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Transcripts For FOXNEWSW Fox And Friends First 20180823 08:00:00


democrats, some are pivoting back to family separation on this issue as donald trump amplifies his calls for tougher border walls. michelle melton says it is disgraceful the democrats failed to recognize the pain of the mollie tibbetts family. the case we are talking about underscores a message i have been sending. these examples are arguments for more and vigorous and better enforcement and not less and as a campaign issue you have democrats who are all lockstep that ice should be abolished, they are openly, brazenly like you to listen is saying, that we should have no borders at all. it is a disgrace, you have elizabeth warren lecturing people about which family separations they should be caring about. mollie tibbetts was probably
foxbusiness alert, stocks begin their longest bull run ever in the midst of it, the turnaround i started 3453 days ago on march 9, 2009. the major indexes have been soaring ever since, donald trump touting success saying longest bull run in the history of the stock market, congratulations to america. political sharks circling in the fallout from a former trump ally. fox and friends exclusive, the president insists he has done nothing wrong. griffin can live in washington where there are different opinions on what this means. reporter: there is blood in the water on capitol hill, the president is fighting back saying he has done nothing wrong and we are hearing his side of the story for the first time in an exclusive. did you know about the payment? later on i knew but you have
money was paid before the election and prosecutors brought charges that mister cohen was motivated for political reasons to pay hush money and mister trump is named as the person who directed and coordinated that. democrats on the hill wasted no time blasting the president as a co-conspirator with talk of impeachment and calling for the supreme court nomination hearing to be postponed. this nomination is now tainted. the president was nominated brett kavanaugh, implicated in a criminal conspiracy. he has not cleaned the swamp but made more rigid and fetid. there is a cesspool around this president. as for brett kavanaugh s hearing, the committee chairman says that is still a go. :has more legal woes being subpoena to testify in a trump foundation investigation.
democrats pouncing as cohen promises to reveal what he is calling the truth about donald trump. fox news contributor alan dershowitz says the problem with the plan to take down the president as he points out he hasn t done anything illegal. he is more correct than his critics are. it is a close question, it is complicated. the president may contribute to his own campaign. if he had written a letter to these women saying you are going to hurt me in my campaign, i m going to pay you 150, $130,000 to help me get elected president and you have to keep quiet, it is hush money, i challenge any of those saying it is a crime to find me anything in the common-law that would make a crime, if cohen himself made the contribution that would be unlawful because she has a limit of $5200 so the complicated issue is what if trump said to do it in the campaign contribution would be lawful as
long as the president ultimately paid for it. michael cohen at sentencing is scheduled for december 12th. bombshell revelation ensures talked about the case before they were supposed to. and sealed documents showed one of the jurors commented on the weakness of paul manafort s defense. s attorneys tried unsuccessfully for a mistrial. this as one of the jurors in field on fox news that a single juror prevented manafort from being found guilty on all 18 charges. we tried to convince her to look at the paper trail again and again. she said she had reasonable doubt. 11 of 12 jurors including yourself would have convicted him on all 18. yes. the door instead found him guilty on eight counts of fraud related charges. reporter: donald trump awarded the medal of honor to an
airman killed in a firefight with al qaeda. as john fired he was shot and fell to the ground and lost consciousness. even though he was mortally wounded he regained consciousness and continued to fight on and he really thought. jillian: he died in afghanistan in 2002 leaving behind two young girls. he is the first airman to receive the medal of honor since the vietnam war. rob: and illegal immigrant charged with murdering mollie tibbetts, one whose son was killed, has asked how many more will it take for america to wake up. she joins us live. jillian: the happiest place on it got happier for people who work there. you ain t seen nothing yet
rob: how many more? that is the question from an angel mom after mollie tibbetts was killed by an illegal immigrant. jillian: she has fought to save other families in the tragedy she went through. rob: a message for those fighting the president s border policy. i want to start with your reaction in the press conference earlier this week when they announced, and how the killer works. it was my already broken heart broke all over again, the numbness in disbelief that another family, i know their pain. my heart and prayers go out to
them and condolences. i wish jillian: a lot of people have said stop politicizing this issue, let the family healed but if we can t talk about it now after another tragedy, will we be able to talk about it and what needs to be done in this country? we have to keep talking about it. it is not politicizing it. it is about mollie tibbetts and dominique and other victims, and the last victim, we will talk about it and help our american citizens and legal immigrants like myself, how much longer will we allow these elected officials, fight harder for illegal aliens than for american
citizens and we have to stop whispering about this issue out of fear we might be called racist because illegal is a status, not a race. we have to get behind ice and law enforcement and stand in support of them and with them and clean up our country. there will be not another mollie tibbetts or dominic. we have to be end it now. clicks of the president s policies say illegal immigrants commit less crime and rape in american citizens do. they call this blatant racism and citizens killing citizens every day in this country. what do you say to that? i say to them that is a false statement.
we should have 0 crime by illegal aliens. we have american criminals we are taking care of, they have a right to be here. illegal aliens don t have a right to be here and one death by an illegal or two or 10,000, and any crime by illegals for american citizens. we are sorry to speak to you under these circumstances but thank you for your time. thank you for having me. jillian: 18 after the hour. will ballots be safe from foreign hackers? the new warning from homeland security. they tell me about this nazi who lived in queens who walks the streets like he owns the place, he is 95 years old.
the president opening up about deportation of a nazi guard living in the united states. his action was personal.
database two years after russian hackers unlawfully accessed dnc computers. reporter: those foreign adversaries who seek to meddling or impact our election our message from the federal government is simple. just don t bother. any attack on a political party or campaign is important to take seriously. rob: she called on election officials to assure all ballots are verifiable by 2020. $15 billion of chinese goods. rob: farmers on the tent about their economic future during what could be a record year. shannon: spoke to those farmers and have their story. one of the biggest farm auctions in the country. we are here in hamilton,
illinois. it sounds like $27 it appears. they have been battered by tariffs that have been imposed, retaliatory tariffs, as a result, trump administration terrace on aluminum and steel and hit with tariffs and the hit they are taking, experiencing tremendous yields this year probably 158 bushels an acre of corn making 52 bushels or so an acre of soybeans, the all-time record. most of these farmers we talked to over time. started the trade
negotiations, let s do it. it is going to get better, a political game that needed done years ago and it is happening now . am i optimistic? yes. i think they will get fixed. reporter: donald trump promised farmers by this terrace, taking matters into their own hands, something they are supposed to do. at the auction in hamilton, illinois, jeff flock. rob: it is amazing. jillian: i don t know how they do it. rob: a good story but close to the megaphone. 425 after the hour. a monster storm barreling
towards hawaii and we need a monster. hurricane lane could make landfall in just hours. tracking the latest path next. one of the things we have to remember is we need an immigration system that focuses on real problems. rob: what does elizabeth warren think of the murder of mollie tibbetts, she cares more about illegal immigrants and sounding off on this one, here live. beat it beat it
when lane is expected to make landfall. reporter: the storm beginning to the outer bands of rain hitting the island. that is what you re seeing a leading edges, some of this heavy rain, heavy stuff still a ways away. looking at the forecast track, wind still at 145 miles an hour. pay attention to the track. it could turn at any moment. it makes a big difference on how close it gets to the islands but here s your track and if you re looking at this area by honolulu that is friday at 2:00 pm. the ands are backing down as it moves that direction. making the closest pastoral major population center, otherwise towards the big island of hawaii, the largest island but not the most populated. here are several forecast tracks, this is why there s a lot of uncertainty. some of these take it into making landfall, others stay farther to the south.
this means eventually we could see something close or farther off. you have a good 18 hours or so until they can nail down where it will go but it will be a major story either way. rob: potentially a direct hit. we will see. the head of ice is resurfacing in nearly a year, urging followers to continue fighting, celebrating the recent attacks in canada and europe and a 54 minute speech released by the terror group, he called on dynasties bombs, and knives in more attacks. it is unclear when it was recorded. there are conflicting reports whether he is dead or hiding in the desert near the syrian iraqi border. rob: violence near a tourist destination for americans in mexico. eight bodies found all over
cancun, mexico, some dismembered and left in plastic bags. sounds like cartel violence. another found dead in a hammock. the state department previously issued a travel warning about cancun, be careful driving at night. be vigilant, they are seeing robberies and carjackings. a fox and friends exclusive, donald trump says he is pleased the nazi prison guard living in the united states was deported on his watch. a nazi prison guard living in queens, officials deported him. why was that important for you? a lot of jewish friends. he said to me about this man in queens, i grew up in queens and he was a man who was not just a prison guard but supervise the killing of many jews. he has lived here for decades.
from the beginning of the campaign they tell me about this nazi who lived in queens and walks the street like he owns it. he is 95 years old and the obama administration was unable to pull it off and the bush administration was unable to pull it off and i was able to pull it off. rob: he was a guard at a concentration camp in german occupied poland before spending decades in the united states. you can see ainsley s exclusive interview at 6:00 this morning with the president at the white house on fox and friends . jillian: the death of mollie tibbetts sending shockwaves throughout the country. rob: elizabeth warren raised some eyebrows with this reaction to her murder. this is hard not only for the family but the people in her
community and people throughout iowa. one of the things we have to remember is we need immigration system that is effective, that focuses on where real problems are. separating a mother from a baby does not make the country safer. jillian: joining us with his reaction is lawrence jones, thank you for joining us. what do you make of that? this is what the american people are so frustrated with. seems like people on the left are so focused on illegals but not american citizens that are often harmed by people that shouldn t be in this country that came into the country illegally. this is why i see them not being able to do well in the midterms. every time they have the opportunity to say i and american, i m upset too, they say no, this president is against illegals, we don t want to enrage people against comprehensive immigration reform.
rob: they keep sliding back to the family separation which was a low point for the president which they wish they could take back but is there tone keep sounding more like they just want open borders, if you want to come here just come here. when you put to that people in polling that is not a popular idea. not that they sound like they want open borders, they don t respect the law, they want ice eliminated, they want us to cry about kids at the border but there are a lot of crimes where kids are stripped away from their parents all day every day and have to pay the consequences like the war on drugs which democrats supported back in the day. because of the war on drugs, if you want the drug laws to change then you have to go through the criminal justice reform process. the same for immigration, not a special privilege forgetting immigration done, they have to go through the legal process and if congress doesn t like the law if they want a better system,
take it to the president s desk. let s talk about the next topic. it has been a week since the dnc said they would review domestic abuse allegations. many of us called for due process. people have a presumption of innocence before we start asking them to resign but that is not what democrats said during the me too movement, your guilty first and have to prove yourself innocent but now because they like this guy, he is the vice chairman of the democratic party and they feel he is an aggregate then he gets a pass and that is hypocritical and one standard, they should stick with it. is he at risk? running for attorney general.
but his ties to radical islam. he has to deal with it but they will provide cover. jillian: alexandria ocasio-cortez posted a photo lamenting this coffee shop closure she frequented. reporter: your coffee shop, americans across the country. when you raise the minimum wage people lose their jobs, machines now, i don t feel sorry for her. this is a woman who benefited from capitalism and now she is changing her tune. campus reform for a little bit, these young people believe in her, they believe in socialism and it scares the hell out of me
and the public, a junior senator, people who are laughing about his hope and change message became the president of the united states. we need to be a little cautious laughing at her. rob: the coffee shop in manhattan stay open because the wage hikes hurt their business, these are wage hikes alexandria ocasio-cortez is a big fan of and when they close the coffee shop she is not crazy about the idea. that is what happens, it is her coffee shop. all across america experiencing the same thing and her policies, socialist policies, she supports raising the minimum wage. welcome to the real world when you do it. your coffee shop is gone now. rob: the fox and friends all-american road trip goes from the road to the sky.
jillian: todd pyro flying with the thunderbirds in atlantic city. reporter: good morning. we took this winnebago through my home state and what an unbelievable experience it was because we went over the boardwalk in atlantic city where the thunderbird not only put on a show but they gave me the experience of a lifetime in one of these. and unbelievable bucket list item for you when fox and friends first returns on thursday morning.
affected. the threat was not specific to one area but details remain unclear. jillian: an officer struggling to arrest a robbery suspect, put down their phones and help. why did you do that? stop it! [shouting] jillian: now of a job after the viral video card her recording the whole thing and not helping. the suspect is charged with this arming a police officer. jillian: from dollywood to atlantic city, todd pyro hitting the roads. rob: getting a firsthand look at all the fun you can have traveling in an rv and we might have a tough time getting him to
come back. jillian: an incredible show in atlantic city. reporter: incredible is an understatement, a tale of two rides for me. first the winnebago really is one of these vehicles that packs a punch even though it look small in size, it has everything you want from the bed to the kitchen and it handles extremely easily, perfect for tailgating and going to see airshows like the ones the thunderbirds fly but this week wasn t just any air show. i had the opportunity to fly with some amazing men and women who do an unbelievable job for our country, an experience that leaves me speechless. take a look. time to take this road trip from the ground to the sky.
that was pretty cool. the thunderbirds represent 660,000 total active-duty national guard airmen deployed around the world. what do you do these airshows? our mission is to recruit, retain and inspire. we travel across america representing amazing things the air force is doing. not many people get a chance to do this, to strap into a fighting falcon. a little lightheaded. my entire life, last week, the dollywood roller coaster. i keep hearing this will be an athletic event. i haven t done a workout since soccer practice. you are going to crush it. say you can t pick your calls, that is not how it is done. and pyromaniac, this process
works. ready to go? as ready as i will ever be. got your name up there? you see that? it is actually up there. show time. let s go. all right. how are you doing back there? that was so smooth. roll to the left. here we go. nice and easy. you ready to fly? what do i do? further. there you go. pullback on the stick. pullback further. there you go. all right.
you go upside down. you ready? upside down again. and all the way around now. this is amazing. this is just amazing. unbelievable. pulling over 6g, no small feat. [applause] welcome back. bring it in. thanks for the experience and i am speechless. it is rare. the folks gave this to me.
a true honor to receive something like this even though i did nothing. the gentleman on the bottom was the pilot who took me up, he was so kind and generous and gentle with what is a massive piece of machinery but it is not just major falcon. 130 individuals are team that make these things fly. they all deserve an amazing amount of credit. when you think of team, what they do on a day-to-day basis is unreal. we are in good hands here as a nation. jillian: did you get sick? reporter: let s put it this way. i will put it delicately. so far on the all-american summer road trip i m over two on intestinal fortitude. in saint augustine next week does me a little better. rob: thank you so much, appreciate it. for more information visit foxnews.com/roadtrip.
jillian: michael cohen s lawyer paying for his client s legal journey. we set up a website called michael cohen truth.com that we are hoping he will get some help from the american people. jillian: the epic mistake he made without even knowing it. rob: it got happier for people who work there, thousands of disney employees nationwide. taking care of business
jillian: tracy carrasco here with more. reporter: it made a mistake in slowing down the wireless data of these firefighters as they were battling california s largest firing state history. verizon says it happens because the plan only allowed for use of a limited amount of high-speed wireless data. the center clarify department chief said this significantly impacted how these firefighters were able to handle this crisis, they were in the middle of this emergency situation and they asked verizon to help them with this slowdown, verizon said it was a customer service mistake, an error that caused this slowdown. they lift these caps, this all had to do with net neutrality. disney offering to pay
college tuition for all its no strings attached program. for nearly 80,000 of these hourly employees they will be eligible to take classes online, the high school diploma, to take college classes, vocational class but they will do this as part of disney s program, they announced it in january, $50 million educational program. employees will soon be able to take in person classes, a biggest and if big initiative. jillian: the good,
the violin rendition of natural women, beautiful. rob: michael cohen s attorney fishing for money from his client on national tv and makes a big mistake. lanny davis s go fund me page sent them to an internet page, somebody quickly buying that up, redirecting users to the president s site. dacorrected himself and gave a proper address. jillian: no shirt, no pants, no problem. a guy driving a motorcycle in florida with his feet. calm, cool and collected, he could be ticketed for several violations. not smart.
rob: student vandals whitewashing history and intensifying their war on confederate statues. [chanting] jillian: a student at the university of north carolina says anarchy has no place in civil society, calling out the irony behind their antics when she joins us live in the next hour of fox and friends first . sleep disturbances keep 1 in 3 adults up at night.
