instead of george washington and his crew, you can see the president and his administration in washington, d.c. your emails on this one have been pouring in. dave writes, love it, but can we actually drain it? i sure hope so. mary says best painting i've seen in a very long time. captures a huge meaning with humor. love a copy. i love the painting of trump crossing the delaware draining the swamp. he is like george washington in my mind,. steve: washington is the swamp and the other paint something washington crossing the delaware. brian: there should be a plug there. absolutely a little roto-rooter jill instead an anchor, a drain. steve: weather anchor janice dean was out on the street. an hour ago, nobody to be seen. this hour -- >> did you you come to give me a hug? group hug, everybody. yea. good, good. that's all. let's take a look at the maps. here in new york city, we have rain in the forecast. we still have rain this afternoon. we could see potential for stronger storms. keep that in mind, we could have watch or warning in new york city area outside of the new york city area. we have a lot of rain coming in from the gulf of mexico. keep that in mind this week. the potential of flash flooding exists from florida all the way up through the northeast. this is the ongoing story unfortunately for the last couple weeks. out west, still very warm. we have over 80 wildfires burning. so the good news we have a little bit of relief next week in terms of temperatures. wave, everybody. look at my friends that came to see me today for fox and friends. we love. we love you. free hugs. yes, yes. ainsley: tell them we said hey. steve: visiting new york city during the summer, stop by 48th and 6th avenue. see janice. brian: she will hug you. ainsley: it has been six months since the tragedy down in florida, park land high school, the county is taking steps to protect students before school starts this month. dozens of trained, armed guards will patrol the hallways. steve: griff jenkins is down with voters in florida. he will serve breakfast. brian: he is full time and doing everything. ♪ your insurance company is gonna raise your rate after the other car got a scratch so small you coulda fixed it with a pen. maybe you should take that pen and use it to sign up with a different insurance company. for drivers with accident forgiveness liberty mutual won't raise their rates because of their first accident. liberty mutual insurance. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty ♪ ito take care of anyct messy situations.. and put irritation in its place. and if i can get comfortable keeping this tookus safe and protected... you can get comfortable doing the same with yours. preparation h. get comfortable with it. new laptop with 24/7 tech support. yep, thanks guys. i think he might need some support. yes start them off right. with the school supplies they need at low prices all summer long. save $200 on this dell laptop at office depot officemax. >> good morning to you, welcome back. time for quick headlines. athink he haves in wisconsin want to stop people from praying hundreds of miles away. they are suing the parkersburg city concerns sill opening meetings with the lord's prayer. they claim it violates the first amendment. the city council says the prayer happens before the actual meeting and is voluntary. banning prayer and banning ads, d.c. metro can keep religious things off the platforms thanks to court ruling. washington diocese sued after they were denied posting this christmas ad in 2016. ainsley? ainsley: progress towards securing our schools taking place. polk county school safety guardians were sworn in after undergoing 144 hours of intense training. they are part of the security plan when school begins this month. polk county sheriff grady judd joins us this morning. thanks for being with us. >> good morning ainsley. my honor to be with. >> great to see you. tell us about the program and how it will protect the students. >> i am. trained guardians. 144 hours of training. only 13% of the people that apply made it through the program? that is how tough it really is. and we're going to make these schools even safer. and this is only the last, best, chance to protect our children in the event the active shooter makes it through all of our other layers of security. ainsley: so what exactly is the difference? what will they be doing? >> what they will be doing, wearing a uniform. they will be armed with a firearm. their job is to interact with the children during school. if they see something, hear something, they say something. their job is to make sure that the school is secure, and to be there if the horrible, evil event occurs where an active shooter shows up on the campus. with a firearm to hurt our children, they are to run to them and shoot them graveyard dead, period. ainsley: was there any opposition to this? >> not in our community. and we find that the support is growing across the state and nation. there is always a few naysayers that don't want guns. they don't want this, they don't want that, but you know, not one of them has a better idea. until they do, they just need to sit down and be quiet. if they have a better idea, we're all ears. ainsley: we heard so many different stories after the shooting