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Democrats , Donald-trump , Issue , Family-separation , Border-walls , Calls , Pivoting , Amplifies , Case , Message , Spain , Mollie-tibbetts-family

Transcripts For CNNW New Day 20160603



race will be defined by head-on attacks, es calates rhetoric an increase of violence. it was so sad to watch. reporter: donald trump coming back swinging. lyin , crooked hillary. reporter: after hillary clinton s scathing foreign policy speech eviscerating the republican nominee with her toughest lines yet. i will leave it to the psychiatrist to explain his affection for tyrants. reporter: trump calling for the secretary of state to be imprisoned over use of a private server. hillary clinton has to go to jail. okay? she s guilty as hell. reporter: the pair trading stinging one-liners. he says he has foreign policy experience, because he ran the miss universe pageant in russia. the tools donald trump brings to the table, bragging, mocking, composing nasty tweets. reporter: to watch her is like sominex. ever watch som ninesominex? sleep all night. it s hard to stay a. it s not hard to see donald trump leading us into a war just because somebody got under his thin skin. reporter: finger on the button, she s the one that stupidly raised her hand to go into iraq and destabilized the entire middle east, okay? because that s what she did. reporter: and the questions temperament. donald trump s ideas aren t just different, they are dangerously incoherent. he is not just unprepared. he is temperamentally unfit to hold an office that requires knowledge, stability and immense responsibility. my temperament is so much tougher and better than her temperament, and, by the way, we need a tough temperament. reporter: outside trump s rally in san jose even more tense confrontations. [ bleep ]! [ chanting ] reporter: mostly peaceful protestors but some going fist cu acuffs throwing eggs, some waving the mexican flag. just hours early trump claimed district judge gonzalo is an absolute conflict presiding over the civil lawsuits over trump university. in an interview with the wall street journal trump saying the judge s mexican heritage is an an inherent conflict of interests because he s building a wall. the judge, which happens to be mexican which is great. reporter: curiel, an american citizen, born in indiana. son of mexican ingrants. the idea that is a judge simply because of his heritage simply has to recuse himself has never been part of the american system. i don t see any explanation for this, other than, i m sorry to say, bigotry. reporter: and, guys, all of that coming the same day house speaker paul ryan, the once lone major holdout for supporting donald trump decided in his hometown paper to back donald trump. aides say there was no deal for his support, no concessions even from donald trump, just paul ryan getting more comfortable with the presumptive nominee after a series of conversations. mostly on the fact that he will be willing to help ryan move the house republican agenda forward. phil, appreciate it. so what exactly did we learn as result of this exchange? bring in presidential correspondent for the new york times, maggie haberman and cnn politics executive editor mark preston. what is your headline, haberman? clinton unbound in a speech that actually wasn t about foreign policy. she gave a stakes framing speech yesterday, where she essentially said, didn t make a case for herself so much but the anti-case against trump. we haven t really heard her do that. criticized by democrats for not doing that and criticized for staying above the fray and relying on surge gits to do this for her saying i want to keep it on ideas. that s not possible. you are facing a completely, as she said, candidate in trump. the issue is her sustaining this. her aides laying oun a tick tock how this came to be and felt a bit victory lavish. you can t do this and move on. she has to do this basically every day for the next several months. it did feel like she d been waiting for that moment and relishing it. finally sort of consolidating all of the different complaints, or insults she had about donald trump into one speech and delivering it with some zeal. she was, and to maggie s point, she s got to figure out a way how to sustain it. going bare knuckles, toe to toe with donald trump the next four months is going to be a losing strategy for her. gallup came out with a poll this morning. we are her biggest asset now in this election, we saw it on display yesterday. 2-1 voters think she is more experienced than donald trump, only 31% do. we saw in the speech yesterday she was trying to put forth the idea he is reckless, don t allow him to have any power over the nuclear codes, and look at me, i have the experience. that s a winning strategy to go bare knuckle, toe to toe, the next few months? total mistake. the second part is what she needs to do more of. maybe i m just numb to it. i felt like it lowered her to be going at him and insulting him. i get there s some lefties who wanted to see her mettle. nobody tests her mettle. the clintons fight. she won t be a victim for long, but when she started talking why certain dynamics were in place in the middle east, why certain things were more complicated, why you needed to think about it, i thought that was her better angle. look at his response. didn t match policy points, said, she should be in jail. where s going to be the balance there? you re right. a tough line to walk and mark s point, too, there were points she did get sort of toe to toe insult with him. i do think she had to do some of that, because so much of what we saw him do with 16 people in the republican primary was essentially bully them. and scare them. and they all ignored him for the most part, for months and months and months. there is this idea out there that nothing sticks to trump, because look at all of these people who tried. they didn t really try. most didn t prosecute a case until was way too late and he was about to win the new hampshire primary. she s trying to avoid that, but you are correct, she can t look like she s doing an insult for insult fest. that doesn t work for her, won t work. not what she needs. what she felt athen theic on, her tapoint, trying to characterize it that way. and she talked about, said he has a bizarre fascination with dictators because he talked seamily favorably an putin and kim jong-un. go back, remind people what she was referring to. trump on kim jong-un. look at north korea. this guy, he s like a maniac, and you got to give him credit. how many young guys, he was like 26, 25 when his father died, take over these tough generals, and amazing when you think about it. how does he do that? even though it s a culture, a cull cheer thing. he takes over he s the boss. incredible. wiped out the uncle, this one, that one. this guy doesn t play games. okay. so, mark, says this guy s a maniac. always able to hang his hat, but then says, deserves a lot of credit, young when he started killing off people. take the political playbook and throw it out the window. saw it in the debates, in the town halls, see it in his speeches, he speaks off the cuff as if he doesn t think about what he s going to say and just says whatever s at the top of his mind. to the point we saw with hillary clinton yesterday and donald trump was so effective in the primary and has been trying to do this with hillary clinton, she s going to make sure she s not defined by donald trump during the dog days of summer right now. why she s so effective. maggie said at the top. why so effective yesterday, but she s got to do some kind of strategy that shows that she s the one who understands how to deal with this world leaders. and showing his words and that is effective. that is effective, but you cannot sustain that. you cannot go into a bar brawl with somebody who effectively fights in bars every night. like you just can t. not just that. i think part of that is that she made the case against him. she has not, i said it earlier, for herself. that s what year getting at. he s races are not defined between september and november. these races are defined basically between now and august and we saw it in 2012. we saw it in previous races, in 2004. that is what we are looking at right now. trump has i want to be clear, though. trump had a terrible last week. it is hard to overstate this. so the idea that, well, he constantly gets free media, has free attention, a lot of his attention is very, very negative. with all the trump university stuff. nots just that the only has himself to thank for that. you know, if you say, kim jong-un, got to give him credit, if you say, got to give it to putin. he s strong. if you say, interesting question, chris wallace. i guess nukes too. if you say things like that about japan, they re going to come back to haunt you. this is a new level of the game. why the point to maggie s point, one-offs on trump university as a one-off won t hurt trump. the idea if she continues to build up a case against him where she can prosecute it going into november that is going to be the most effective. we do need to talk about the jump in the trump university case and will do that shortly. stick around if you would. over to ana. breaking news following overnight. two more soldiers have been found dead after an army truck overturned in floodwaters at fort hood, texas bringing the death toll to five soldiers just in this one incident, four other soldiers still missing. get to cnn s ed lavandera live at fort hood this morning with the latest on the search. ed? reporter: good morning, ana. well, the search will continue this morning for the still missing soldiers. there s a group of about 12 soldiers riding in a tactical, large tactical vehicle resembling a pickup truck, open bed in the back. told that truck was passing through a low-lying area, an area hard-hit by heavy rains yesterday, flash flood waters intense, and that the truck overturned. those 12 soldiers spilling into the water. three of them were recovered, as you mentioned, five found dead, and the search will continue this morning for the remaining four. although more rain expected here in the area, which would obviously complicate search and rescue efforts as that process continues, but it has already been some time. this accident happened midday and weren t able to find all the bodies yesterday. that search will continue and complicated by the search efforts today, complicated by the fact probably more rain is expected to fall on this area. flash flooding, a major concern. chris? ed, not an easy situation. thank you for staying on it for us. appreciate it. we have new details and not good about the gunman who opened fire on ucla s campus killing a beloved professor in a murder/suicide. the police now say they found a kill list leading investigators to another victim in minnesota who was the gunman s wife. cnn stephly elam is following developments live in los angeles. stephanie? reporter: good morning, chris, yes, he left behind a cryptic note and suggested someone needed to check on his cat. this being the shooter in the story, and that led police to find out this strachty was even worse than previously thought. he had to semiautomatic pistols, one he used for the homicide and the other in his backpack. reporter: investigators discovering rounds of ammunition and a kill list spelling out the names of three people at ucla shooter mainak sarkar s home. adult female. reporter: wcco reports this woman was ashley hasty one of the names on the list. she was married to sarkar in 2011. investigators finding her body in brooklyn park, minnesota. after killing her he drove nearly 2,000 mimes to los angeles descending on ucla s campus intending to follow through with the rest of his list. he went there to kill two faculty from ucla. he was only able to locate one. reporter: sarkar opened fire kills hi form are professor william klug then turned the gun on himself. the third was another ucla professor off-campus that day, escaping what police say was a revenge-fueled plot over intellectual property. he perceived he had been done wrong and just stewed on this several years. reporter: ucla denies any dispute between the school and sarkar. now, as far as sarkar s relationship to ucla it is worth noting that he graduated in 2013 with a ph.d. in engineering, he listed professor klug as hi advisers for his dissertation and part of klug s research group. from what we understand at this point, alisyn, no grudge understood to be there as far as ucla was concerned between the school and the student. oh, what a mystery and tragedy. stephanie thank you for that reporting. well, it s a delicate balance for democrats. how to support hillary clinton without alienating bernie sanders supporters. we ll tell you what s going on behind the scenes, next. little miss muffet sat on a tuffet eating her curds and whey. along came a burglar who broke into her home and ransacked the place making off with several valuable tuffets. fortunately geico had recently helped her with homeowners insurance. she got full replacement on her tuffets. the burglar was later captured when he was spotted with whey on his face. call geico and see how much you could save on homeowners insurance. i don t want to lie down. i refuse to lie down. why suffer? 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luxury cars just seem like they would be top awarded. better be some awards behind what you are paying for, right? the final answer. chevy. the most awarded car company two years in a row. wow, it s like a luxury car. i was shocked. i mean it s like, this is chevy? get cash back for 20% of the msrp on all 2016 spark, sonic and impala vehicles. that s over $8000 on this chevy impala. .of fixodent plus adhesives. they help your denture hold strong more like natural teeth. and you can eat even tough food. fixodent. strong more like natural teeth. fixodent and forget it. donald trump continuing his attack against the judge presiding over two of the civil fraud lawsuits against trump university. trump says the judge s mexican heritage is an inherent conflict of interests. bring back mark preston and maggie haberman to discuss. maggie, he says because he announced he s going to build a wall wean the u.s. and mexico, that this judge is not qualified or has a conflict of interests to sit on the trump university case. have you ever seen anything like that? no. i have not. this judge was born in the united states bp he is an american citizen. he has mexican ancestry, but you could make this argument and i think we saw a clip from jeffrey toobin earlier saying he had nover seen something like this, this is a very overtly racial statement. he called the judge hispanic earlier. he s inject it, then say that s not a bad thing, we like that. this was a very different type of statement, and it had two strains to it. one, the racial component. the other is, and the times did a piece on this today, others as well, it represents an authoritarian streak we have seen with trump before where the judiciary is a separate branch. if you are the president you do have to respect that. where we re seeing the confluence of trump the businessman and trump the candidate is very hard to untangle. the problem also is that this is probably the first or maybe best example of where, what he does to stimulate the base may have really just hurt him with the people he want to impress most, which is the party right now. i can t tell you how many people have jokingly in that, in the republican world said to me, what can i give to you leave this alone? what did you accept? that s right. wait until you see what i drove here. the interesting part of it is, he goes after this judge, having an inherent conflict. has he moved to have him recused from the case? there are legal avenues. no. did the judge actually go along with him and may have saved his bacon by continuing these trials? maybe after the election? so if anything, you d think he d be liking this judge, but how dangerous is this for republicans on the fence right now when they hear he s just calling this judge a mexican and saying he s conflicted? before you answer that, let me play for you what senate majority leader mitch mcconnell has said, talking about sue az a martinez, new mexico governor and mcconnell thinks it is time to unify. stop doing these things. so listen to this. i do. and i think that the attacks that he s routinely engaged in, for example, going after susana martinez, the republican governor of new mexico, chairman of the republican governor s association, i think that s a big mistake, abo. he was saying she wasn t doing a good job, he s right to be worried about that. but this is ten times worse, isn t it? the fuel that has gotten donald trump the primary win, this harsh rhetoric, attack on the main streen media, we ve seen from republicans and conservatives anyway but he amped it up this election. his attack on the media, on his own republicans, on the establishment, and really his attack on this judge because this judge s family came from mexico. not him. he was born in the united states. let me side track a second. my parents came from ireland. came over here. if you were to ask my father, you know, a very simple question, and i asked this when i was 10 years old, would you fight for ireland or the united states in a war? he said i would fight for the united states and the reason it gave my children everything in this country. i think you would hear that time and time again from immigrants, you know, who come over here to try to find a better life for their kids, but the rhetoric that donald trump is u.s.yao using right now, this is a two-part contest. going into the november election, dealing with independents and undecided voters, this rhetoric scares me. a lot of entry back channels from our own reporter, done reporting on this, it will be released today. there have been people, high senate democrats, including harry reid, who made phone calls to bernie sanders to figure out a graceful exit, and how after california, these democrats are pressing him to sort of exit stage left. but bernie sanders does not seem interested in doing that. so, bernie sanders and a supporter of his said this to me a long time ago, a version of what he s been saying 30 years. pretty consistent in what he thinks. we think never accused of being a flip-flopper. a couple specific issues criticized, but he basically has been talking about a revolution for a very long time and finally has tense of thousands of people listening to him and voting for him. that becomes a very compelling thing, to stick with, and very hard to walk away from. and he generuinely has influenc on the party right now. he is not a democrat, which is what you hear from clinton supporters and i think something you will hear from, you know, establishment democrats. harry reid and sanders have fought before. there are few credible democrats or he ll sanders would see as credible to negotiate at this point. i know chuck schumer s name was floated at one point. i don t know chuck schumer would be seen by sanders supporters as the one they want. he is seen as very close to wall street. that s what sanders supporters are against. so it s not really clear yet what is going to take for sanders to get out. if he wins california on tuesday, we are in for a very, very long seven weeks on the democratic side. tell you what, that might wind up being what the democrats need. yes, the big names have been going to bernie. that s true. but a lot of people in the party going to the big names saying, if he leaves we re going it look like we co-opted the system. his people won t come with hillary and they have a real problem. i think they need him at the convention. guys, thank you. great to have you. have a great weekend. get to ana. so will the parents of a 3-year-old who fell into that gorilla enclosure be charged? 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reporter: good morning, ana. gorilla world reopens tuesday. the reopening will spotlight a brand new barrier around that exhibit. if you can clolook at the side-by-side, on the right, the previous rail in place during saturday s incident. it s a simple metal railing about three-feet high. now, on the left, the zoo released images of the new one visitors will see on tuesday. officials say it s about 42 inches high, 6 inches taller than before, and perhaps crucially it will have a knotted rope netting that no one can get through. now, the zoo stresses that the previous barrier was secure, and it was accredited numerous times by the association of zoos and aquari aquariums, obviously what happened on saturday with the little boy getting through and getting into the gorilla enclosure, officials say they will put that new barrier in place spotlighted when it reopens tuesday. meantiming the prosecutor s office could announce as soon as this morning or today whether or not they will file criminal charges against any family members of that boy or the parents. police wrapped up the investigation yesterday, and then handed it over to the prosecutor for review. so we should get more information at some point today. alisyn? right. lots of people waiting to see what the prosecutor is going to do in this case. jessica, thank you for the update. we also have an update on prince. we now know he died from an accidental drug overdose of an incredibly powerful drug. what drug was it and why would he have it? we have answers from an addiction expert, next. sorry ma am. no burning here. try new alka-seltzer heartburn relief gummies. they work fast and don t taste chalky. mmmm. incredible. looks tasty. you don t have heartburn. new alka-seltzer heartburn relief gummies. enjoy the relief. type 2 diabetes doesn t care who you are. or where you re from. we re just everyday people fighting high blood sugar. i am everyday people farxiga may help in i am everyday people that fight every day. along with diet and exercise, farxiga helps lower blood sugar in adults with type 2 diabetes. one pill a day helps lower your a1c. and, although it s not a weight-loss drug, farxiga may help you lose weight. do not take if allergic to farxiga. if you experience symptoms of a serious allergic reaction such as rash, swelling, difficulty breathing or swallowing, stop taking and seek medical help right away. do not take farxiga if you have severe kidney problems, are on dialysis, or have bladder cancer. tell your doctor right away if you have blood or red color in your urine or pain while you urinate. farxiga can cause serious side effects, including dehydration, genital yeast infections in women and men, serious urinary tract infections, low blood sugar and kidney problems. stop taking farxiga and call your doctor right away if you have signs of ketoacidosis which can be serious or life-threatening. farxiga. i am everyday people we are everyday people. visit farxiga.com and ask your doctor how you can get farxiga for free. okawhoa!ady? [ explosion ] nothing should get in the way of the things you love. get america s fastest internet. only from xfinity. we now know what killed music superstar prince. it was an accidental opioid overdose, but there s a lot more to it than that and, in fact, this isn t the end of the understanding. it s actually just the beginning. the medical examiner s report reveals that prince was on one of the most potent drugs on the market right now. it s called fentanyl. so what is fentanyl and how was prince able to hide this addiction if it was so potent and taxing on his life? let s discuss with someone who knows very well. addiction expert, founder and ceo of the hills treatment center howard sam yoouels. thank you for helpinging us out on this today. absolutely, chris. when we hear about high-powered drugs that require a lot of coordination of getting them and different doctors and there are so many different drugs found in his house, different opioids, benz benzo hover you say that, how was he able to do that without someone knowing? first of all, chris, that s impossible. i m a recovering heroin addict myself and anybody close to an addict, you know, the moods, the need for the drug, the highs, the lows. there is no question that people that were close to prince had to know what was going on, and probably enabled the addiction. so we have that piece of accountability, and we do know that authorities are looking into which doctors, how did he get. then we get into this new realm of this problem i know people in your community are so worried about. these pills. the opioids, that they are easier to get, and this fentanyl is at the top of the food chain. why? why does this drug worry you more than others? well, first of all, fentanyl is a synthetic opioid, so much stronger than morphine. top of the list, extremely dangerous. you re seeing in america the heroin epidemic out of control, a lot of the drug dealers are putting a little fentanyl in the heroin packages and addicts are dying quickly and o.d.-ing because the drug is so powerful. why do that, though? don t they want their customers alive? well, they do, but they also want to get a reputation on the street about how good their particular heroin is. so it s that reputation. i mean, this may sound crazy, but when i was shooting heroin in new york, you know, if we heard a certain brand of heroin, people were o.d.-ing off the drug, we wanted that drug, because that meant it was powerful and really, really good. now, the key was, not to do enough to die, but do enough to get really, really high off it. and obviously, once you re compromised by taking the drug it s hard to make those calculations the right way and that may have contributed here as well, according to the medical examiner. self-administering nap then takes us to a big problem what do we do with this information? how does it affect the rest of us? i can t tell you how many parents i hear from who has kids who get into drugs who have said before, in the beginning i was okay with it, because at least it was just pills. so you know, it s not like i found him with a knife in his veins. they re misunderstanding the strength of the pills. what are you seeing in your work? well, first of all, it all starts and ends with the family. you know, the family is the closest to the addict there is. so it s about families truly being educated. i mean, we are in a drug epidemic throughout america. we re the biggest consumers of these drugs in the world. and it s the families that are on the front lines of being able to see the signs that their son or daughter or their husband or wife are going through. and that s where the education really has to occur, and where families have to get educated. they have to start to do boundaries. they have to do interventions. they ve got help their loved ones before it s too late. part of the analysis with prince was, why would a doctor prescribe this. the truth is, you don t need a doctor to get this sfuf anymore. it s on the streets. get it in powder in patches s pt the prop blem is real and we ha to deal with it. thank you for being with us. thank you, chris. ana. just about two moss out from the olympics in rio. but is this crime-ridden city ready to play host to the world? we are taking you there. you won t believe the violence we discovered, and should athletes and tourists be worried? we ll answer that, when we come back. olay luminous illuminates skin with pearl optics science. your concert style might show your age, your skin never will. with olay you age less, so you re ageless. olay. ageless. wprime cuts of meat.s fit kitchen. 25 grams of protein. and savory, mouth-watering sides. it s the perfect balance of delicious and nutritious. making it just the right fit for you. stouffer s fit kitchen meals. this is fit. that can camp out in between our teeth, if we ll let it. use gum® brand. soft-picks®. proxabrush® cleaners. flossers and dental floss. gum® brand. golden state warriors powered by the bench. to coy wire with the bleacher report. i have a feeling kim james isn t happy? not a good day for king james and the cavs. making a push in the second half and then the warriors needed a wake upcall. coach steve kerr gave them one. like a cold bucket of water trying to sleep. watch this moment right here. this was it. i mean, said his team was losing, careless passes, bad defense. needed to get their edge back, and guys like sean livingston got the message, coming off the bench scores 20 points. that s as many as steph curry and klay thompson combined. ig kuodal iguodala. and war jens win 104-89. game two sunday in oakland. nba commissioner adam silver says the idea of moving next year s all-star game from north carolina still a possibility. this is in the wake of the passage of the state s controversial lgbt law requiring everyone to use public bathrooms that correspond to their birth gender. here s commissioner silver talking about it. the discussions are ongoing. i was in north carolina about two and a half weeks ago, spoke to a lot of business leaders in charlotte, working behind the scenes. frankly, to craft some sort of compromise with the governmental leaders, both in the city and the state. i would say there is absolutely strong interest in trying to work something out. so in the past, silver said they would move the game if the law wasn t changed. chris, sounds like progress is being made. we ll see how it plays out. quickly, who s the better team? cavs. they re going to get it done. here they come, chris. craziest thing i ve ever heard you say. you re too handsome to be that crazy. coy, have a good weekend. one of the biggest questions surrounding rio this summer and the olympics what do do with guns and violence. if you think athletes won t be affected, think again. here s cnn correspondent ivan watson with more of what s real in rio. reporter: gun battles in the olympic city. [ gunfire ] reporter: a clash between police and gangs in one of the impoverished favelas. urban warfare in denley populated communities where parents struggle to keep their children safe. this woman says two bullets flew into a children s recreation center. when armored personnel carriers and police special forces move in they trigger more gunfire. it s not exactly what you d expect in the host city of the upcoming summer olympics. translator: today we live in the middle of a cross fire, caught in a war that is not our own. reporter: louisa is a well-respected community activist in one of rio s biggest favelas. she says the war between the police and the gangs is getting worse. she argues that the upcoming olympics won t make any impact on the violence here. the authorities in rio insist they have a plan for keeping the games safe by deploying some 85,000 police and soldiers across the city. but these days, even members of olympic teams are getting caught up in the violence. actually, i went to the gas station. just meters away and a gunfight started. so all of a sudden everybody started running at the gas station and hiding behind things. so i thought, well, may be time to lie flat in the motor boat and hide as well. reporter: part of the problem, there are effectively two systems of law and order in rio. police keep control in the of a flewistic parts of the city, but up in the mill tops, there s a very different group in charge. this young drug trafficker is trying to illustrate the complete different set of rules that exists up in the favelas. civilians call this the parallel state. there are communities where the gangs control the area, and where the police rarely go in without weapons. you don t want the olympics? it s not that i don t want it but i don t see any advantage to corrupt olympics. there s no investment. the rich people just use the games to steal from the brazilian people. a drug dealer s deep skepticism of the olympics, and a view that s also shared by many of the ordinary brazilians we ve met here. and perhaps it s understandable. given the frightening conditions many residents face in this troubled city, sheer survival more important than bronze, silver and gold. ivan watson, cnn, rio de janeiro. okay. another story getting so much attention. the death of harambe the gorilla spark add national debate. should the parents face charges? that s next. shape. this. i can do easily. benefiber® healthy shape helps curb cravings. it s a clear, taste-free daily supplement. .that s clinically proven to help keep me fuller longer. benefiber® healthy shape. this, i can do. find us in the fiber aisle. you ll enjoy consistent comfort with the heating and air conditioning systems homeowners rank number one. american standard heating and air conditioning. a higher standard of comfort. my m.about my toothpasteice. she eveand mouthwash.ice. but she s a dentist so.i kind of have to listen. she said jen, go pro with crest pro-health advanced. advance to healthier gums. .and stronger teeth from day one. using crest toothpaste and mouthwash makes my. .whole mouth feel awesome. and my teeth are stronger too. crest-pro health advanced. .is superior to colgate total. .in these 5 areas dentists check. this check up? so good. go pro with crest pro-health advanced. mom s right.again! it s my decision to make beauty last. fix. roc® retinal started visibly reducing my fine lines and wrinkles in one week. and the longer i use it, the better it works. retinal correxion® from roc® methods, not miracles.™ outrage over the death of has rahm ba at the cincinnati zoo continues. nearly half a million people signing an online petition saying it is believed the situation was caused by parental negligence and the zoo is not responsible for the injuries and possible trauma we want the parents to be charged with negligence causing harambe to lose his life. debate this with kristine flowers and cnn commentator mel robins. thanks for being here. christine, start with you. as early as today the hamilton county, ohio, prosecutor s office could decide whether or not to charge the parents. do you think they should? good morning, alisyn. under ohio law, they could do that. there s a possibility there. i think that there should be some accountability here, and while filing charges may not be exactly the appropriate avenue of relief, i think that we need to hold the parents accountable. how? christine, if if not charges, what do you mean by accountability? what does that look like, then? if you can file charges, then you can have some kind of a plea bargain whereby the mother could be on probation, whereby children in youth services could come in and monitoring the situation. clearly, something went wrong, and it wasn t the zoo s fault. because in 37 years at the cincinnati zoo, this didn t happen. three generations of kids were able to go to that exhibit or to be able to be at the zoo and not fall into the primate preserve. so the default position is, the mother did something wrong. mel, 500,000 people agree with cries toohristine. they want repercussions for the mother, or the parents map do you think? it s absolutely ridiculous. talk about accountability, we ve pointed the internet unanimous rage machine and commentators at this family with a barrage of cruel accusations. on anderson cooper s show last night, an eyewitness to this event. to people understand what the quote negligence was of this mother? she turned to take a photograph of her other children. do we really want to live in a society where you could be held criminally negligent because you go to a zoo and you take a photo? i mean, this is absolutely absurd. this child climbed over a barrier, fell into the, you know, the exhibit, which we all know. it was a tragic accident. and accidents happen in this day and age, and i think we have to take a step back. it s very easy to click a button on the web and feel a sense of moral outrage and think that you re better than somebody else, but take a step back. understand what actually happened before you start to accuse people of negligence, and want to leverage our criminal justice system to go supervise a woman doing nothing wrong. okay. christine, your response? i completely disagree. doing nothing wrong here resulted in a child falling into the primate pit. as i said in 37 years, this has not happened. you know, i agree that there has been some very cruel kind of crucifixion of the mother in the cyberspace, and that s wrong. and a lot of people are motivated by a sense of anger that this magnificent gorilla was put down. but but, you have to look at the situation. in context. if a child runs into a canned food display at thrift way, that s one thing. when you sggo into a supermarke you expect this kind of thing to happen. eve an child darting across the street on a busy morning. that s acceptable. understandable. it s tragic. but when you go to a zoo interesting about your argument is let me finish. let me - mel, hold on. give her one minute to finish her sentence. go ahead? if you take your child to the perimeter of an exhibit where there are wild animals below, you don t take your eye off of that child for one minute. you don t take pictures of the other children, unless you are sure that there is someone supervising that toddler. got it. christine, made your point. mel, your response? i think the interesting thing about christine s argument in a supermarket, foreseeable, you let go of your child s hand they might run into something. at a zoo in operation for 38 years and it s not a common foreseeable thing that children climb over the barriers, you actually have a, an expectation that you re in a safe environment and that it s okay to turn around for 10 seconds and take a photograph of your other children. guess what? in 38 years no children did that. in 38 years, no children did that. christine exactly. why i m go ahead, mel. look, i think that your argument proves that because it hadn t happened in 38 years, it s not something that anybody think would happen. and it s not something you would assume but now she ladies christine, thank you. what are you going to do? thrower in jail? put a woman on probation that no. not throw her in jail but we have standards. ridiculous. absolute absolutely standards? how about not supposed to express blame. this apathetic wave of don t express blame. what are standards for? why do we have standards for good and bad? you both made a point, exactly how this half million people feel. they want some repercussions even if it doesn t rise to the level i think there has been. the social media, i hear you, onslaught they ve been facing certainly does qualify as some repercussions. we ll see. we ll see today what the hamilton county prosecutor s office decide to do and whether or not they think this was a case of child endangerment. christine flowers, mel robins, thank you very much for that debate. following a lot of news including donald trump stepping up attacks on the trump university judge. let s get right to it. donald trump s got america all wrong. hillary clinton has to go to jail. he says he has foreign policy experience, because he ran the miss universe pageant in russia. we haven t been smart and strong for many, many decades. if you really believe america is weak, you certainly don t deserve to lead it. five soldiers found dead in floodwaters at fort hood, texas. the water up to the windows. seeing families and farms destroyed. this is a tremendous disaster. a former military commander accused of some of the worst atrocities. is living in the united states. how dare anyone call him a war criminal. he tortured people personally. he oversaw torture. she ho be in jail. this is new day with chris cuomo and alisyn camerota. good morning, everyone. welcome to your new day. ana cabrera with us again this morning. great to have you here, ana. all right, the political punches continue between hillary clinton and donald trump. trump contends hillary clinton should be in jail because of use of a private e-mail server. that coming in response to clinton s foreign policy speech belittling the presumptive gop nominee and dangerous and temperamentally unfit to be commander in chief. trump also once again targeting a judge overseeing lawsuits against trump university. saying that his mexican heritage presents a conflict of interests, because trump says he s building a wall. this as more violence erupts at a trump rally. we have complete coverage of the 2016 race starting with phil mattingly. phil? reporter: chris, much of the last couple weeks, if you looked at this like a heavyweight battle, it s like the first round. a couple jabs here or there, testing out attack lines. no more. thursday marked a noticeable shift in this campaign, full frontal attacks from here on out escalating rhetoric and the consistent, really, the consistent reality that violence and protests will be part of this picture going forward. i watched hillary today. it was pathetic. it was so sad to watch. reporter: donald trump coming back swinging. yin crooked hillary. reporter: after hillary clinton s scathing speech eviscerating the republican nominee with her toughest lines yet. i will leave to do the psychiatrist to explain her affection for tyrants. reporter: calling for the former secretary of state to be imprisoned over the use of a private e-mail server. hillary clinton has to go to jail. okay? she has to go to jail. she s guilty as hell. reporter: the pair trading stinging one-liners. he says he has foreign policy experience, because he ran the miss universe pageant in russia. the tools donald trump brings to the table, bragging, mocking, composing nasty tweets. to watch her is lime sominex. ever hear of sominex. sleep all night. it s hard to stay awake. it s not hard to see donald trump leading us into a war just because somebody got under his thin skin. crooked hillary said, oh, donald trump. his finger on the button. she s the one that stupidly raised her hand to go into iraq and destabilized the entire middle east, okay? because that s what she did. reporter: and the question of temperament. donald trump s ideas aren t just different. they are dangerously incoherent. he is not just unprepared. he is temperamentally unfit to hold an office that requires knowledge, stability and immense responsibility. my temperament is so much tougher and so much better than her temperament. and, by the way, we need a tough temperament. reporter: outside a trump rally in san jose even more tense confrontations. [ bleep ]! [ chanting ] reporter: mostly peaceful protestors but some going fisticuffs with supporters throwing eggs, water and surrounding their cars as they exited. some anti-trump demonstrators waving the mexican flag. just hours earlier, trump claimed district judge gonzalo is an absolute conflict presiding over the civil lawsuits against trump university. in an interview with the wall street journal trump saying the judge the mexican heritage is an inherent conflict of interests because he s building a wall. the judge, which happens to be mexican which is great. reporter: curiel, an american citizen, born in indiana. the son of mexican immigrants. the idea that a judge simply because of his heritage simply has to recuse himself has never been part of the american system. i don t see any explanation for this, other than i m sorry to say, bigotry. reporter: on top of that one other piece of news, paul ryan, highest ranking republican hoon had not endorsed donald trump now has coming out in his home town newspaper saying conversations with trump over the last couple weeks have gotten him for comfortable. no concessions or deals made according to ryan s aide for his endorsement but ryan saying he feels he is ready to help republicans move forward their agenda. talk more about trump s claim, judge curiel has an inherent conflict of interests because of his mexican heritage. joining us, president of the hispanic judge association and a trump supporter david chavez, thanks for being here. why does it bother you trump pointed out this judge s heritage? it s outrageous to criticize a judge simply for hispanic heritage. they re vetted by a senate, by a bipartisan senate, they re public servants, do their job. not exactly criticizing him, a conflict of interest because donald trump has been so public about wanting to build a wall between mexico and the u.s. and the judge seems to be so proud of his heritage, that s a conflict of interests. that s not conflict of interests. it s prejudice, making assumptions because of their heritage, presuming he is against donald trump stance on building a wall without facts. should not be tolerated. mr. chavez, you are a chutru supporter and hispanic. why aren t you bothered by what mr. trump just said? good morning, alisyn. first of all, any judge is not immune from critique. also, you don t want to have any appearance of improprietorship. but what has the judge done that is, has been some impropriety? i m not saying he s done anything, but you don t want to have an appearance. so, again, every judge has the opportunity to recuse himself and if he had a certain dissent that may cause this to be raised as an issue, and you ve got the presidential presumptive nominee involved in this lawsuit that s before him, i think you take a second look at him. my father was a district judge in new mexico, tried many, many cases. i ve tried many, many cases to verdict. i ve had issues come before the court as well. so that s a decision the court has to make. i just want to be clear on what you re saying. you re saying you and your father could never have tried a case that involved hispanics? oh, absolutely no. we tried them all the time. all the time. what s the difference between this judge of hispanic background and this case? why are you saying that s an inherent conflict of interest. no, no, no. it s not an inherent conflict of interests. number one, an issue, threshold, is there an appearance. that was raised through the release of these documents to the public. so when you have internal documents released to the public, that, then, becomes an issue. okay. let me be clear. you re saying that because he released those internal documents, that is the conflict of interests? he says he did it because there s national interest in all of this. you re saying because the judge released the documents, not because he s hispanic? no, no, no. not at all. i m saying that when certain actions are taken by a judge, then his actions are scrutinized, and then he comes under critique by trump, and that s what s happening here. in other words, there was other ways this court could have handled the case. had a sequestered hearing on the documents, sealed these documents. okay. could have had an in-camera review of the documents. there s procedures that could have been in place that would have allowed this case to move forward in the sanctity of the courtroom and not for public opinion. that s the problem with the case. do you understand that argument? not at all. the crew technique on this judge a not based upon anything he s done in the courtroom, solely on his hispanic haseritage. the decision is what propels the racism. that s what s going on here and should not be tolerated. i want to ask you about the seeming squabble between mr. trump and the governor of new mexico. mr. trump criticized her nap got a lot of attention. yesterday susana martinez said why she is not endorsing donald trump yet. he needs to address his plans for us, and new mexico people deserve to get that answer. he s not addressed it yet. i will tell you i m not going to be voting for hillary clinton. i am waiting to hear from him as to addressing the issues facing new mexico. once i hear that she says once i hear that, then we ll see what happens. and that prompted donald trump to put this out i like i d like to have governor susana martinez support. i respect her. i have always liked her. mr. chavez, a completely different tone than the one last week, he was critical of her, had not done a good job for your state and a complete litany against her. why the change? number one, i was at the event. the governor had the opportunity to appear. i know the governor. she s a very good friend of mine. i supported the governor, served with the governor. when i was in the legislature s she works very, very hard, is very good for new mexico. you also have to remember in new mexico we have a democratic-controlled senate so a lot of conflicts between the executive were you comfortable with mr. trump s given your long history with the governor, were you critical of what trump leveled against her. i have no problem with the comments made. that she hasn t didn t a good job for your state? those are his opinions. she s done very good for new mexico and had the opportunity to visit with trump and bill bridges and chose not to, and she ll make her decisions in due time. but she had an opportunity to, when he came to new mexico, to visit with him, talk to him, discuss their differences. and she ll do it on her own time and as she determines appropriate for new mexico. look, we look forward to having donald trump back to new mexico. in the near future. he said he was going to come back to new mexico so we look forward to welcoming him back in new mexico. got it. mr. maldonado, do any of these comments hurt him in the hispanic commute? absolutely. lack of trust, talk of hate that s offensive to the latino community. he needs to apologize to jump kuril jehl to tjudge curiel. mr. maldonado, mr. chavez, thank very much for being on new day with both perspectives. over to ana. thanks, alisyn. hillary clinton may be laser focused on donald trump now, but her party and supporters in particular, wrestling with what to do about bernie sanders. how do they nudge him out of the race without alienating supporters? joining us live in washington, we have details. manu? reporter: good morning. the last thing democrats want look like they re strong-arming bernie sanders out of the race they fear it will alienate sanders and supporters who they need in november. they want to make it clear he cannot win and his agenda better served railing behind hillary clinton. i m told harry reid privately made that case to sanders in a phone call last month. you ll hear a lot more democrats make that case publicly after tuesday s primaries. now, several things the democrats are discussing about what they could offer sanders, that includes reforms over superdelegates, dumping the controversial head of the democratic national committee debber wasserman schultz gives sanders a primetime speaking slot at the july convention and pushing clinton to make a vice presidential make would satisfy sanders issupporters increasingly, chatter about elizabeth warren as clinton s running mate, easy specially if elizabeth warren emerged as attacking donald trump and has same supporters at bernie sanders. i m told clinton is open to the idea of warren as a vp and says warren and clinton camps talking much more as of late and democrats believe she could help unite this party postprimary. all discussions, chris, only bound to intensify starting wednesday, assuming clinton gets the nomination next week. manu raji getting his scoop on. appreciate it. also breaking overnight. two more soldiers found dead. an army truck overturned at the fort hood, texas, base bringing the death toll to five. four other soldiers still missing. cnn s ed lavandera is the live at fort hood with the latest. what do we know, my friend? reporter: good morning, chris. well a group of 12 soldiers riding in a large kind of pickup-style military vehicle, if you will, helping during the flood. 