and it was one story in particular that stands out. the coach that was blocking other children from getting killed, he lost his life as a result. his name was aaron feis. i understand the program is named after him? >> yes, in the state of florida we passed a law and said that you will have armed, well-trained security, either a law enforcement officer or a trained guardian on every public school campus in this state when school begins on august 13th. ainsley: that's great. >> we named the program after him. ainsley: that's great. sheriff, thank you for being with us. god bless you. >> y'all have a great day. ainsley: you too. griff jenkins having breakfast with friends in the great state of florida. we'll go back back down to tanko him. first sandra smith with what is coming up on her show next hour. >> a bombshell we're following from facebook. it uncovers sophisticated efforts to disrupt our elections. fresh reaction from the senate intelligence committee in moments. 65 years later north korea returns the 65 remains of possible american servicemen from korea. latest in florida from the gubernatorial race when adam putnam joins us live next hour. newt gingrich is the headliner next morning. america's a-team is on deck. join us live at the top of the hour. when did you see the sign? when i needed to jumpstart sales. build attendance for an event. help people find their way. fastsigns designed new directional signage. and got them back on track. get started at fastsigns.com. and got them back on track. booking a flight doesn't have to be expensive. just go to priceline. it's the best place to book a flight a few days before my trip and still save up to 40%. just tap and go... for the best savings on flights, go to priceline. really impressed you? >> part of the thing that impressed me was just doing, bringing home those soldiers from korea. nobody has ever done that before. i'm a vietnam veteran. nobody ever made that effort before. >> now in fairness, there was done in previous years, but wasn't done for about the last 10 or 11 years, certainly not to this scale, but larger than that seems we're opening up dialogue with kim jong-un. that certainly has never happened, the sit-down, does that impress you? >> absolutely. absolutely impressed with that. >> betty, let me ask you, you, the president went down your street. what did you think of him yesterday, how do you think he is doing? >> i think he is doing great. we need a businessman in the office. he knows how to run things. >> what matters most to you? what do you want the president to focus on now? what should be the priority? >> well, making sure everybody gets a job, that wants one and keeping us safe. and build that wall. >> build that wall. you put it in there at the last second. does that mean you want him to push it hard? he is threatening might even shut the government down. do you want him to do whatever it takes? >> i don't think he will shut the government down. that is not how you run a business. i think he will do what we want him to do. and he has a big fight on his hands from the other side. you know. >> you mentioned business. lou is with us. you started in the mid 90s, a braille company here. how has this administration affected your business? >> we started in 1994 braille works international. if we ran braille works like the government typically runs we would have been out of business by 1996. we've gone from my wife and me, joyce and me, running company in 1994, to 160 employees. >> 160? >> yes. in 2018. 24 years in. that is where we are. >> president trump is good for your business? >> food to see somebody run the country like we run a business. yes he has with the tax cuts and other things he has been doing for business. most definitely a big asset. >> guys, so that is what is happening down here in seffner. was the president's first visit since becoming president. the community here, many small businessmen, feel the economy is doing well. many of them like betty, want that wall built. meanwhile, i'm sorry. one more second. >> sanctity of life. i'm very happy he is against abortion. >> sanctity of life. big thing here. meanwhile i got to get back to the newly-named griff jenkins waffles and sprinkles. back to you guys. steve: that looks delicious. brian: nice. steve: griff, well-done. we're stepping aside. two minutes so griff can finish breakfast. this is not a bed. ♪ let your perfect drive come together at the lincoln summer invitation sales event. get 0% apr on select 2018 lincoln models plus $1,000 bonus cash. omar, check this out. uh, yeah, i was calling to see if you do laser hair removal. for men. notice that my hips are off the ground. [ engine revving ] and then, i'm gonna pike my hips back into downward dog. [ rhythmic tapping ] hey, the rain stopped. -a bad day on the road still beats a good one off it. -tell me about that dental procedure again! -i can still taste it in my mouth! -progressive helps keep you out there. -i can still taste it in my mouth! when heartburn hits... fight back fast with tums smoothies. it neutralizes stomach acid at the source. tum tum tum tum tums... smoothies... ...and introducing new tums sugar-free. >> fox news alert. want to show you brand-new video of american planes carrying possible remains of

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Transcripts For MSNBCW Your Business 20181125 12:30:00

this is staying connected with xfinity to make moving... simple. easy. awesome. stay connected while you move with the best wifi experience and two-hour appointment windows. click, call or visit a store today. good morning. coming up on your business. clothing rentals. christine, founder of begin i b finds out that's how we'll fill our closets. terry crews adds business startup to his lineup. if you've used a public bathroom and the door wouldn't close, you want to see the elevator pitch. will our shopify judges give it guy? we have information to run your business. that's all coming up next on your business. msnbc your business is sponsored by american express. don't do business without it. hi there everyone. i'm jj ramberg and welcome to your business. the show dedicated to helping your growing companies. christine hunsaker is one impressive ceo. she had a big idea to use data, k technology to apply it to any business. didn't matter to her what business. that led her to the retail industry. a space that a lot of people aren't clamoring to get into these days. undeterred. she launched a clothing rental company in 2011 and used it as a case study for her bigger company castle changing the face of clothing rental and making it a turnkey service for all. >> when christine hunsaker talks about the genesis of her clothing rental company, gwynnie bee. you hardly hear the word fashion. in spite of her product, her passion is not clothing. >> my nerdy thing are marketplaces and economic models. i get excited about that. not so much whatever industry you apply that to. >> after 17 years in technology and data startup, christine wanted to do something ambitious. as for the criteria, she was product agnostic. >> we came up with three core principles, long lasting institution, use data technology to disrupt and positively impact the end lives of customers. >> where she landed was retail. an industry in turmoil ripe for a new revenue model. her thought? we rent so many other things, cars from uber, rooms through airbnb, why not clothing? >> when you launched this company, you said you can rent your clothes. what was the response? >> crickets were chirping. >> this wasn't a surprise. christine knew she'd have to educate the consumer. that's why gwynnie bee existed. this company which she put millions of dollars into was a proof of concept. >> the first pitch step has a platform. it's going to take us a little while to get there. we will eventually get there sniept the platform is castle. it now takes up the bulk of christine's 400-plus person company. castle is a service that allows any retailer to enter into the new economy for apparel. it's the technology, the logistics, the front end consumer experience and even the customer service that allows any retailer to quickly offer a rental service to their consumers. >> i have my own clothing line, jj's clothing. i use your service and now i'm renting it out easily. >> you'll have jj's rental.com or whatever fancier name you come up with. >> you don't like that name. >> jj's stale box. >> maybe my brand wouldn't work but there are big names that thil they can. >> christine signed up ann taylor, new york and company and express. jim hill is the chief customer experience officer of express. >> the rental model actually makes a lot of sense for a fairly large number of consumers, for them to try new styles, look at new trends that they might want to explore. rental for us has been something we've been looking at for a while and we're excited to launch it. >> christine thinks she'll launch 6 to 12 brands on the platform pretty soon. this is the realization of the dream she set out to accomplish when she launched gwynnie bee. which begs the question, why did she go through the trouble to create her own consumer brand when really she wanted to be the back end for others? >> it's incredibly expensive to build out this service. you have to understand what -- you have to figure out what matters from a metrics perspective. we made a lot of mistakes, but we did that on our dime with our consumers and our inventory. >> she thinks if she went to the retailers off the bat -- >> we would have been laughed out of the room. >> by the time she pitched them, she had seven years of running gwynnie bee under her belt and came with piles and piles of data. >> all the product, the warehouse, the customers, it's all part of the platform, part of castle. gwynnie bee is a tenant as express or new york and company or ann taylor. >> i think of myself as a consumer. i will buy anything that sequined in hot pink. but only going to wear it once. >> i think the average woman wears 20% of her wardrobe in a given year. >> she had made her mistakes, as she said, on her own dime. >> at one point early on, we realized that the clothing wasn't coming back from an external cleaner quickly enough and we visited the cleaner and all of our clothes were stacked up in a corner from floor to kriel. >> when your head of logistics called you and said there's a kofrn full of gwynnie bee clothing dirty, piled up here, what was your reaction? >> i don't think i'm allowed to curse. my initial reaction is, this is ridiculo ridiculous. >> now that she had big brands on board, she's collecting new data which will help her answer the biggest question she gets from potential partners. >> how does this not cannibalize the customers coming into the stores and buying things. >> necessity buy differently than they rent. this is not a replacement for ownership. this is a complement to ownership. >> i'm buying black pants and i see this amazing big flowered shirt that i want to buy but don't want to spend money on it. now i'll rent that. >> yes. what the brands are seeing is that people are spending not only more time engaging in the brands but a significant amount of more money with the rent. >> christine and her partners have been quiet about castle. they wanted to make sure everything worked. with express, the launch was big. >> christine hunsaker says her platform helps retailers attract new customers and increase their spending. christine joins us now. >> after seven years, you feel like we're ready. we don't need to keep it quiet anymore. >> we can now start talking. america's got terry crews. that's what the brooklyn 