12 of those driving through a low-lying area prone to flash flooding and that is exactly what happened. the truck became stuck, overturned. 12 soldiers falling into the water. three recovered safely but the search is still on for several more, four in all. five of them, the bodies of five have been recovered so far. but search and rescue operations continue throughout much of the day yesterday and will resume here again this morning. inside of fort hood. obviously, this will be a very difficult situation later on in the day, chris. it s expected that perhaps more rain will be falling on this area, but those search and rescue teams back up here at work here now that the sun is coming up again, to continue the search for those four remaining missing soldiers. alisyn? what a tragedy, ed. thank you for that reporting. another tragedy to tell you about, the u.s. military mourning the loss of a blue angels pilot after her fighter jet crashed during practice for a weekend air show in tennessee. five colleagues in matching aircraft not injured. in colorado a pilot managed to safely eject from his thunderbird f-16 before it crashed near the u.s. air force academy. that flyover was part of a graduation exercise which president obama was attending. grabbing your coffee, come look at your television. got to see this next video. drama in a cleveland courtroom as the father of a murder victim tries to attack the man sentenced for the crime. watch. so that was a father of one of three women killed by michael madison. terry addressing the court when he suddenly lunges, jumps, right at his daughter s killer. he is eventually restrained by deputies. madison was sentenced to death for killing three women back in 2013. you don t see that every day. no, but i understand the tempations. surprising you don t see it every day. great job by the bailiffs, the court officers there, but you ve got to understand. another story like this here in new york, where a man wound up going after the assailant who attacked his wife and wound up being arrested initially and then released. yes. i mean, those emotions so high. amazing you don t see that more auchk. different temperament in play in the election. who has the right temperament to be commander in chief. hillary clinton says not donald trump. no slight difference of opinions on this issue. very, very far apart. carl bernstein understands what this issue means in a president as well as anyone. he ll give us his reaction, next. you pay your car insurance premium like clockwork. month after month. year after year. then one night, you hydroplane into a ditch. yeah. surprise. your insurance company tells you to pay up again. why pay for insurance if you have to pay even more for using it? 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and i said, i really do. when i do things wrong, and the press writes badly about me, i can handle that. in fact, i congratulate them. imagine if he had not just his twitter account at his disposal when angry, but america s entire arsenal. do we want him making those calls? now she s saying, donald trump, do you trust him with the nukes. let me tell you, my temperament is so much tougher and so much better than her temperament, and all right. i didn t know if he or we were repeating himself? so nice we ll play it twice. less discuss with the life of hillary rodham clinton. carl, thanks for joining us this morning. temperament. a word i ve heard you use before. what does it really mean in the context of being president? what mot matters in this analys? stability. knowing there are a majority of americans that need stability, firmness, and trump has demonstrated none of. shown himself to be a kind of wild man all over the lot. hillary clinton said incoherent. it s true. yesterday hillary clinton ticked off a litany of things that she said proves your point that he is incoherent and uncontradictable. do you think that what we saw yesterday particular hillary clinton signal aed a shift in h approach? it s a very wise, tactical maneuver to go after trump where he is weak, and where he is who he is, but i think we re seeing a much, much bigger question that now is raised. this election is about much more than republicans and democrats. it s about donald trump, who is a total break in american history. he is an authoritarian. in the new york times today a factual story about experts in all kinds 6 fielof fields acros country talking about how he doesn t believe in the amendment of the constitution. separation of powers. we are talk an aauthoritarian, nerve her anything like this in history and the question, are we going to elect a president of the united states who is a thug-ish maximum leader, who operates in total contradiction, disrespect and disdain for our history and our constitutional traditions? and many republicans have been the first to recognize this. but many republicans are also ignoring and mitigating these qualities you re pointing out as your opinion of donald trump because of what they believe about hillary clinton. and this inspector general report, while from the left, you ll say, well, the inspector general said the e-mails, nothing illegal. no laws broken. on the other side, a lot of people looking for an alternative to her say it shows everything they want. the idea she asked for permission for this is sketchy, at best. that the personal server made it different. you know than anything done before. let s cut to the chase. cut to the chase. she s lied about this. there s no question about it, whether you quote me, you quote chuck todd on msnbc or andrea mitchell. she has. and it s an awful thing, and at the same time, you got to ask about donald trump s lying. who is the bigger liar here? but the real question is about what kind of president do we have a president in the traditional constitution principles in this country which any of the democratic nominees, whether it s hillary clinton or bernie sanders, represent? there are independent candidates who represent that. but the question of donald trump is the underlying question in our history in this election, and that s what it s going to be decided on, i believe. but, carl, if you see he s picking fights with the press, yes. picking fights with a judge. yes the first amendment is in jeopardy, an authoritarian-type presidency we ve never seen before. at the at the moment, fights by insulting people. it s not about picking fights and insulting people. it s about what he said what he s going to do to the press, he believes there ought to be lawsuits against the press. we ought to change the liable syst libel system and free speech at his own rallies. he is an authoritarian and i keep coming back to that word and we haven t had anything like this in our politics that s reached this level. you have to go back to the demagoguery of huey long. you have to look at sin claicla lewis in literature talking about it can t happen here a kind of creeping neofascism in america. that s not to say donald trump hasn t identified in a resonant way with voters about the fact our institutions in this country aren t working, but his solutions are those of the maximum leader. those of a juan peron, a latin-american kind of dictator. this is something that republicans are addressing. that s what you re hearing from the governor in new motion coe and the question for republican leaders, it s very interesting what ryan has done here, is he s saying, okay, i ll throw in my cards with this guy. does the republican party of the united states really want to throw in their cards with somebody who is antithetical to what lincoln, eisenhower stood for, reagan stood for. reagan was not an authoritarian. this is suey generous, one of a kind and dangerous. carl bernstein, thanks so much for being on new day. let s get to ana. by the way, you can see donald trump today later defending himself on the lead with jake tapper, 4:00 p.m. eastern on cnn. to foreign policy. how hillary clinton and donald trump would handle tough issues abroad. who has better strategies? we ll break it down. a closer look at their world views for you, next. crowd sounds ] oooh! 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we got to hear hillary clinton last night. let s look at a point-by-point comparison. carl higbee, spokesman for the pro-trump great american pac, a former navy s.e.a.l. and senior advisers to votevets.org. commanding general of the coalition military assistance training team in iraq. gentlemen, thank you both for being here this morning. let s play a little sound from both candidates and then we ll react. this is on the issue of how to deal with isis. we need to take out their strongholds in iraq and syria by intensifying the air campaign and stepping up our support for arab and kurdish forces on the ground. we need to keep pursuing diplomacy to end syria s civil war and close iraq s sectarian divide. their days are numbered. i won t tell them where and i won t tell them how. we must [ applause ] we must as a nation be more unpredictable. general what appeals to you and why? first, thank you very much for having me. rp to isis, we have to contain them. we ve got to collapse the perimeter, and use american air power and surveillance reconnaissance, just erode theirs capacity to wage war. hillary clinton is spot-on on this and so is the president of the united states. the criticism is, general, that we seem less safe today than ever. everything seems worse than ever, and that happened, isis specifically, under the obama and for part of the time, clinton watch. chris, when you come to the vital national interests of the united states, we re okay. we have access to the common, the global commons, air, sea, cyber and space. our borders are secure. we have a problem in the middle east. it s remote. we re containing it. we re doing okay. we ll support europe, because they re at greater risk than we are. through nato. carl, the criticism on trump s policies that he doesn t state one nap he just said he s going to smash them, bomb them, it s going to be fast and i m not going to tell you because i want to be unpredictable. that s not usually how it works. what do you see? i couldn t disagree with you more. our borders are not secure and additionally this air campaign, hillary clinton made a big point to say donald trump is rogue and going to bomb and kill incident civilians. keep in mind, air strikes under hillary clinton have killed 90% incident civilians as they call them, opposed to the people targeting. so an explain that number to us. yes. under hillary clinton and barack obama, the air strikes they ve conducted through drone strikes, things like that, 90% of the people killed are not it the ones targeted. these air strikes, while sometimes effective, they are not the only thing. donald trump committed to putting boots on the ground to solve the problem. boots on the ground? very controversial, though, carl. you know americans don t want men and women like you on the ground and risking them in a battle they feel isn t even theirs? this threat is now coming to our shores. we pulled out, under hillary clinton s policies, we pulled out of iraq and the arab, the region, and what happened it left a power void so isis sources could fall back into iraq, create a stronghold, take fallujah and places like that and they ve grown so strong they can attack us on our shores through the europe. of refugee crisis. we are not secure. trump said he doesn t want to put people in there, but pull back. also said, see what happens once i get in there. general, with what year hearing from carl higbee what do you want to push back on? well, first, chris, i hate the term boots on the ground. my sons of soldiers, and it s soldiers. we re talking about the sons and daughters of the united states of america. so boots on the ground is a very bad term. let s talk about soldiers. we are doing fine in the middle east. we need strategic operational and tactical patience. this is a fight that s going to take time. it s an ideological fight. that s where the real money is going to be made. so we re containing these guys and will kill them slowly over time. so patience, my friends. patience is unsatisfying, though, to the american people, general, because they say patience means that the problem gets worse. patience means there s another san bernardino. patience means we re losing? patience as in, we contained saddam hussein over a decade. we did it very cheaply. we did it very well, and are we going to take some hits? yes. is it worth putting 100,000, 200,000 americans to the field? no. we re doing fine with our special operating forces. we re doing fine with our air power. and is there collateral damage? yes. it s a that s a fact of war, but we re doing far better today than isis is doing. we re winning. carl, one final point from you. within this context, not saying i disagree we your strategy, curious. it doesn t sound like donald trump s strategy. he doesn t say i want to go in more than ever. he s saying the iraq war was a mistake. he s always been against it, but i ve never seen proof at the time the war was being debated donald trump was against it. i know he says that now, but do you hear him saying i m going to go more all-in, more people on the ground? he said do what it takes. at times we ve discussed the notion of putting boots on the ground. general, all due respect, your philosop philosophy, boots on the ground. who irkas what they re called? your outlook and view we are winning the war is the reason we are losing it. i don t think people like you should be commanding people in the war zone because we re losing this war now because we re unwilling to do what it takes. it that takes boots on the ground, massive air strikes and campaigns, fine. thematter were have to realize we have a problem. and we need to get the public s persona in this. we need to do that talking about this discussion now or taking exception to the fact the general was on the warfield leading people? i think leadership he s displayed, articulated here today is not conducive to winning a war, respectfully, sir. general, final word. well, obviously i disagree. i am a patient man, and i understand vital national interests. the fight with isis is not a vital national interest to the united states. it is a conditional interest, which means do you you go in with restraints and with the appropriate use of air power symbol jns and special forces. that s it. general, carl, always good to have you both. thank you, sir. thank you for the discussion, guys. alisyn? chris, thanks so much. there is a cnn investigation that is sending shock waves. a former somali military commander accused of horrific war crimes. you won t believe what we found him doing at a major u.s. airport. that s next. thisproof of less joint pain and clearer skin. this is my body of proof that i can fight psoriatic arthritis with humira. humira works by targeting and helping to block a specific source of inflammation that contributes to both joint and skin symptoms. it s proven to help relieve pain, stop further joint damage, and clear skin in many adults. humira is the number #1 prescribed biologic for psoriatic arthritis. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections and cancers, including lymphoma, have happened, as have blood, liver, and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions, and new or worsening heart failure. before treatment, get tested for tb. tell your doctor if you ve been to areas where certain fungal infections are common, and if you ve had tb, hepatitis b, are prone to infections, or have flu-like symptoms or sores. don t start humira if you have an infection. want more proof? ask your rheumatologist about humira. what s your body of proof? poallergies?reather. stuffy nose? can t sleep? take that. a breathe right nasal strip instantly opens your nose up to 38% more than allergy medicine alone. shut your mouth and say goodnight, mouthbreathers. breathe right. no, you re not yogonna watch it! tch it! we can t let you download on the goooooo! you ll just have to miss it! yeah, you ll just have to miss it! we can t let you download. uh, no thanks. i have x1 from xfinity so. don t fall for directv. xfinity lets you download your shows from anywhere. i used to like that song. new questions this morning about the hiring practices at the nation s airports after cnn first reported a military commander during the civil war in somalia, an accused war criminal is now working at a private security guard at dulles international. cnn s kara phillips went straight to the source for answers ar first speaking to an attorney who represents one of this man s alleged victims. reporter: bones are all that remain of ethnic clan members slaughtered in a vicious civil war in the 1980s. evidence of the brutality carried out by the government regime in somalia. now, cnn has learned a former military commander accused of some of the worst atrocities is living in the united states and working near our nation s capital. his name is yousef abdi ali, also known at colonel tuke. he and soldiers under his command are accused of terrorizing the esock people, tock chers them, burning their villages and carrying out mass executions. 1992, somali locals told a canadian documentary team what they experienced under colonel tuke. a reign of terror. translator: two men were caught, tied to a tree. oil was poured on them, and they were burned alive. translator: he caught my brother. he tied him to the vehicle and dragged him behind. that s how he died. reporter: did you see tuke do that with your own eyes? translator: yes, and many people around saw it. he oversaw some of the most incredible violence that you can imagine. reporter: kathy roberts is an attorney for the center for justice and accountability. a nonprofit dedicated to bringing war criminals to justice. she s out in representing an alleged torture victim in a lawsuit against ali in civil court. he tortured people personally. he oversaw torture. reporter: but now, yousseff abdi ali lives in the united states, and we found him working at one of the nation s largest airports. he is a security guard at dulles international. our camera captured him guarding a security exit. he even started a conversation with our producer. what s your name? ali. ali. ali. ali, yes. okay. yousseff ali. yes. where were you originally from? somalia. reporter: a couple weeks later we approached him as he left his apartment. mr. ali i ll kyra phillips with cnn wanted to ask a couple questions about your time in somali and commander of the 5th brigade. no comment right now, but we ll get together with my lawyer and then i will talk to you. let me have your card, business card. tell you the truth, baseless. reporter: all baseless and false? no comment. reporter: what about violating immigration law, mr. ali? and lying about your past, sir? did you murder any incident people in somalia, sir? if none of it is true, then tell me that none of this is true. we will talk with my lawyer. i told you, i call you. reporter: now while mr. ali said he would talk to us, his attorney said, no. insisting his client is innocent. how dare anyone call him a war criminal. those are just allegations. if he is indeed a war criminal, take him to the hague, or if he s a war criminal, take it up with the immigration authorities. my client deserves to live in the united states just as any other legal permanent resident deserves to live in the united states. reporter: but right now there is no criminal court in the world where ali can be tried for war crimes, because the international war crimes court didn t even exist during somalia s civil war. however, the u.s. government says its been aware of ali for years, based upon allegations that he had been involved in human rights violations, but wouldn t answer any of cnn s detailed questions. i think it s really hard for the average viewer to listen to this and the fact that he is working in an airport that we all fly through on a regular basis. it it s deeply disturbing because that is a position of trust. he abused that terribly in somalia. in my opinion, he should be in jail. reporter: ali ended up in the u.s. after being deported from canada because of his past. he got a u.s. visa through his wife, a somali woman who became a u.s. citizen. adding to the outrage, his wife was convicted of immigration fraud for lying. she claimed she was a refugee from the same somali clan ali is accused of torturing. when we tried to find out how ali was hired we just got passed from one group to the next. ali works for a private contractor, master security, and they said they didn t know about the accusations about ali since cnn contacted him and they placed him on administrative leave. the airport authority did confirm ali was checked out by the fbi and tsa. the tsa, however, said we should ask the department of homeland security, and homeland security said, it s the airport authority s responsibility. so no agency is willing to explain just how it happened. in atlanta, kyra phillips, cnn. great reporting by kyra there. so now the obvious questions how did this accused war criminal wind up, would go at a u.s. airport? 