99 star said when he was named the newest host for the hit nbc show, "america's got talent." what many of the former nfl players loyal fans might be surprised to learn is that terry was gifted with the ability to draw from a very early age. he has spent a lifetime hoping for a chance for his innate talent to truly shine. well, a few years ago, that opportunity came. terry became a buzzed about furniture designer almost overnight. >> take one look at the life of television star terry crews. >> hey! >> and you will see he is living proof that dreams really can come true. actor, nfl player, artist. the brooklyn 99 star pursued multiple careers throughout his lifetime all with passion and ambition. >> two years ago terry added yet another somewhat unexpected title to his resume. furniture designer. >> when someone comes up to you and says i love your furniture, what do you think? >> let me tell you, that's probably one of the best compliments i could ever get. when the furniture line came out, it was my version of a $200 million movie. you know what i mean? because it was a release. there were people who viewed it. i sat back, like, do they like it? and the reaction. people are like, this sofa, this chair, these tables and it really hit me. >> terry's passion for art started at a very early age. after graduating high school he received an art scholarship. but soon after that, the world of football lured him in. in 1991, the los angeles rams drafted terry and for the next six years he played for a handful of nfl teams. but his creative fire was always burning. >> when i would get cut from an nfl team, i would go back in the locker room and ask the players if they wanted their portraits painted. i would say look, man, i am going to do you over the city. you are going to be a giant. you're going to look amazing. they were like, man, how much is that? >> i'm like sign right here. >> you get cut from an nfl team. you go back into the locker room to all of your old teammates and say let me paint you now. >> that's right. >> it's humbling. you had to really eat crow. what i learned is that's the ego that gets in the way. your own pride is your own problem. >> when his football career ended, terry headed to the west coast with his ayes set on hollywood and for nearly two decades, he has entertained audience ws his flair for humor and undeniable talent. >> in 2014, terry crossed paths with jerry helg at the helm of a modern murn tur company. >> he said i know you're an artist. i did research on you. he said i'm interested in what you can do. i was like, me? you're kidding? my design, my sketches? >> you're free from expectations, right? >> my thoughts were i'll show him everything. if it sucks, he'll say thank you very much. it doesn't work out. but oh, my god, he was like, this doesn't work, this works. i'm like, that works? he's like this works. >> terry's first furniture collection launched in 2016. a big success for bernhardt. >> he's a dreamer and doesn't understand the word stop, no. he finds a way. >> wood around the back, man. >> he has an incredible sense of scale and proportion. he knows how to make beautiful lines and beautiful shapes. >> collection number two launched this year. >> this is the key. being a good businessman or a good artist, it's about knowing how to market. a lot of artists don't know how to sell. it's one thing to be an amazing artist. but you have to be a great salesman. >> when you think of business, you think of competition, though. you have to beat out the competitors. >> what happens is people are trying to compete to be like you. the ones who are the most creative are not competing. they're always on their own level. >> here i would do the back the couch and try to make it three-dimensional. you say how can i make it more interesting. you might draw over it. it might be cooler if i did a circle over that. >> this is what i learned to do as a a kid. >> that's kind of cool. >> when you are creative, you can last. you can stay in your own lane and be your own thing. i think to be a really, really successful businessman is one who has created this thing that no one else can compete with. the fact that my mom passed away about three years ago and she would always tell me, she said you know what, all this football and all this other stuff, she goes baby, remember, you're an artist. you are an artist. that's the first thing you are. she wasn't able to see it. but i still feel her like looking down on me and her pride at the collection. her pride at, like, he's -- this is what you always talked about. this is what you are. the design world really embraced me. for today's elevator pitch, we've partnered with shopify. one of the leading platforms. they work with more than 600,000 merchants. we're out of our studio and here at the row dtla where shopify opened a space. a permanent space that will help merchants grow their business. now, there are two great prizes if the elevator pitcher wins. the first is they get to have their product in one of the shopify stores getting lots of consumers to see the product. number two, this is pretty amazing, they get a mentorship with someone if from shopify and get a lot of help figuring out how to grow their company. let's see how the pitcher does. >> today's elevator pitcher is suzanne estes. good to see you. >> thak you. you too you came from where? >> florida. >> came cross-country for this. lack a loo, right? >> you know what, if you ever need a jingle for the end of your commercial, i can sing that for you. >> okay, good. >> what would shopify mean for you if you won this in? >> it would change the world. i need a product that needs to be visualized. everybody has this problem. but shopify will allow me to visualize this. >> and be in their stores? >> definitely. >> do you have any mentors? >> i do not. to be able to have someone to bounce things back off of would be awesome. >> you're a physics teacher. >> i am. >> you said you're an introvert. you must be good at presenting because you've been teaching for all these years. i'm guessing you have great reviews, the little time i've spent with you you seem fantastic. >> thank you. >> let me talk about who you're talking to. harvey, the coo of shopify. he's been doing it for a while. he knows what works. and michelle was in your shoes. know that you have someone who can empathize with you. she's the