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use a whitening toothpaste? i m afraid it s bad for my teeth. try crest 3d white. crest 3d white diamond strong toothpaste and rinse. .gently whiten. .and fortify weak spots. use together for 2 times stronger enamel. crest 3d white. concern over who is working in our national s airports. a somali war criminal, yusuf abdi ali works as a security guard at dulles international apt. he was only placed on administrative leave at cnf s investigation. joining us, barbara comstock. she sits on the committee for transportation and infrastructure and dulles is in her district. thank you for joining us. good morning. great to be with you. how does this happen, is the obvious question. a man who has been in the u.s. for 20 years, escaping persecution in somalia, not only has been given a life here but he now works security at one of our country s busiest airports in our nation s capital. what wint through your mind when you learned this? first, i would like to thank cnn s investigative team because i think they did very good work and have highlighted multiple failures in multiple systems. first, we had a failure in airport security, and that needs to be look eed add very thoroughly. the house of representatives passed two bills last year about upgrading security and vetting who works there. the senate hasn t passed them yet. i hope they will quickly taking up the bills and pass them and the president will sign them, but we need to continue to look at in this particular case the failures. then secondly, there was a failure in the immigration system. we know we have a broken immigration system. why was this couple allowed in the country? first, mr. ali was kicked out of canada because of what was shown in the media in canada with these atrocities, alleged or otherwise, but certainly they re very disturbing. and then we need to know a lot more about that. then his wife was convicted of immigration fraud, as kyra pointed out in the report. that s your second failure. third, we have a failure of our office that s at the department of homeland security that s supposed to be investigating when war criminals or human rights violators have gotten into the country in some way. so we need to clean up all three of these failures in these systems. i think what we need to look at in this particular case is know every fact and what was going on and all of the people involved with looking at our airport workers need to be looking at basic media that s available. as kyra pointed out in the report, this was you could google this and find out all this information that you highlighted. you went a step further. yet we have multiple agencies pointed at each other saying they didn t know or if they did know, they couldn t do anything. iening think most of us if we googled somebody and saw they were an alleged war criminal, they wouldn t get an interview. you wouldn t have to worry about them working in any type of job because you wouldn t want an alleged war criminal in your aufsz, no matter what office you re in. this guy seems like low-hanging fruit. someone whose history is right there on line. chris cuomo did a story in the past with this guy, several years ago. we know his history has been put out front, but he passed a background check. that does not give a traveler a lot of confidence in the system. my understanding from the department of homeland security is the so-called checks they run are just the criminal background checks, the terrorist watch list, which we know is incredibly flawed and didn t include anything about war criminals, and then they have other systems that they put them through. he apparently wasn t in these systems, but he was in google. that doesn t cost the government anything. so dhs should be looking at google, the people who are hiring somebody should be looking at them so they don t even bring them into the system and clear them for being looked at in any way, and then the airport itself. i hope right now everybody is taking all the employees at dulles or any airport around the country, put them in a google search and see what you find, so if there s anything like this. i would also like to invite your lyoning public to contact our office, to contact the homeland security committee working on these two bills. i hear what you re saying. there is a lot of finger pointing going on. you have asked for an investigation. you have billed. but the bottom line is nothing is getting done and the broader and most important part of the question here is how safe are we really when people like this are slipping through the cracks? could there be other people who want to harm americans and travelers? we know the aviation system is vulnerable. could they, too, be slipping through the cracks? certainly. that s why the bills the homeland security committee put through, my colleague from new york, he has two bills on airport security, and he s been having a lot of hearings on that. when is the going to happen? when is something going to get done? we need to senate to get in gear and get the bills passed. we also need to immediately do more investigation, and i m not happy with the response. i spent, and my staff did, all day yesterday trying to get more answers. we re in the same boat you are. everybody is pointing at everybody else. and we re not getting satisfactory answers. so that s why i m going to the public, who also to ask them, provide us more information that you know about. we re going to have hearings. we re going to hold people accountable. if you see something out there you know about, if there s not action being taken, please let us know so we can do more to make sure that incidents like this don t happen and that terrorists, as you point out, who know they want to come, who know they still target airlines, we don t need to have these kind of slip-ups in the system and have everybody pointing at each other. we need a system with built-in redundancies that everybody is looking at something like google, everybody is double checking and rechecking and raising these kind of concerns that you have raised. congressman barbara comstock, thank you so much for joining us. we appreciate it. we ll follow up with you to see how things are proceeding as the investigation and the bills work through congress. we re following a lot of news, talking to madeleine albright also this morning, so let s get to it. this isn t reality television. this is actual reality. lying, crooked hillary. he is temperamentally unfit. four more years of this stuff, we re not going to have a country left. it s not hard to imagine donald trump leading us into a war because somebody got under his very thin skin. he went there to kill two faculty from ucla. he was only able to locate one. a kill list leading investigators to another victim in minnesota. an adult female was found deceased. he had two semiautomatic pistols. an arm artruck overturned in floodwaters. we urge all citizens to take the evacuation notices seriously. cars floating down the street. this is new day with chris cuomo and allison cameroto. good morning. welcome to your new friday. it is friday, june 3rd. ana cabrera very happy about it. hillary clinton and donald trump exchanging fire on foreign policy. donald trump unloading on clinton after her speech warning of the perils of a trump presidency. he says, you know what, clinton should be in jail because of her e-mail server. she says, you know what, he s dangerous and temperamentally unfit to be in the white house. trump also wrapping up his rhetoric against the judge overseeing two lawsuits against trump university. trump says the judge s mexican heritage is a conflict of interest with trump s plan to build a wall. meanwhile, more violent protests, as you can see, at another trump rally. cnn s coverage begins with phil maddingly. well, hillary clinton s advia advisers made clear one of her goals was to delegitimize a trump candidacy. another one, get under his skin. based on donald trump s response, his counterattack in san jose, it became clear that probably worked. leading pretty much everybody to recognize that these next five months are only going to grow more intense, and as we look at the protesters, potentially more violent. i watched hillary today. it was pathetic. it was so sad to watch. donald trump coming back swinging. lying, crooked hillary. after hillary clinton s scathing foreign policy speech, eviscerating the presumptive republican nominee with her toughest lines yet. i will leave it to the psychiatrists to explain his affection for tyrants. trump calling for the former secretary of state to be imprisoned over the use of a private e-mail server. hillary clinton has to go to jail. okay. she has to go to jail. she s guilty as hell. the pair trading stinging one-liners. he says he has foreign policy experience because he ran the miss universe pageant in russia. the tool s donald trump brings o the table, bragging, mocking, composing nasty tweet. to watch her is like somannex. have you ever hurt of that. sleep all night. it s hard to stay awake. over the issue of trust. it s not hard to imagine donald trump leading us into a war just because somebody got under his very thin skin. crooked hillary said, oh, donald trump, his finger on the button. she s the one that stupidly raised her hand to go into iraq and destabilize the entire middle east. okay, because that s what she did. and the question of temperament. donald trump s ideas aren t just different. they are dangerously incoherent. he is not just unprepared. he is temperamentally unfit to hold an office that requires knowledge, stability, and immense responsibility. my temperament is so much tougher and so much better than her temperament. and by the way, we need a tough temperament. outside trump s rally in san jo jose, even more tense confrontations. mostly peaceful protesters, but some going fisticuffs with supporters. throwing eggs, water, and surrounding their cars as they exited. some anti-trump demonstrators waving the mexican flag. just hours earlier, trump claimed district judge gun za zaulose curule has an absolute conflict presiding over the civil fraud lawsuits against trump university. in an interview with the wall street journal, trump saying the judge s mexican heritage is an inherent conflict of interest because he s building a wall. the judge who happens to be, we believe, mexican, which is great. he is an american citizen, born in indiana, the son of mexican immigrants. the idea that a judge simply because of his heritage has to recuse himself has never been part of the american system. i don t see any explanation for this other than, i m sorry to say, bigotry. and chris, the escalating battle between donald trump and this federal judge only underscoring the unease some republicans feel about how donald trump has been interacting or treating with hispanics. something that s also been proven out with his battle with the new mexico governor, susana martinez, many consider her to be the future of the party. now donald trump walking that back a little bit in an interview with a new mexico paper saying he would like her endorsement. he s always liked her. chris. probably would like to rethink a lot of this because by talking to the judge, he kept the university trial in the news. i m sure that something he does not want. this should be about the policy. and let s get some deeper insight into what hillary clinton said about foreign poli policy, what trump s response should be and what hatters to you. we have madeleine albright, former secretary of state and ambassador to the u.n. she has endorsed hillary clinton. she s currently chair of the national democratic institute. always good to have you on new day. great to be with you, chris. thank you. so, let s leave all the name calling to the side that went on during this speech and in response to it and let s get to some of the basic arguments. the trump basic argument is the world is worse. obama as president has made it worse. hillary clinton was there with him. how can she argue that she knows the answers when she created the problem? your response. well, first of all, thealigation is wrong. the world is very complicated. it has come about as a result of actions that took place during the bush administration. if president obama is going to be blamed for everything, the bottom line is the situation was created then when america s reputation was damaged and democracy was militarized. but i think that what is important is to understand secretary clinton s record. she is the one that in fact was able to move on sanctions on iran. was able to rebalance our policy to understand that china is our most important relationship of the 21st century. was also able to work on a cease-fire between hamas and israel. and a whole series of issues that then also led to the recognition of cuba, a change in relationship with burma myanmar, and restored our relationship. i was listening earlier, and i think that what donald trump talks about that america is not liked by its allies is absolutely not true. they count on us. and in her speech yesterday, secretary clinton made very clear that our alliances and relationships with our allies are absolutely key to keeping america strong and to make sure that we are able to operate in this very difficult world. his point of pushback is that they may like us, but they abuse us. they like us because we re weak and temperamentally, he is strong. and you put a lot of emphasis on temperament and decision making, especially in foreign policy as well. you put out a tweet, trump-ish fashion, i might add, that said donald trump would flunk my class on decision making in foreign policy. the commander in chief test is even tougher. no way he can pass. why would trump fail your class? because he is erratic. he changes he says crazy things. i have traveled abroad an awful lot. and our allies don t think we re weak. they don t understand what he is saying and why he changes his mind, why he thinks that nato doesn t work, why he thinks that saudi arabia needs to have nuclear weapons, why he says the japanese need to be nuclearized. any number of things that absolutely don t make sense. that s what troubles me, because i have been, i worked in the carter administration and the clinton administration. i have been in the situation room. i know what the temperament is necessary, what you need to have, as somebody who doesn t think he knows everything but has people around that differ in their opinions, who is respectable of the people s opinions, who listens, who makes considered judgments and understands the unintended consequences of foreign policy decisions. donald trump does not exhibit any iota of any one of those qualities, and it makes me nervous. it really does. i am very concerned. the increasing negative analysis in this election, it often seems like you re picking the lesser of two potential problems. to those who are supporting trump or who are worried about clinton, they say her legacy policy wise is a russian reset that did not work, an iran deal that she participated in that gave one of the worst state actors in the world $100 million, and an e-mail scandal that showed she can t be trusted. well, first of all, the e-mail issue, she has said she made a mistake, and nobody is going to die as a result of anything that happened on e-mails. i am concerned about some of the statements that donald trump has made that are dangerous. on the issue of russia, the fact that donald trump admires putin is one of the reasons that i can t agree with a word he says because the reset takes two to reset. and putin is the one that has made very aggressive moves against ukraine and pushed europe around, which is why we need a strong nato. and the iran nuclear deal has made it clear that iran will not have a nuclear weapon. that is positive. so i think people these are very, very difficult and complicated issues that need to be explained. i thought secretary clinton s speech went a long way to laying out what was a rational national security policy. i would hope and i would be so happy to participate in this, is having really an in depth discussion of the issues that are out there so that america will be safe. and that s what we need to talk about instead of name calling, frankly. well, you can see what our emphasis is here today. let s take one step farther down the road of the iran deal analysis because with khomeini, the religious leader coming out and saying that the u.s. and britain are the biggest enemies of iran, it re-enforces the feeling that not only did you give him $100 million, but you seem to have given license to come after us again. no, i think the thing that we have done is established an international procedure for verifications. secretary clinton has said distrust but verify. we have a way to do that. and we have made the breakout of the possibility for iran to have a nuclear weapon, made that very clear that that is not going to happen for a very long time. reduced their centrifuges, their highly enriched uranium, and in fact have made a huge difference in terms making it safer in the region because iran will not have a nuclear weapon in the foreseeable future. madeleine albright, thank you for your perspective on new day as always. thanks for asking me, chris. always. donald trump wants to respond to what happened last night in this speech. and he wants to do it on cnn, of course. the lead with jake tapper at 4:00 p.m. eastern. you will hear from trump himself. let s get to breaking news. overnight, two more soldiers were found dead where an army truck overturned in floodwaters at ft. hood, texas. now the death toll has turned to five soldiers. four other soldiers are still missing. ed lavendera is live at ft. hood with the latest on the search there. ed. good morning. search teams are back at work already inside of the ft. hood military post here in central texas, resuming the searches for the four missing soldiers. there were 12 soldiers in all riding in this tactical vehicle which is like a large truck, almost like a big pickup truck style military vehicle, an open bed in the back. that truck was driving through a low-lying area. it rained heavily in this area, this part of tebs tex yesterday, causing a lot of flash flooding in the low-lying areas. the truck got stuck, overturned. all of the soldiers went spilling out into the water. three of them were rescued alive. as you mentioned, five s been found dead and the search continues here this morning for the four that are still missing. what could complicate matters here later in the day is that more rain possibly expected. that could trigger the floodwaters to come back up again. we ll see how that plays out throughout the day, but the search continues. all right, ed. another flooding story to tell people about. rain and flooding in paris causing the museum dorsy and the louvre to evacuate artwork to higher floors. the louvre removing 150,000 pieces. many of which were on display. both museums will remain closed until tuesday. we have new developments to tell you about in the ucla murder-suicide. investigators say the gunman who killed a professor on campus and then himself left a note in his backpack that led them to a kill list and then the discovery of his wife s body in minnesota. stephanie elam is following developments. yes, it looked like it was a murder-suicide that was isolated here to ucla, but that note sending police to minnesota and then discovering this was a way more tragic situation than previously thought. two semiautomatic pistols. one that he used for the homicide and the other was in his backpack. investigators discovering round of ammunition and a kill list, spelling out the names of three people at ucla shooter s minnesota home. they found an adult female found deceased from a gunshot won wound. this woman was ashley hasty, one of the names on sarcer s list. she was married to him in 2011. investigators finding her body in brooklyn park, minnesota. after killing her, he then drove nearly 2,000 miles to los angeles, descending on ucla s campus wednesday morning, intending to follow through with the rest of his list. he went there to kill two faculty from ucla. he was only able to locate one. he opened fire, killing his former professor, william klug, a father of two, then turned the gun on himself. the third name on the list was another ucla professor who was off campus that day. escaping what police say was a revenge fueled plot over intellectual property. he perceived he had been done wrong, and he stewed on this for several years. ucla denies any dispute between the school and sarcar. now, according to ucla, we can tell you that sarkar graduated with his ph.d. in 2013 in engineering. the dispute seems to be over intellectual property. as far as the school is concerned, they do not believe there was any sort of dispute big enough for any beef like this. they didn t think there was any throughout to professor klug or the other professor. a shame. thank you so much, stephanie elam reporting for us. after weeks of waiting, a medical examiner report now confirmed what killed prince. it reveals an accidental overdose of fentanyl. let s get to sara sidner live for us from paisley park, the late singer s compound. sara. good morning. we now know what killed prince. there are very stark details spelled out in black and white on this one-page report from the medical examiner s office. we wanted to highlight four different things we learned about his death. one, the manner of death. that they determined was an accident. two, they determined that it was self-administered fete na eed f actually killed prince. three, the fentanyl toxicity is what took his life. there s also a detail on there that may explain why he was using such a powerful, powerful painkiller. it is the most powerful painkiller on the market and it s opioid based. they talked about scars and amputation. he had a scar on his left hip and there s been a lot of talk about peninsula having hip pain. fentanyl is normally used for cancer patients or people coming to the end of their lives and using it to try to make them feel comfortable before they die. this is an extremely potent drug. and investigators are looking into exactly how he got it and whether he had an valid prescription for it. we do need to answer those questions. thanks so much for the reporting. well, donald trump continues to attack the judge overseeing lawsuits against trump u. what s behind that strategy? we ll debate it next. orld today could use a smile? at cricket wireless, we think so. that s why, prices for plans are all in, taxes and fees included. and we ve got more 4g lte coverage nationwide than t-mobile or sprint. that s a whote lotta network for not a lot a dough. it s what makes cricket 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for life. attack the judge presiding over the fraud lawsuits against trump university. in a wall street journal interview, trump says judge gonzalo curiel s mexican heritage is, quote, an inherent conflict of interest. joining us now, trump supporter kaley mca9y, and s.e. cupp. great to have you both in studio. the conventional wisdom has been for the past four years that whichever president will need hispanics to win. why is donald trump going after, making an issue of this judge s ethnicity? well, he s doing it to appeal to a certain segment of the population. that believes the reason anything is going wrong in their world is the fault of other people, others. and it s been working in a primary. i don t know that it s going to work in a general. i think this tactic is so revealing. it really is a slip-up for trump. because he has insisted that hispanics love him, that mexico will gladly pay for a wall, that he has not said anything disparaging about mescons. if that the case, why would this judge s mexican heritage be an inherent why should this judge s mexican heritage be a disqualifier? it s not. it s not relevant and he shouldn t have made that comment. it does make it harder to win the hispanic community. he is someone who is going to create jobs. he s speaking to a lot of issues they care about. donald trump i think brought up the heritage because he s concerned the judge is connected with a group in the san diego chapter of which the judge is a member. they gave a scholarship to an illegal immigrant. that s sending the signal we re okay with illegal immigrants in the country. what does that have to do with trump university? he feels that s antithetical to the positions he s taking in the campaign. i think that s a fair criticism, but he needs to focus on that portion, not the judge s heritage. we have heard that as well in the media, but cnn has not been able to independently confirm this judge had given been part of a panel to give a scholarship to an illegal immigrant. however, that is totally legal. that is, in california, that s part of their state s dream act. they believe, just for the record, that you don t invest 12 years of a free public education in some stellar students to only send them away. those are the ones you sort of want to keep here in the country. millions of people believe that. sure, and that s fair if people want to debate the efficacy of whether they should have done that or not, but i see coupled with the judge s actions declassifying or rather unsealing documents that he s now attempting to reseal because he didn t take out certain information or redact certain information. that s a questionable thing i think the judge did. as chris pointed out, the judge has also in trump s favor postponed the decision until after the election. he could have sped it up and made it happen sooner. you think there is a bias. i don t i m not going to make a claim on that. i think trump has facts in his column that could lead him to believe that in a real way. here s other facts. this is the opinion of donald trump by hispanics. this is the latest polling from fox news. unfavorable, 74%. and it seems as though he s not that concerned about this, s.e. he s doubling down, really, on a lot of the rhetoric he s been using throughout the primary, even though he s now essentially in a general election. i think he thinks if he says it enough, hispanics love me, i m going to win the hispanic vote, that it will come true. i think with hispanics, with women, a lot of the rhetoric and the policies he s suggested through the primary are going to come to reckoning in the general. they don t just poof go away because he says they love me and they re going to vote for me. one thing i want to bring up because this is new news, that this high-level rnc staffer, ruth gerrera, the head of hispanic media relations, at the rnc, she has left her position, apparently according to colleag colleagues, because she said she could no longer work to help elect donald trump. what message does that send? there that s a personal decision she makes. i know of many latino supporters of donald trump. i don t think it s impossible for him to win this community but it s going to mean not making comments like he made to the wall street journal. i want to get back in time now and play a clip from 1994 where donald trump was talking about whether women should work outside of the home. let s listen to this. i think that putting a wife to work is a very dangerous thing. i mean, we ll do an educational program here. if you re in business for yourself, i really think it s a bad idea to put your wife working for you. i think it s a really bad idea. i think that was the greatest single cause of what happened to my marriage with evonna. i have days where i come home and, you know, i don t want to sound too much like a chauvinist, but if dinner isn t ready, i go through the roof. i m sorry, 1954 and that was archie bunker. besides proving that in 1994, donald trump was a chauvinist, what does that moment reveal? i have to be honest, i m no trump supporter. being a traditional guy, having a traditional view of the way of a marriage, this doesn t bother me. it s not a marriage i would want to be in because i like to work and i don t cook dinner, but the fact he wants a wife who s going to be home and cook dinner, that s his choice. i don t judge that. if he found a woman willing to participate in that agreement, that arrangement, that s his choice. fair enough. and he has found those women. apparently. i think it s the language that jumps out at me, putting a wife to work. i mean, you don t just send her out to the field. if we bring up donald trump s 1994 statement, we should bring up hillary clinton s 1992 statement where she says i could have stayed home and baked cookies and baked teas but instead i fulfilled my career. i find that offensive to women who chose to stay home. why is want that her personal view like this is donald trump s view. it can be her personalvu vie but it s going to ostracize millions of women who have stayed home. should we dispense with any looking back at 1992 and 1994. trump and clinton. we re living in the 90s again. it s juicy. we re time traveling. thank you very much for being here. donald trump will be on the lead with jake tapper at 4:00 p.m. eastern on cnn. tune in to that. it s a story we ve all been talking about this week. haramby. will the parents of the 3-year-old who fell into gorilla enclosure be charged and what is the cincinnati zoo doing to prevent future tragic incidents? unique extended release h technology helps prevent the urge to smoke all day. i want this time to be my last time. that s why i choose nicoderm cq. what are you doingetting faster. huh? detecting threats faster, responding faster, recovering faster. when your security s built in not just bolted on, and you protect the data and not just the perimeter, you get faster. wow, speed 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defense. it s not just security. it s defense. bae systems. all right. we re waiting on the labor department to release the may jobs report. we re waiting on it right now. we have chief business correspondent christine romans. you have the number. i have given you the opportunity. what do you have? a really light number, a low number. 