ceo and founder of lively. she gets it. >> good. >> if you're feeling nervous at all, look there and know somebody exactly understands what you're feeling. >> thank you. >> all right. let's see how you do. >> okay. >> hi. i'm suzanne from florida. i am the inventor of the lock a loo. i know you've experienced this before. you're out and about with your besties and the need to go arises. you end up in a bathroom with a broken lock or no hook. you end up hovering over the toilet seat holding your bag with one hand and trying to prevent anyone from walking in on you with the other. what are you going to do? lock a loo. it's attached to your bag and open the stall door and put it between the door and the doorjamb and slowly close the door. it holds your bag up off the dirty floor and prevents anyone from walking in on you while doing your business. shopify, are you going to join me and partner with me to get the word out? i know everybody's experienced this situation, but nobody knows there's a solution. so lock a loo. help me keep america bag safe hands clean and your business private. lock a loo. >> i feel like that one deserves a round of applause. amazing. >> you got to do some commercials late-night television. >> i got some questions. is it a door fastener or something to help hold your purse? >> it hold your bag up, up to 20 pounds. but it prevents anybody from walking in on you. it doesn't lock the door but gives anybody an awareness that someone is in the stall. most stalls are hovering like this and people push and people say i'm in here. >> how often does it arise? >> is there any data research? >> there is no data. i said about the hands clean. you're only touching up here, so the germophobe. i use it all the time. it also works in a shopping cart and hold it and twist it in the slats and it holds your bag secure in a shopping cart. i use it in a lot of different purposes. >> i'm going to let you deliberate. >> thank you. by the way, i love the setup here. you built this yourself, right? >> i sure did. >> you wouldn't get it -- i all the time put my bag on the hook and i need another hook. >> exactly. it works for both. >> how much money have you put in the company? >> i've put $30,000 into it. it was a patented product. a lot was for the patent. >> $30,000 of your own money. we got to get this out there. >> we sure do. >> i'm going to bring them back in. >> got to hear what you think. >> come back into the bathroom. >> the moment of truth. >> will the lock a loo be in the shopify store. >> the answer is no. but i bet there's a good reason. >> it's not a no. it's not yet. first thing is, we think your product is interesting. but it needs more product development. if people are putting them on your really nice purses or handbags, it has to look really good. it looks like a prototype. >> i do have a manufacturer -- i have a mold designed and built. >> i think actually as you develop your product, make it more custom solution as opposed to somebody that seems hacked together. i think you'll get more customers with. >> i think it's important to understand the market size and how much you're addressing. focus group and understand how much the need arises for the women around you and you'll be able to understand how broadly you impact the world. >> by the way, start with a survey. a cheap survey before you go doing market research. i love that the problem that we talked about right here is you have it developed. >> great entrepreneur. >> by the way, you learned how to design and print these by yourself. you're on your own. >> you're almost there sfliemt congratulations. >> thank you. >> getting a customer once takes a lot of work, so you do not want to lose them once you've got them. here are the top five tips for creating repeat business. one, stay in touch with the customers you already have. send e-mails to them, remote special offers, wish them a happy birthday, and send appointment reminders, if you can. this is a great way to get repeat business. two, create memberships. this is a good way to increase the number of loyal customers you have. you can create offers that bring in more business. three, provide excellent service. have a good customer relationship team. that can make all the difference. for a lot of small businesses, how you talk to the customer is just as important as what you say. for, ask for feedback. using surveys is one of the best ways to find out what you're doing right and what you're doing wrong. also, you can simply ask people when you talk to them. and five, stay active on social media. keep an active presence on all your social media channels, and that will help keep your brand in your customers' thoughts. we are in the middle of the third season of our podcast, been there, built that. i get to talk to business owners about the highs and lows of running their customompanies ans been really, really interesting. in 2010, karen sideman becker took a big risk and bought the company clear which had gone into bankruptcy. that is the biometrics company that gets you through security at the airport and other places very soon fast. now it has over 2 million customers. she talks to me about how important it is to be innovative and why she takes an optimistic approach to life. i hope you get a chance to listen to it. and if you do, please leave some comments. we would love to hear what you think. please check it out. it's called been there, built that. you can find it wherever you get your podcasts. still to come, growth hacks you can implement today in your p business. and the conundrum of collecting data on your customers while still protecting their privacy. you're in the business of helping people. we're in the business of helping you. business loans for eligible card members up to fifty thousand dollars, decided in as little as 60 seconds. the powerful backing of american express. don't do business without it. we have this e-mail from derek. he writes, "within our website, we keep most things private, so how do we strike the balance between privacy and making our website more user friendly without invading privacy?" >> it's a great question, especially if you are in a business that is all about privacy and making sure your customers feel safe. of course, there's a legal side to this. you have to properly disclose and be transparent about how you may ever use their information, how