38,000. they re telling me, 38,000 net new jobs. that s a disappointment. we expected something more like 140,000, 150,000, 160,000, 159,000 was the estimate there. so 38,000 new jobs is a very, very small number. here s what i can tell you. i can tell you the unemployment rate is 4.7%, so it came down pretty sharply here. but why that jobs number? why that jobs number so weak? 36,000 verizon workers were striking for six weeks. we have seen in the past when there s a big strike like that, it can lower the number artificially and then it pops back up. so the important thing here is to think about the trend. the trend in the jobs numbers and what we have seen. so far, it s been about 215,000 net new jobs every month for the past year. this is a setback, only 38,000 new jobs. but a decline in the jobless rate, that means there are enough people coming into the labor market to lower the jobless rate. and you probably see that verizon strike really distorting the numbers. no matter what on the campaign trail, you ll hear people arguing about nuances in the numbers. i say take the long view. 14.6 million jobs added by businesses over the past 74 months. great to get your context as always. thanks so much for that breaking news. could the parents of the boy who fell into the gorilla enclosure at the cincinnati zoo be charged? that decision is coming down possibly as early as today and what can we do to make sure this doesn t happen again. on sunday, parts unknown, anthony bourdain heads to germany to the city of cologne. he gets a lesson on how to drink beer and eat schnitzel. this is what i came here for, surfboard sized slabs of veal and pork filled with many wonderful things, dredged in bread crumbs and fried in magical, magical deep fat. now that s a carnival i can get behind. wow. that is unbelievable. supposedly, you can split your schnitzel in half, take the other half home, and it s really good for breakfast. it s like the german equivalent of pizza in the morning. right. which is a tradition i totally support. considering it s a beer drinking culture, at the end of the night, will there be two or three or five or ten people hanging out way past the point they should have gone home, or does everybody reach a sensible point of intoxication and say, i ll see you tomorrow? you re forcing beers on us. i didn t order a beer, yet another one keeps coming. do you know how to make it stop? face plant into my schnitzel. there s an easier way. do this. that means, like, i m done. but nobody is doing that. not yet. i m not doing that. i have asthma. .one of many pieces in my life. so when my asthma symptoms kept coming back on my long-term control medicine. i talked to my doctor and found a missing piece in my asthma treatment with breo. once-daily breo prevents asthma symptoms. breo is for adults with asthma not well controlled on a long-term asthma control medicine, like an inhaled corticosteroid. breo won t replace a rescue inhaler for sudden breathing problems. breo opens up airways to help improve breathing for a full 24 hours. breo contains a type of medicine that increases the risk of death from asthma problems and may increase the risk of hospitalization in children and adolescents. breo is not for people whose asthma is well controlled on a long-term asthma control medicine, like an inhaled corticosteroid. once your asthma is well controlled, your doctor will decide if you can stop breo and prescribe a different asthma control medicine, like an inhaled corticosteroid. do not take breo more than prescribed. see your doctor if your asthma does not improve or gets worse. ask your doctor if 24-hour breo could be a missing piece for you. see if you re eligible for 12 months free at mybreo.com. once i left the hospital after a dvt blood clot. what about my wife. .what we re building together. .and could this happen again? i was given warfarin in the hospital, but wondered, was this the best treatment for me? i spoke to my doctor and she told me about eliquis. eliquis treats dvt and pe blood clots and reduces the risk of them happening again. not only does eliquis treat dvt and pe blood clots. but eliquis also had significantly less major bleeding than the standard treatment. knowing eliquis had both. .turned around my thinking. don t stop eliquis unless you doctor tells you to. eliquis can cause serious, and in rare cases, fatal bleeding. don t take eliquis if you have an artificial heart valve or abnormal bleeding. if you had a spinal injection while on eliquis call your doctor right away if you have tingling, numbness, or muscle weakness. while taking eliquis, you may bruise more easily. and it may take longer than usual for bleeding to stop. seek immediate medical care for sudden signs of bleeding, like unusual bruising. eliquis may increase your bleeding risk if you take certain medicines. tell your doctor about all planned medical or dental procedures. eliquis treats dvt & pe blood clots. plus had less major bleeding. both made switching to eliquis right for me. ask your doctor if it s right for you. today if prosecutors will charge the parents of that young boy who fell into the gorilla enclosure. this comes as zoo officials in cincinnati beef up security around that gorilla exhibit. jessica schneider is live in cincinnati for us. what s the latest there? the latest is that gorilla world will reopen on tuesday. when it does, visitors will see a brand-new barrier that surrounds the exhibit itself. if you take a look at the side-by-side, you can see the difference. on the right is inold rail that was up on saturday when the incident happened. zoo officials say the rail was about three feet high, but unfortunately, there was all that space in between the rail and the ground that that toddler slipped through. on the left, the new design that visitors willee on tuesday, zoo officials say it will be 42 inches high, about six inches taller than before, and perhaps crucially, it will have a knotted rope netting that no one can get through. the zoo stresses the previous barrier was secure and repeatedly accredited by the association of zoos and aquariums but they say they re putting in the new barrier because they think and know they need to take further precautions. in addition, right now, we re waiting for the prosecutor s review of the police investigation. the police investigation wrapped up yesterday. and the prosecutor says that they could have their findings about whether or not to file any criminal charges as soon as today. we will be on standby. thanks for the update. we know you ll be watching. for the women who have ended up on the streets caught in a vicious cycle of abuse and addiction, you can imagine how difficult it is to see a way out, but thanks to cnn hero becka stevens, those who need a help in nashville now have a place to heal. it s in every community. trafficking, abuse, addiction. what we created is a movement for women s healing. i was almost like a slave to the drugs. i lost everything. i just turn a trick wherever as long as i could get one more hit. i can remember thinking that i m going to die out here. when i was a small child, i experienced sexual molestation for years. it gave me a lot of compassion. those scars are deep, but it doesn t have to be the end of the story. to see the rest of that story and how becka has helped more than 200 women reclaim their lives, go to cnnheroes.com. even with issues like that all over our society, harambe is now a household name. why? for good reason? maybe for bad reason as well. we have two guys coming on to break it down, and they ain t afraid to tell it like it is. headache? motrin helps you be an unstoppable kind of mom. when pain tries to stop you, motrin works fast to stop pain. make it happen with motrin® liquid gels. also try motrin pm to relieve pain and help you sleep. everything you re preyou were once,w, well, pretty bad at. but you learned. and got better. at experian, we believe it s the same with managing your credit. you may not be good at it now. but that s okay. because credit isn t just a score. it s a skill. and you can get better. experian. be better at credit. it s a story everybody has been talking about, death of the gorilla harambe. what is it about animals that causes such outrage, especially when you consider the reaction to stories involving people? joining us, the host of united shades of america, and morgan spurlock. you guys have both kind of made a living pulling back the curtain on social issues, controversial issues of our time. what do you make, morgan, of this obsession with animals and in this case harambe the gorilla? i think it s not just animals, it s animals in captivity. i did an episode filming at the detroit zoo, and these are creatures that are similar to us, on the heels of blackfish, where you see a gorilla like this that is, again, something so similar to us, that we do like so much. that people love because it s like, look how sweet they are. these big crazy animals, but to see one get taken down in this way is tragic. you understand why the zoo did it and i still, i support the zoo s decision, but i think it s still tragic nonetheless. is it really just about the captivity, though? because if we did a story about a dog that s lost and the owner needs help getting it back home, the coffers will be full immediately. you do a story about people who need help, maybe it happens, maybe it doesn t. the weird thing, we love to personalize animals and depersonize people. even with the zoo, there s a sense of oh no, there s a poor gorilla. i m always going to choose people over animals. that s how i roll. i eat meat, too. you don t eat people? i don t eat people. i m always going to choose people first. that s how i roll. i mean, look, i think to be fair, we do see our viewers often reach out to help people as well. they do send money. however, just for context, 500,000 people have signed this online petition to somehow punish the little boy s parents or have there be some kind of repercussions because they feel there has been no justice for harambe. that kid is never allowed to go to a zoo ever again. not allowed to leave the house again. i think your kid falls into a gorilla cage, you have probably been punished enough. i get it, don t do that again. that s a great point, because just watching the video is so traumatic even for us and we re not the parents. those ten minutes of, like, blood curdling fear. ten minutes. i would be freaking out as a parent. and now i have a new baby. the idea of my small child getting sucked into a gorilla pen. but again, i don t understand how he got in. what were the parents do when this happened? there s that extra curiosity, the extra layer. you have kids, you look up, where did you go? kids are gone like that. it s part of being a parent. you get five of those moments and the sixth one, you re like, oh, he s in the gorilla pen. people can be highly empathetic and it s about helping those in need, but there is something about animals that often gets immediately elevated. for example, you hear about a fight and one man hurts another man, nobody really cares. when someone hits a dog, i did a story once where this guy got bitten by a dog reaching into a car arguing with someone, and this little dog hit him and he threw his arm like this, the dog went into traffic and got hit by a car and killed. they tracked this guy down like lee was a serial killer, found him and put him in jail because there was a dog involved. if he had done that with a human, sometimes it s not the same outrage. why? i hear you. there is that crazy paradaungs dox. they ll say because the animals were innocent. this was an innocent gorilla. the little boy, his dad had a criminal record because he probably deserved it. what are you talking about? what s the logic. let me throw this out to you because of some of what you have covered on united shades of gray, there was a blog united shades of america. that s next season. really tuning in. freudian slip. a little window into that. so we digress, very much so. took the train off the tracks. so, would somebody fife00,000 people sign the gorilla petition. you look at a situation like tamir rice in cleveland. there s a petition for justice for tamir rice. 120,000 people have signed that one in the past 18 months. why? well, a lot of that is also i mean, people like the black lives matter movement is working for justice for people like tamir rice. however, it s easy to sign a petition. it s hard to get the work done. there s a thing where an online petition goes around and people say, i ll sign that petition and i m going to sign it again with different e-mail addresses. what is it doing exactly? a lot of things with tamir rice, you have to show up and do the work. i feel confident in that, but i feel people love to show their support for petitions. they have a gorilla ribbon yet? that s what i want. so morgan, your new season premiere is happening tonight. 10:00. what are we going to see? we dive into the world of gambling. i go to las vegas, i live as a high roller and show you both the amazing, exciting side and the dark side. do you do the full whale thing? i was in the high roller s suite. i was fully whaled up. at the palms in las vegas. how sweet was it? pretty sweet. but then you start to talk to the people who are very addicted to gambling and see the lives it can destroy around the way. what we get sold is this amazing colorful idea of this is your chance, you re going to hit big. it s going to change your life forever. that happens to such a small amount of people, but that s what everybody banks on. real fast, polar bears in alaska coming up on your show. also, nice segue, i ate whale in alaska. you ve been there. so yeah, i got to hang out and sample some whale and whale blubber. sounds fascinating. they get you on the eskimo ice cream? they give you the whale fat with the horrible berries. gross. i want none of that. tune in tonight at 10:00 p.m. eastern for the season premiere of morgan spurlock s inside man and you can watch united shades of america this sunday at 10:00 p.m. eastern here on cnn. all right, about caring about others, how about this story? a man with a knife, a little girl in danger, and a police officer going beyond the call of duty. the story is next. inkle cream in no hurry to make anything happen. neutrogena® rapid wrinkle repair works. .in one week. with the. fastest retinol formula. .to visibly reduce wrinkles. neutrogena®. what if 30,000 people download the new app? we re good. okay. what if a 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given to him by president obama. cnn s ed lavendera tells us how this hero cop definitely went beyond the call of duty. he s my superhero. oh, thank you, sweetheart. that s so sweet. why do you say that? because he saved me. and he saved the day. wow. david hasn t seen zoey in three years. thank you so much. the day they met was captured by surveillance cameras in this oklahoma grocery store. a man named sammy wallace had snatched 2-year-old zoey from her mom s shopping cart. i started screaming. somebody please help. this man has my baby. this is 911. how can i help you? we need police here immediately. there s someone with a knife holding a little girl hostage. within minutes, midwest city police officers calmly walk in to this frantic scene. he was in this manic state where he was basically just blurting out statements. huff and miller were trained hostage negotiators. the next 34 minutes and saving zoey would be the ultimate test. i said, sammy, look, she s not scared of you. she s not even crying. then wallace threatens to kill zoey and starts counting down from skith. the only way i know that zoey s not going to be in danger when the shot s fired is if the barrel of my gun is touching his head. he got down to five, and i ended up taking one large step and had to do it. wallace collapses. but watch huff s reaction. i was angry that he made me do it. and at that point, i thought that zoey had already been cut or stabbed and that i waited too long. they finally came around and said, she don t have a scratch on her. and that was the best part. my superhero. you re the sweetest thing. david huff is proof not every superhero wears alavendera, cnn city. oh, my god. what a story, to have the video and to watch how they how calmly hey had to do that terrible outcome. oh, my god. his reaction. great for the little girl, but horrible to watch. most men and women deal with the best and worst of humanity on a regular basis. he had to do this, which is the worst thing anyone wants to do. and you can see his reaction. and he also gets to be with the little girl who never would have been there if it wasn t for him. thanks for joining us. have a great weekend. time for newsroom with pamela brown, in for carol costello. i actually covered that story three years ago. incredible to see that reunion. thanks so much. yeah, have a great weekend, guys. you, too. good morning to you. i m pamela brown, in for carol costello. thank you for being here with us on this friday. we have some breaking news out of texas. a press conference to begin any moment now at ft. hood. this is what we know right now. five soldiers

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Transcripts For FOXNEWSW Americas Newsroom With Bill Hemmer And Martha MacCallum 20160603



he is tempermentally unfit to hold an office that requires knowledge, stability, and immense responsibility. i will leave it to the psychiatrists to explain his affection for tyrants. donald trump s ideas aren t just different, they are dangerously incoherent. martha: donald trump wasted no time firing back in his classic fashion. watch this. i watched hillary today. it was pathetic. it was pathetic. supposed to be a foreign policy speech. it was a political speech. had nothing to do with foreign policy crooked hillary said, oh, donald trump, his finger on the button. i m the one that didn t want to go into iraq, folks! and she is the one that stupidly raised her hand to go into iraq and destablize the entire middle east! martha: that is trailer, folks. wait until you see the whole feature. chris stirewalt, join us fox news digital politics editor. good morning to you. good morning. martha: start with eggs, bottles unbelievable behavior we saw yesterday. if they believe hurting donald trump s chances opposing donald trump nothing they could do would be more helpful to donald trump cause then to engage, thuggish, anti-democratic, anti-freedom. this is against freedom. people expressing themselves. that you are trying to squelch the free expression of other people, gives credence to trump and his supporters claims, immigrants are out of control. it gives credence to trump s claim that some rough justice is required when you see this conduct, this makes people who might otherwise be uncomfortable with what trump says, say, maybe he has a point. martha: i don t think we ve ever seen anything like this. that woman being pelted with eggs, just incredibly uncivil and, you know, she held it together but really something else. in terms of the back and forth between hillary and donald trump yesterday, she went out there, supposed to be a big foreign policy speech. she basically hammered him during the entire course of it and he came back at her. what do you make of it? she has found her lane. that is why she ought to, and every democrat ought to condemn the goor badge behavior that took place outside of that trump rally because this is where she wants her focus. where she wants her focus is, make this referendum on donald trump. make this election referendum on his character and fitness for the presidency. not hers, not policies, whatever else, but is donald trump man for the job. president obama did that successfully against mitt romney. she would like to do it against donald trump. martha: thank you, we have breaking news. chris stirewalt. live pictures from fort hood, texas, update from a general on search-and-rescue mission for missing soldiers including five dead. first report of this incident and continues to be the search for our four missing teammates. while that remains our priority, major general thompson, the commander of the first cavalry division and command sergeant major and the entire leadership team is focused making sure we re providing the support and counseling for the families, friends and soldiers as we work through the notification and grieving process. i d also like to thank the many emergency services personnel, not only fort hood emergency services but the state and local community emergency services personnel who have so willingly come forward and have professionally been searching for our soldiers. i d also like to thank the community for their outpouring of support, their thoughts and prayers. they will be needed in the tough days ahead. you re well aware this tragedy extend beyond fort hood and. as priority remains on searching for our four missing soldiers and we re providing support and counseling for the soldiers, families and friends, affect affected by this tragedy. we have command sergeants major smith and command sergeant of major of fort hood who both are deployed to baghdad extend their condolences to major general thompson and the entire first cavalry division team. again, thank you for being here. thanks for your support and thanks for your thoughts and prayers. do you have any information as to the search? leland: wrap-up there in fort hood. as of now five soldiers are confirmed dead. four are still missing there in texas in what has been torrential rains there. these five soldiers and their comrades were in some type of a large army truck, a troop transporter if you will, when they crossed over the river bank that swelled over and were swept away. casey stiegel live in richmond, texas, just outside of houston with more. hi, casey? reporter: leland, hi. one thing we should also point out we heard a lot about from the crews on the ground there in in fort hood the terrain where this accident happened is extremely rugged. there is a lot of woods and mix that with the bad weather they are still getting and that is proving to be extremely challenging for the search-and-rescue crews but they are throwing every resource they have at it. they re using helicopters, k-9 units, boats and everything to try to find the four soldiers still unaccounted for right now. they are all part as you heard of the first cavalry division of fort hood and they were on a routine training exercise at the time when their vehicle everyturned while trying to get through a low water crossing. it was a 2 1/2 ton vehicle in fact. so that gives you a sense how fast moving those waters must have been. the commanding general of the first cavalry division releasing this statement and it reads in part, i m quoting here, your thoughts and prayers are greatly appreciated during this difficult time as we care for the families, loved ones and fellow soldiers of those impacted by this tragedy. god bless the first team. the three soldiers who survived and were rescued are in stable condition, recovering at a local hospital, leland. leland: and we are thankful for that. casey stiegel live outside of houston. thanks, casey. martha: what unbelievably tragic situation. we ll get more floods we re learning in texas as well. we will speak in a little while with governor greg abbott about the situation that he s dealing with on the ground there. that comes up in the next hour of america s newsroom. so much loss and fort hood has seen enough of that. leland: they certainly have and also the communities around fort hood, 30 plus communities, counties now under a state of emergency in texas. you can imagine the cleanup for this goes on for months through the summer. martha: without a doubt. we ll stay tuned for more information as it comes through. and another tragedy to tell you about involving our armed forces, involving some very well-known airplanes. one incident that happened in tennessee when a blue angels flight jet exploded into a fireball. oh, no, god bless his soul. no! no! oh, my god! martha: oh, my. anguish, of the people watching this situation. this pilot, marine captain jeff cust, killed shortly after taking off near nashville. nobody is believed to be injured. blue angels were practicing for a airshow, and at same time, f-16 thunder bird jet crashed after the graduation ceremony in colorado springs. the pilot avoided homes and parachuted to safety. leland: answers about state department intentionally deleting video about iran nuclear negotiations. that is when sparks started flying. so where is all of this heading? the debate coming up. this is the policy of the state department where the preservation of the secrecy of secret negotiations are, is concerned, to lie in order to achieve that goal? james, i think there are times where diplomacy needs privacy in order to progress. this is a good example of that. steady is exciting. oh this is living baby! only glucerna has carbsteady, to help minimize blood sugar spikes. and try new glucerna hunger smart to help you feel full. . . . . can we please stop with the lectures on smoking already? i ve heard it all. and i want to stop. but cold turkey doesn t sound that hot, unless it s between two slices of bread. can t we take this one cigarette at a time? cause one less cigarette feels pretty big to me. that s how zonnic helps me quit. with zonnic nicotine gum, every cigarette you don t smoke is a victory. 3 great flavors. $4.99 or less wherever cigarettes are sold. zonnic. every victory counts. martha: a very disappointing jobs report for last month was just released. the labor department saying u.s. employers added just 38,000 new jobs last month. that is the lowest number of added jobs in five years but somehow, this is always interesting trick, right, unemployment rate fell to 4.7%. funny how that works. real unemployment rate is 9.7%. that is the number that shows you, takes into account the people who have dropped out of the labor force and aren t looking for a job anymore. leland: a top obama administration official teeing off on fox news, this follows the state department s bombshell admission that someone purposely deleted eight minutes of video from the agency s website and youtube channel. it happened in a briefing there three years ago over questions about the iran nuclear deal. in an email, former spokesperson jen psaki claimed to fox news correspondent james rosen that the editing referred to video, not just a transcript as she previously suggested. and then, she turned up the heat. saki writes, i understand it is inconvenient for you that i have nothing to do with this, given you have spent the last three weeks vilifying me on television. i would encourage you to also ask the state department if there is any evidence, hopefully you will find the time to spend on the range of global events happening in the world in between attacking my character. here now, juan williams, author of the book, we the people, also a fox news political analyst and mercedes schlapp, former media spokesperson for president george w. bush, also a fox news contributor. welcome both. happy friday. juan, take you back to your time as a reporter from the washington post there on the white house beat. seems you always know you re on to something when they start attacking the questioner, rather than the question. no doubt about it. so what we have here is a situation where i think the administration feels on the defensive now. john kirby, who is the current state department spokesman, leland, says there is no cover-up. he came on fox & friends he is the one to make sure it doesn t happen again but when you see the kind of reaction from jen psaki, see kind of reaction coming from the administration at the moment, you understand they re back on their heels of this question, it is hard to get around the idea they don t like the exchange that took place between james rosen and jen psaki because it suggests there was some duplicity at play. leland: all right. well, obvious they now admit they were the ones who deleted it. they said intentional act now. you talked about kish by, state department spokesperson on fox & friends. take a listen. i want to thank james rosen, your correspondent for bringing this to my attention, because if he hadn t a couple of weeks ago i would have never known this occurred. so first of all, kudos to him. he is journalist that i have great respect for. leland: now, mercedes, state department, says, oh, gee, we reached the end of the line. we can t figure out who possibly ordered depletion leagues. would that have flown in the bush administration if that exact same thing happened? absolutely not. the state department says they can t trace phone records from three years ago. my foodness, they were able to track down emails and phone records from james rosen. how interesting. it really comes to play in the fact that they are on the defensive, because they re off message, quite frankly, plays into narrative corruption, media manipulation, censorship, this is something requires for someone in the administration to get fired. leland: juan, do you buy that this is just going to go away in the way the administration seems to want, state department says seems nothing more we can do, or time for media organization, washington post, other people, starting to demand answers? you have to demand answers. i m a big believer you don t mess with the record. let me be clear, there was some thought, maybe according to the federal records act there might be legal issue here, that someone had violated the law. what we re told by state department, this was not deletion of the official record but public record therefore there is no actual criminal activity at stake. i think when you have this kind of deletion, man, you are messing with history, leland. remember they had francois holland issue talking about terrorism and islamic terrorism. when he said that at a conference in washington, that got he deleted from his video record. you can t have that. that is not the way democracy is supposed to work. especially era when we have concerns as journalists all of us, going back having the real record, so that we can tell people what is going on, and hold accountable officials in our government. leland: makes it very hard to talk about the global issues, mercedes, that jen psaki wants everyone to talk about when they can t even tell the truth about their position on the global issues. last time i checked this iranian issue is a global issue and the mere fact that they lied to the american people, that this administration has decided to say, we weren t having these secret negotiations or secret diplomacy with iran, is unfair. it is inappropriate. the american people have the right to know. especially when you re talking about an incredibly unpopular deal that the united states has made with this iranian regime. leland: well, we ll have to see if the state department can t figure out who called ho when. one would think american diplomats have records sitting around. we ll see. juan, mercedes, have a great weekend. thanks, guys. thank you. martha: we have breaking news on a dangerous person who made it across other southern border. a chilling new report that individuals from terrorist hotbeds are being smuggled in an operation across the southern border. one got through despite the fact he was on the fbi s terror watch list. plus a well-known general forced to step down at a top university. why? we ll tell you. martha: frightening news from our southern border. people from terrorist hotbeds collaborating with smugglers to get themselves across our southern border. one of these individuals was from afghanistan, allegedly involved in a plot to launch an attack in north america. congressman duncan hunter is demanding answers from the homeland security chief jeh johnson. the washington times writes this, the documents obtained by congressman hunter confirms fears of a pipeline that can get would-be terrorist immigrants from hotbeds to the threshold of the united states. let s bring in buy i don t know rork, political correspondent from the washington examiner and good morning to you. good morning, martha. martha: this is a disturbing development. we heard a lot about people trying to get across the border and concerns that there could be terrorists among them and this looks like that confirms this. go back to the republican presidential debates earlier this year. this is what all the candidates were talking about, the problem, the possibility of that a porous u.s.-mexico border that terrorists could come through the united states through there. terrorists that can not fly in through jfk can get over the mexican border. this really changed the immigration debate. think back to a few years over the gang of eight, it was how much does immigration affect american jobs? does it overstress health care systems or education systems. but after the rise of isis, you have seen a real change in the immigration debate. this is exactly what a lot of republicans have been talking about. martha: so what happened here was these individuals got across the border and then they were caught by border surveilance. so the border patrol is saying look, this is a victory. they got through but our system worked and we found them but the problem is according to this washington times story, after they found them, they ran the watch list that the border patrol has access too, nobody was on there, they thought the guys were okay. turns out one of them was very much on the fbi terror watch list, right? exactly. ed good news from the border patrol point of view, yes they were caught. we don t know how many others might not have been caught. but then when we do know, is that thousands of people crossing the border are given a piece of paper and then let go. and, according to washington times, six of these people, one from pakistan, one from afghanistan, made asylum claims. they did a little paperwork and they were let go at that point they successfully entered the united states. they don t have to show up for a court hearing. they are here to do whatever is they were planning to do. if it s a terrorist act, that is something police will have to follow. martha: one of the issues, you have a fairly sophisticated smuggling ring terrorists may be using to get across that border but the other one that keeps just sort of coming back and smacking us in the forehead, byron, these watch lists don t line up. why is it that all of these years after 9/11 there is still no ability on the part of our intelligence officials to have one list and to have one person s name scan those lists quickly and know whether or not he is on the fbi list? that is a great question. goes you will the way back to the september 11th attacks. remember in the investigations after september 11th, there were some people saying we didn t connect the dots. one agency didn t talk to another agency. there was a whole new bureaucracy created in the department of homeland security, which is in charge of what is going on here. and still there is no real coordination here. it is a very difficult task. obviously there are thousands and thousands of to follow in countries which they do not have strong identification systems and the like but even now, u.s. agencies are not talking enough to each other. martha: which is crazy. there is this tide list that identities, data list, that the fbi uses. what good is having a list if a border patrol agent can t scan it, find out, hey, guys, you know what? the person we just picked up, the fbi is interested in him? how can that be? you have to find out who exactly the person is. this is large problem with migration inflow in europe as well. basically european officials have depended on migrants to identify themselves. if someone is coming to the united states for ill purpose, they re probably not going to do that. this creates trouble in a lot of areas, not just having a definitive list but actually defining or identifying specifically who this person is. martha: yeah, no doubt. southern border issues and immigration and people infiltrating them is probably going to be a net positive for donald trump when we go through this campaign period and it looks like this story makes that case to some extent. byron, thank you very much. thank you, martha. leland: all right, we ll have more on this during the second hour of america s newsroom. we ll talk to republican congressman duncan hunter of california. he is the guy who really uncovered the documents that is the basis of the story you were just talking about. martha: these watch lists are so unwieldy. there are hundreds of thousands of name on them which are repetitive. leland: misspelled. martha: amazing in the era of technology and way you look stuff up on your phone, there is not a more simplified, cogent way to get this together that it can t happen anymore. this is crazy stuff. leland: stakes are high. martha: we ll talk to duncan hunter on that. did you see this yesterday? hillary clinton went off on donald trump. making donald trump our commander-in-chief would a historic mistake. martha: that speech could be the most direct attack to date on donald trump and he didn t hesitate, as you might imagine to fight right back. and it is only june. can you imagine what it will look like in september? we don t say lyin ted anymore. we love ted. i love to pull it out and just use it on lyin , crooked hillary. you pay your car insurance premium like clockwork. month after month. year after year. then one night, you hydroplane into a ditch. yeah. surprise. your insurance company tells you to pay up again. why pay for insurance if you have to pay even more for using it? if you have liberty mutual deductible fund™, you could pay no deductible at all. sign up to immediately lower your deductible by $100. and keep lowering it $100 annually, until it s gone. then continue to earn that $100 every year. there s no limit to how much you can earn and this savings applies to every vehicle on your policy. call to learn more. switch to liberty mutual and you could save up to $509. call liberty mutual for a free quote today at see car insurance in a whole new light. liberty mutual insurance. trust number one doctor recommended dulcolax constipated? use dulcolax tablets for gentle overnight relief suppositories for relief in minutes and stool softeners for comfortable relief of hard stools. dulcolax, designed for dependable relief leland: hillary clinton unloading on donald trump what is likely the most direct speech so far. she mentioned trump s name 30 times and attacking him on foreign policy and questioning his temperment on whether he is ready to be president. which can not let him roll the dice with america. this is not someone who should ever have the nuclear codes. because it is not hard to imagine donald trump leading us into a war just because somebody got under his very thin skin. leland: mike emanuel live in napa, california the, this morning as the some comes up there. mike, a lot of lines of attack here. give us clinton s line on trump s thinking. reporter: leland, good morning. hillary clinton says electing donald trump would be a historic mistake and that donald trump is temper mentally unfit for the presidency. imagine him deciding whether to send your spouses or your children into bottle. do we want him making those calls? someone thin-skinned and quick to anger who lashes out at the smallest criticism? do we want his finger anywhere near the button? no! reporter: clinton did not lay out new foreign policy solutions. instead it was a series of attacks on trump. expect plenty more as we head into the fall, leland. leland: this is just the beginning. think about the speech and the sense that trump has been hammering away at the iran nuclear deal. clinton is forced to defend that right? that s right, hillary clinton says that it should be block every path to nuclear weapon and she says donald trump doesn t know the first thing about iran and its nuclear program. donald trump says we shouldn t have done the deal. we should have have walked away. but that would have meant no more global sanctions, and iran resuming their nuclear program. and the world blaming us. so then what? war? telling the world, good luck, you deal with iran? reporter: we are in california today with a primary here in the golden state on tuesday. bernie sanders continues campaigning up and down the golden state, holding large rallies including one last night in chico. polls suggest it s a dead heat here in california and sanders is trying to deliver a embarrassing loss to clinton in a key west coast state. leland. leland: things really tightened up in the polls. mike emanuel, napa, california. thanks, mike. martha has more. martha: hillary clinton showing her cards in that speech to be sure. expect to hear the trigger finger, loose cannon rhetoric all the way from now until november. she is the one with the foreign policy experience. she will argue, that trump is dangerous, can t be trusted. retired lt. general michael flynn says her past actions, he believes her the dangerous one. watch this. secretary of state who uses unsecure email server to send and receive highly classified, national security information, knowing that she s not doing the right thing, the rise of islamic state, failure of libya, the failure of the russian reset, the failure of the pivot to the pacific, iranian nuclear deal which she was directly involved in, yemen, there are some things that she touched that are just utter failures. martha: going to be interesting right? sam clovis joins us now, national co-chair and chief policy advisor for the trump campaign. sam, welcome. good to have you with us this morning. thanks, martha. it is an honor to be on with you. martha: you watched the back and forth yesterday and it is clear that hillary clinton has watched the donald trump rise on the gop side and she has seen how he has accomplished it, in part, by making mincemeat out of the people he ran against, calling them names, lyin ted, little marco, all of that. she has decided she will go after him calling him dangerous, calling him a loose cannon, that his finger on the trigger is a bad idea. how is that going to go? well i think there is a couple of things to take a look at. first i think the whole premise of her speech was supposed to be on foreign policy. i don t think there is very much in there and certainly if she wants to extend the record of barack obama, i think that s, we ll be happy to run against that. i think that will be very important from that aspect because of the utter failures that general flynn and others pointed out. we don t need to rehash that but i do think that one of the things that is very interesting here i think this speech may have been just as much focused for people inside of the beltway people in washington and people in california. i think she is sees that bernie sanders is right over her shoulder and i think this is really, what that speech was about. and i think one of the things that s interesting, because the premise going in, everything has been done is okay, i m going to extend that, we re going to be fine. well the truth of the matter is, the american people are totally disgusted with the way things are. if she wants to run on that, i think we ll be happy to run against that the. martha: sam, don t you think over the course of the next several months she will distance herself from certain policies, certain things done in the obama administration, say, i wasn t president then but i m running for president now and there are things that i would have done a little bit differently? well, i don t know. honestly don t know because so far she s tacked left very hard left and, i think it is hard to get left of this president. i think bernie sanders might be out there. left of, but i think that bernie sanders has made her tack left very hard. i think if she tries to tack back to the center and it will look confusing. that will show weakness on her part as a candidate. martha: could be. in terms of policy, and you re a policy advisor for mr. trump, the biggest criticism against him he is not fond of digging in, in terms of learning foreign policy, understanding what is going on with iran, with the sunni culture very sus the shia culture. are these issues that he is curious about, that he digs in on and that he will be able to face off with hillary on that debate stage? that is what she is going to demand? i m an old fighter pilot and we have flight test data on this and i can assure you he has great curiosity about these issues. i talked personally to him about this. he has an excellent young man with him nearly every day. steven miller is a tremendous asset to this campaign. i m working most of the strategic things and i know as we get closer and closer to the convention and then as we get ready for the debate season coming up after labor day i think we ll be primed and ready and i think this whole campaign has been focus canning on a crescendo. the fact we caught up with mrs. clinton this fast i think really startled her as well. this is why she pivoted to the personal side as opposed to policy side. martha: you may be right about that, but a lot of people look to this period and through the summer months as the time when donald trump will need to bring into the fold the rest of the people he will need to win. nobody can say he has not done extraordinarily well and exceeded all expectations being able to win the nomination and being able to close the gap in some of these polls against hillary clinton but now he has got to reassure people who are nervous about him and that is exactly where she is going. what is she going to do to do that. it is long anticipated and many people believe it hasn t happened. one of the things we re in constant dialogue with people all over this country, people who are experts. frankly i want to tell you we re not exactly keen on going to the tried and true 30-year inside the beltway establishment people who frankly have gotten us in the ditch along the way. so we ll be looking for fresh talent. the other part of this is we really are focused on the future. we re going to be focused on how to make america great again. if we think what has been going on has been good, all you have to do is take a look at the job numbers that came out today. my word, i mean what a hideous number that is. i can t believe anyone would say because we had positive job growth that was a good thing. it is not. just simply not, this economy is in the ditch. the country is in the ditch. we have people have no confidence in the government of this country and don t have a lot of time here but i will tell you in my discussions with people, particularly from europe and in eastern europe in particular, they are ready for a donald trump presidency because they feel abandoned and left behind by this administration and hillary clinton has been at the very point of the sword when it comes to american foreign policy and they really are looking forward to a donald trump presidency. martha: all right. we ll talk more about that. so hope you will come back. good to see you. i will. great honor. thank you, martha. you bet. leland: fisher man thrown from his boat is now thanking his lucky stars. the coast guard, as you can see, coming to the rescue. you will not believe how long he was treading water without a lifejacket. wow. new revelations in the hillary clinton email scandal that could be surfacing as at the worst possible time for her campaign. a judge says more emails need to be release but not from hillary clinton. who does he want to see stuff from now? we ll tell you when we come back. i will say this. hillary clinton has to go to jail, okay? she has to go to jail. that was a phony