you store it, but in a business like this, legacy, you know, estate planning type of information where there's a lot of personal information on the site, a big side of it is also design and communication. do you have a site that seems like it's an open, exploratory space, or is the password protection aspect of this site and the closed parts of it designed in a way that merchandises, this is private, this is safe, and this is secure? so i think you have to think about it both from the standpoint of, of course, the legal checkboxes, the proper disclosure and transparency, but also a design that shows that it is, in fact, a vault. a place where you can really trust the use of your information and that your activity is guarded and safe. according to my next guest, there are only ten paths to growth for your company, and so your job is to choose the path that's right for your business and then execute a strategy around it. it sounds easy. of course, it's not. but tiffany boba's new book helps explain how to implement this. it's called "growth iq." tiffany, the global evangelist at salesforce. so good to see you. >> thank you for having me. >> tell me in what ways people aren't smart? is it they get overwhelmed or they're choosing the low-hanging fruit. where is it people go wrong? >> right now the competition gets so heated and growth is top of mind for everybody. but they get a little overwhelmed, as you said, on what's the right way to go and do it and they get too confused around, it doesn't have to be right. you have to try something. so making sure you make the right decisions, you have really amazing consequences, either good or bad, right, if you make the wrong one. but i think many people are afraid of making the wrong one, so they don't do anything. >> you have these ten paths for growth. give me an example of one of them. >> let me use partnerships as an example. many small businesses think that they need to -- once they do one partnership arrangement, that that's going to be their answer to growth. i'm now on this big ecommerce site or i'm now online or i've now opened my storefront and it isn't just one thing. you have to really think about, how do i package that together so my opportunicustomers get an opportunity to buy from me in multiple ways. and, you know, i like to start by saying that businesses have towns who their customers is. what's the context of the market they're competing in. once they identify that, then they say, what's the right way for me to grow? what do i have to combine together to do it? partnerships is one of them. >> right. >> and am i doing it in the right order, at the right sequence, at the right time? >> so how do you know if you are? >> i always say, you've got to try something. and i first start by saying, they're doing something today. everyone's doing something as it relates to growth. so taking a moment to step back and stay, what is it that i'm doing? does it match the customer i have today. does it match the current environment from a context perspective? and make sugaring sure i'm delivering what they're looking for. >> and you talk about choosing your path, what was it, context -- >> and combination and sequence and what order you do them. >> and are people doing them in the wrong order, do you think, very often? >> let's use partnerships as an example. let's say you want to expand into a new market, so you launch the product but then there's no one there to sell it or deliver it or provide service. so what you should have done is put the partnerships in place ahead of time to make sure if you're going to sell into that market, there's someone there who can actually support the customer, whether it's you or someone else. but sometimes get so excited about launching a new product or getting into a new market or doing something different, they don't think about, what do i have to put around it to make sure that i don't deliver the wrong experience to my customers along the ray. >> so we're not thinking of things holistically. in the race to growth, often people are just grabbing at whatever's coming their way without thinking about the whole thing. >> yeah, and i would say, right now, everyone just needs to step back and reframe how they think about growth. that what got us here may not get us there. i know that's a cliche statement. but right now with the change in the way customers want to buy, who you're competing against is very different than the way it used to be. the available channels for you to sell through and market through are exploding. and so, you just have to say, am i looking at it the right way? so it's really about differently about growth versus doing things differently. i think those are two very different things. >> one thing i learned with my own company, you better be prepared to support it internally also, right? >> yes. and culture is a huge part of this. if you don't have the employees that are behind the decisions that you're making, it's never going to work out well for you. >> and you talk about the mental ability -- >> the mental model is really important. and i really have this belief and this philosophy that your customers will be as happy as your employees are. >> well, congratulations on the book. thank you so much for stopping by. >> thanks for having me, j.j. yes. >> that is a whole lot of foam. this week's your business selfie comes from greg gordon of longview, texas, who owns partymachines.com. that's a lot of fun. he's a wholesaler who sells foam and snow-making machines to party and rental companies. now, why don't you pick up your smartphone, take a selfie of you and your company end and it to yo"your businessyourbusiness@ms it to #yourbizselfie. thank you so much for joining us. we love hearing from you, so if you want to get in touch, just send an e-mail to yourbusiness@msnbc.com. also, please check out our website. it's msnbc.com/yourbusiness. we've put up everything from today's show plus a whole lot more for you. and don't forget to connect with us on all of our digital and social media platforms. one last thing, don't forget to check out the podcast. it's called, been there, built that. we are in our third season and you can download it for free from tunin or wherever you get your podcasts. we look forward to seeing you next time. until then, i'm jj ramberg. and remember, we make your business our business.

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Transcripts for FOXNEWS Life Liberty Levin 20240604 09:48:00

used the justice system to target everyone has stands in their way for power but first of all i find it offensive for joe biden to speak to black people every four years. the graduate black a church, go to the naacp and insults the intelligence of black america. that's always losing black votes admit that is why i left the democrat party because of joe biden and his racist tendency. but what they have done now as s they have used this obsession with power to after president trump we have no authority, no authority to enforce federal law leading candidate being elected in november they want to use the system have to be immediat this is terry's look of total relaxation. and this is his john deere x350 lawn tractor.

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Transcripts for MSNBC Dateline 20240604 05:44:00

>> at this point, i am 100% sure that terry is our guy. >> kaplan spoke to don's mom, sharon and his brother, dennis. >> we do have a suspect in this case and we do have an arrest warrant. >> yes! >> terrific. >> it's terry white. >> the case seemed to be solved, but there was a problem. before kaplan could find terry, he got a call from christine. she said terry was missing. >> you put the noose around terry's neck which are also finding out he doesn't seem to be around anymore. >> right. >> kaplan asked christine to stop by the station. she thought he might have information that could help find her husband. >> i think at that point, her willingness to cooperate with me was sort of gone. >> kaplan got a search warrant for her car and phone, hoping to find clues that might lead him to terry. >> interesting enough, we find her cell phone in the glove compartment and there is a last will and testament right next to it. >> a last will and testament in the glove compartment?

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Transcripts for MSNBC Dateline 20240604 05:46:00

albuquerque, he did talk to someone. dennis received a facebook message from a woman. >> she's like, you don't know me but my boyfriend is ginger ale, a guy by the name of terry white. >> the boyfriend's name, rodrick white. no relation. rotted terry shared the same last name, the same birthday and for three days in april 2017, the same jail cell. soon, terry's former cellmate was in the interview room with detective kaplan. >> from what i understand you want to talk about what terry has been telling you. >> according to rod, terry made a full confession. >> he tells them everything. he tells them how he snuck in. >> he ended up getting underneath the garage door, underneath the correct guys truck. >> don was a smoker whose routine was to smoke in the garage so he waited for him to come out.

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Transcripts for MSNBC Dateline 20240604 05:43:00

current husband, terry white. it all started lining up. terry's strained relationship with don, his shifting timeline, his sudden need for a new hoodie. >> the fact that he has amended his second story to include buying a 30, what does that tell you? >> in hindsight, a lot. it tells me that there was probably a lot of blood on him and he needed something to wear to work. >> above all, terry's dna where it did not belong. >> were not going to find any dna or fingerprints of yours are in his house or on his vehicle or anywhere in that area? >> no. >> so if we did, it would be weird? >> yeah, i would say that would be weird.

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Transcripts for MSNBC Morning Joe Weekend 20240604 10:12:00

indigestion, and stomach pain. it's time we all shine. talk to a healthcare provider about nurtec odt from pfizer. this is terry's look of total relaxation. and this is his john deere x350 lawn tractor. it does more than just cut grass. ♪♪ it delivers peace of mind, all year round. ♪♪ you just have to get in the seat. i don't want you to move. i'm gonna miss you so much. you realize we'll have internet waiting for us at the new place, right? oh, we know. we just like making a scene. transferring your services has never been easier. get connected on the day of your move with the xfinity app. can i sleep over at your new place? can katie sleep over tonight? sure, honey! this generation is so dramatic! move with xfinity.

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Transcripts for MSNBC The Weekend 20240604 12:40:00

most toothpastes quit working in minutes. but crest pro-health's antibacterial fluoride protects all day. it stops cavities before they start... crest. this is terry's look of total relaxation. and this is his john deere x350 lawn tractor. it cuts millions of blades of grass.

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Transcripts for MSNBC Andrea Mitchell Reports 20240604 16:44:00

that he is going to support this -- the ukraine aid. that's critically important. we don't want to see our troops fighting on the ground in ukraine. unless ukraine is successful, unless russia learns its lesson that military aggression is not going to work, we will see a situation in which russia is emboldened and the chance of u.s. troops in ukraine becomes higher. we are going all in on this and making sure ukraine has what it needs. that's the first step. now we need to make sure ukraine has the resources to succeed over the course of the next year. >> alexander vindman, thank you very much for being with us. >> thank you. stuck in court. next we will go back to manhattan for new developments from inside the courtroom in the trump criminal trial. you are watching "andrea mitchell reports" on msnbc. this is terry's look of total relaxation.

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