hit job. [cheering] she is guilty as hell. that detergent was like half the price! and we ll have to use like double! maybe more! i m going back to the store? yes you are. dish issues? get cascade platinum. one pac cleans tough food better than 6 pacs of the bargain brand combined. cascade. martha: incredible rescue on the high seas. the coast guard saving a florida fisherman who spent nearly 20 hours in that raging water with no lifejacket and managed to keep his head above the water. that is unbelievable story. fell overboard north of clearwater, florida, wednesday after he got lost. coast guard located him next day several miles from there. the fisherman said his navy training saved his life. leland: a federal judge ordering the white house to hand over a new batch of emails connected to hillary clinton. the release could come as early as july 11, just days ahead of the democratic national convention. tom dupree, former deputy assistant attorney general joins us now. good friday to you, sir. thanks for being with us. thank you. leland: as we learn more about the emails they are going to be released they are connected to hillary clinton, not necessarily from her. are these game-changers or is this another bloc pulled out of the jenga wall? they could be potential game changers. obviously we ll know when we see them. what people are interested in seeing the nature and extent of communications tweep usaid which is agency and clinton foundation. we ve seen some evidence of improper communications, potentially improper influence. i think idea that the emails might provide more evidence of that. leland: we heard rumors surrounding the fbi investigation into hillary clinton es email server that it may have expanded a little bit into the clinton foundation, whether there was favors done or improper influence on those kinds of things. cot emails be part of that or give us insight into that? i think they could. one thing they could certainly illustrate the extent either mrs. clinton or others close to her were using private email addresses which were launched from her home brew server to conduct official business or make communications that had an official component to it. and so the more we learn about this, the more signs we see of troubling usage of emails, of improper connections, improper communication, and it keeps going. right now they re fighting battles on multiple fronts to try to keep emails from the public. leland: we re talking on one hand about emails, we the public get to see. the lawsuits for these emails was filed bit rnc on other side you have the fbi investigation still ongoing. you ve been at the justice department before. give us a sense where the fbi is in that investigation and what it means in terms of how the doj are dealing with it. they re dealing with the conclusion. they re still interviewing witnesses, collecting evidence. but all indicators, public indicators we ve seen thus far suggest that the investigation is nearing its conclusion. once it does i anticipate there would be a recommendation that comes up from the career prosecutors within the justice department and career officials at the fbi as to what should happen, whether mrs. clinton should be charged. whether she should not be charged. what the proper steps are for the government to take. at that point the decision really becomes one made by the highest levels of the obama administration. that would go up to and include the attorney general and in all likelihood the president himself. leland: he said he doesn t want to put his hand on the scale when it comes to this. do you believe him? and as a president do you have the ability to put your hand on the scale, all the way down whether someone is indicted or not? obviously the attorney general works for you but how does that happen, that process? right. well, i would like to believe there will not be a political thumb on the scales. that said there are things that the president has said that do raise concerns on that front. you will recall a few weeks ago he made public comments where he suggested this might be much ado about nothing. and look, presidents can exercise authority in all sorts of ways. he could certainly give a direct order to attorney general i lynch not to indict that would probably be too heavy-handed. he could communicate views in i other way, subtly signaling to attorney general and career prosecutor what the outcome would be here. i hope he will not do that and he will let the process play out in fair, neutral, impartial way. leland: if that does happen what james comey, the fbi director chooses to do with the information, if people ignore, shall we say their recommendations. mr. dupree, we appreciate your time with us, sir. expertise, insight and your service at doj. great, thank you so much. leland: all the best. martha? martha: three-star general forced to withdraw from an appointment at a prestigious university. why dozens of faculty members claimed that this man was not fit to teach. leland: plus, boxing legend muhammad ali is in a phoenix contrary hospital. it s a sad situation they say. we ll bring you the very latest on his condition. you don t let anything keep you sidelined. that s why you drink ensure. with 9 grams of protein and 26 vitamins and minerals. for the strength and energy to get back to doing. .what you love. ensure. always be you. martha: listen to this one. a retired three-star general and former u.s. ambassador was forced to withdraw from a position at northwestern university after dozens of faculty members, signed a petition criticizing him as a quote, non-academic with a skewed perspective on international politics. mike tobin reporting live from chicago. mike, tell us the background. what s going on here? reporter: well, he has two graduate degrees. he lived and worked in korea, china, italy and belgium. he served as u.s. ambassador to afghanistan under president obama but faculty and some students at northwestern university in evanston, determined that karl eikenberry fit for appointment to new global studies institute because he is a retired 3-star general. a student started a petition opposing his department, a ex-u.s. general will think about internag politics in terms of war and perspective u.s. interests. 46 professors post adler in the daily northwestern as a faculty deeply kit committed to academic integrity we believe it would be irresponsible while the universities core mission of independent research and teaching becomes identified with u.s. military and foreign policy. in email to the washington post, ikenberry writes, this is the worst stereotyping he can imagine and affront to any veteran. he asked rhetorically what is it about a military officer s career makes him unqualified to serve. martha. martha: this is unbelievable. such an unbelievable story. so these critics, these teachers, who somehow believe that studying the u.s. military and studying foreign policy doesn t fall into the category of global policy studies were able to force him out of this post? reporter: it was actually ikenberry who stepped back in april, telling university that conditions were not right for the post. he had been approved by faculty senate. clearly he wanted a job. he purchase ad home in near by winnetka. this was appointment director of buffett independence statute of global studies established with a record-setting donation from the sister of by buff. martha? warren buffett. martha: unbelievable, mike. you did go to northwestern. leland: unbelievable, really not all that surprising considering what goes on college campuses they are unbelievably afraid of being politically correct. how does that change? clanks with money and donors. one gentleman, former colleague, former student there, long time ago he wrote to me in email, this is shameful. i m not proud of our alma mater. he has a lot of buildings named after him on the campus. you wonder if that gets the administration on campus, finally. martha: why don t professors say to students studying international policies, and forry studies, come to the class of this esteemed general, they don t have to call him esteemed, call him whatever you want. come to the class. if you disagree with him, speak out, question what he is saying and then you will have a debate and you will have discussion about foreign policy you will learn from his experience, and we hope you will disagree. we hope there are debates going on in the class because that is the process of education. do they not want these people to be educated? they don t want them to hear anything antithetical what these professors believe is the right way to run the country. leland: or anything they might be offended by. god forbid. martha: so sad, so sad what is happening on college campuses across this country. this is prime example of it. unbelievable. leland: think about what happens to the rest of the kids after this. after holding out, paul ryan now endorsing donald trump but is his support not exactly a total embrace? we ll break down just how important this is. we re going to ask fox news sunday anchor chris wallace who is standing by. martha: donald trump keeping up the pressure in california right now where all eyes are focused as hillary clinton fights to avoid what could be a crushing loss potentially in the golden state. you re late for work. you grab your 10-gallon jug of coffee, and back out of the garage. right into your wife s car. with your wife watching. she forgives you. eventually. your insurance company, not so much. they say you only have their basic policy. don t basic policies cover basic accidents? of course, they say. as long as you pay extra for it. with a liberty mutual base policy, new car replacement comes standard. and for drivers with accident forgiveness, liberty mutual won t raise your rates due to your first accident. learn more by calling at liberty mutual, every policy is personal, with coverage and deductibles, customized just for you. which is why we don t offer any off-the-shelf policies. switch to liberty mutual and you could save up to $509. call liberty mutual for a free quote today at see car insurance in a whole new light. liberty mutual insurance. martha: donald trump stomaching in california now with some new energy bolstered by long-awaited endorsement that came yesterday afternoon, first in the form of a tweet as these things go from house speaker paul ryan. he is planning a big rally today in reading and security staffers are making sure they don t see repeat of yesterday s despicable show of violence. [shouting] martha: what is going on here, right? brand new hour of america s newsroom. glad to have you with us on a friday. i m martha maccallum. leland: nice to be with you. nice to be with you at home. i m leland vittert. bill hemmer is on assignment this fine friday. violence erupting at a trump event yesterday. protesters attacking supporters outside of the venue. you see the riot police there. meanwhile on stage trump trading blows with hillary clinton. he is firing back after she stepped up attacks against him in a major speech. they re not even really ideas, just a series of bizarre rants, personal feuds, and outright lies. this isn t reality television. this is actual reality. when you watched her today, she does not look presidential, that i can tell you. she does not. [booing] this is not a president. four more years of this stuff and i ll tell you we re not going to have a country left, believe me. and if i win, believe me, make america great again, and it is going to be greater than ever before. leland: senior national correspondent john robert was there for the violence and the aftermath joins us now live. good morning, john. reporter: leland, good morning to you. there for the rally as well which was well-attended despite game one of nbc championships. inside, lot of celebration, big enthusiastic crowd but outside quite another scene. protesters, people bent on violence intermingled on the street, confronted trump supporters. my colleague shot video of a guy being sucker-punched on side of the head. it wasn t until he was knocked down, police came in to intervene. another very troubling scene. one woman, who was waiverring a trump shirt, who had been facing off with protesters, was sort of cornered in the front of the marriott hotel. she was trying to really stand her ground. and, doing admirable job of that, she got egged a number of times before people let her inside. authorities eventually let her inside. a lot of complaints today that the san jose police stood by and didn t do anything until this got well out of hand. that is when they declared it unlawful assembly. we were walking down the streets and riot police got involved. big political topic, hillary clinton s foreign policy speech in san diego. more of a screed against donald trump provoking a very sharp from him last night in san jose. let sly a little bit of when hillary clinton said and donald trump s response. donald trump ideas are not just different, they are dangerously incoy inherrent. this not someone who should ever have the nuclear codes. i watched hillary today, it was pathetic. it was pathetic. [booing] it was so sad to watch. and you know, she is up there and supposed to be a foreign policy speech. it was a political speech. had nothing to do with foreign policy. she made a political speech, tonight, folks. it was a pretty pathetic deal. reporter: we re likely to hear more of that when donald trump takes the stage here at the reading airport which promises to be a heated rally and not just for the fact it is forecast to be 106 degrees in the sunshine, when trump takes the stage. leland: we ll make sure you have a few bottled waters out there. give us a sense how paul ryan s long-awaited endorsement is being received. do trump supporters care? does the trump campaign care? leland, donald trump famously said he didn t need paul ryan s endorsement. politically better to have it, but not to have it. brings in line most if not all members of the house. ryan has broad approval of the conservative wing and mainstream wing of the pub bees in house. ryan tweeted i will vote for donald trump this fall. confident he will turn the house gop agenda into law. no secret we have our differences. we have more common ground than we have disagreement. ryan decided to get behind trump after the two talk ad number of times including in person. he said trump releasing list of 11 potential supreme court nominees was very, very helpful. which may explain, leland why trump released the list in the first place. close on the heels of his meeting with members of the house and senate the other day in washington. leland: yeah that list seemed to solidify a lot of people s opinions. john roberts, reading, california, will stand by for the trump rallyir. martha: a fact, speaker paul ryan as of yesterday afternoon is now supporting donald trump. so what is the impact of this? here is what the congressional democratic congressional campaign committee had to say about it. quote, ryan s dragged out decision underscores how truly vulnerable makes house republicans in swing districts but ryan only caused them further damage. joining us chris wallace of fox news sunday. good morning toe you. good morning martha. the that is big issue for some time paul ryan held back hisendorsement. he didn t actually endorse he said he would vote for him. there is concern down ballot for people not trump fans. what do you think? first of all ryan s endorsement and his office said afterwards, that is what we should call it was about as tepid and arm blanked as it could have been. he delivered it not in washington in a news conference. delivered it in article in local paper in wisconsin in the home district. no talk about appearing with trump, campaigning with trump. simply that he is going to vote for trump. look, i don t know that it s a big positive for trump but, refusing to endorse him would have been a negative and would have been a bad issue both for trump and ryan and house republicans. at every turn we would have said about what about ryan? are you going to endorse him now, particularly going into the convention in cleveland and to the degree that he kind of did it, kind of finessed it, yes it is endorsement but arms length as it could be, he is just going to take the issue off the table for himself and for other house republicans who are running for election or re-election. martha: what does it say about the whole thing though? i mean, what does it say about what paul ryan thinks is really going to happen in november? is he trying to keep his powder dry? is he trying to maintain ability down the road to say i wasn t really that supportive of him? we are on the same page on some things but not on others? what is he up to is the real political question here? i think what he is up to is damage control. he is trying to limit not obviously enthused about donald trump but he doesn t want to make it an open wound in the republican party, excuse me, and he, you know he wants to protect his members. i thought it was very interesting, in his statement, in his op-ed piece in the local peep, he said, we think trump will sign and put into law our agenda. he wasn t signing on. he made it very clear, he wasn t signing on to the trump agenda. he was saying trump would be a vehicle to put into law his conservative republican agenda in the house. so, again, about as tepid, about as lukewarm as it could have been but i think he is hoping that the issue now will just go away. martha: you know what paul ryan is concerned about and tax reform is very high on his list. he wants to get rid of obamacare, there are suggestions donald trump wants everyone to be covered. that sort of thing. he wants some people to pay more taxes. this would be the meat of discussions that these two gentlemen have had, begs the question, did he get donald trump to say, all right, you know, when you want to run your tax reform bill, you know up the flagpole, i m going to be there supporting that 100%, that kind of thing? no. i think it is very clear and in fact, ryan explicitly said, there are continued disagreements that we have, in effect he said, he is better than hillary clinton would be but where those differences are are, where they come up in the campaign i will reserve the right to speak up. in addition to issues that you talked about i think are of continuing concern to ryan, one is entitlement reform. ryan really made his name talking about reforming medicare, medicaid, social security. trump said he wants hands off those. the other that is a huge issue is the separation of powers and the question of executive action. obviously ryan and the congressional republicans have been very upset by executive action by obama. they re concerned, i know there were specific discussions between ryan and trump on that issue. will trump respect the role of congress and not try to go around them with executive actions. i m not sure he has gotten a definitive answer on that at all. martha: donald trump making a interesting bet on some of those issues in order to get elected he needs to take those stances and it will be quite interesting to see in the long run if he does get elected, if the pivot everyone is waiting for comes after the election and what kind of assurances he may or may not have made to paul ryan. fast it fascinating what is going on behind the scenes. thank you, chris. thank you, martha. martha: he has been an early supporter of donald trump and we ll hear he has to say when the former house speaker weighs in on the ryan endorsement. coming up with fox news sunday with chris on sunday. leland, disturbing reports that a man tied to terrorism made it into the united states via mexico. he got caught. what about next time? california congressman duncan hunter demanding answers. he joins us live next. martha: legendary beloved boxer muhammad ali hospitalized at the moment for respiratory problems. we ll have latest on his condition. plus there is this. is it your fault or your government s fault? it is your government s fault. we have to get your governor to get going. she has to do a better job, okay? your governor has to do a better job. leland: strum trump s recent lash out at new mexico s first republican latina governor, why one of the top republicans in congress is worried that trump could drive away latino voters. just the thought of quitting makes me want to light up. i say we take this one less cigarette at a time. that s what i m doing and that s how zonnic helps me quit. zonnic nicotine gum. every victory counts. martha: boxing legend muhammad ali rushed to a phoenix hospital with respiratory issues. the last word that the 74-year-old is in fair condition, however some sources have reported that his condition may be worsening. obviously there is some mixed messages are coming in here. we re working to get an official update on his condition. he has been hospitalized several times in recent years, most recently in 2015. he was diagnosed with parkin par kin son s in the early 80s. leland: disturbing new reports that a human smuggling network managed to sneak illegal immigrants from the middle east through the mexican border including a man from afghanistan who has known ties to terrorism and was part of an attack plot in either the united states or canada. that man is in custody. it raises questions about national security and border security. california congressman duncan hunter leading the investigation and co-chair of the donald trump s congressional liaison committee. thanks for being with us this morning. thank you. leland: you uncovered documents that these public reports are coming from and in those documents if i understand it right, the homeland security administration saying this is success because we caught the guys, not a failure because the guys were able to get across the border in the first place? yeah. that isn t true for a number of reasons. number one, back of the napkin math that border patrol agents do, they say for everyone guy they catch, two or three make it through. that is just back of the napkin math. if you catch one afghan with terrorists ties you can assume others have gotten through. that is number one. number two, when they first caught the afghan the border patrol s database did not flag him as a terrorist. they had to go to a different database which flagged the afghan as a terrorist. the same time there were five pakistanis with him. we don t know where the pakistanis are at all. they weren t flagged on anybody s database. we re trying to track down whether they were released in the u.s. just like they were here in san diego trying to find work, or whether they were flagged and kept in custody. so we re trying to find out, number one, why the databases didn t work. number two where the are pakistanis came through with the afghan. i assume they all know each other. these are assumptions pretty easy to be made. number three, the american people would have had no clue on this if wedidn t get the documents from homeland security. the american people would have had no clue what the obama administration and homeland security tries to make it looks like the only people coming across the border are nice people looking for work. they don t have anything bad to do or say about americans. that simply isn t true. the ease evident way for terrorists to get into the u.s. is across the southern border. in san diego here where i m talking to you from, we have actual border fence. we have 13 miles of double border fence and high speed road in spotlights. that needs to continue on through arizona and texas because in this story, the after again terrorists crawled under a little fence to get into the u.s. and he was caught 15 miles in. so a lot of problems here but the main thing is, we don t know who is coming into the u.s. and what they re bringing with them. we simply don t they. that is what is scary. leland: a lot to unpack here. let s talk about the watch list here, the failure, the epic failure what was supposed to happen if you catch these guys and run them through databases. is it as bad as it seems or is this comedy of errors a one-off deal? no i think it is as bad as it seems. what you probably have multiple databases with multiple government contractors that probably costs taxpayers tens of millions of dollars that don t talk to each other this goes into whole different direction as opposed to using commercial software from silicon valley where everything would sync up. this is monumental failure. when you think about 2001, we re 15 years from 9/11 and we still don t have homeland security bases that sync up with the department of defense and fbi in master terror watch list. leland: stunning. border patrol agents on the ground encountering these people, crossing the border, need to know who they re dealing with when they apprehend them. shouldn t take two weeks later to realize they re a terrorist. leland: to your point even if they apprehend them, everyone that gets caught, a number get through. congressman, appreciate your insights. as you find out more about this come back and tell us. we will do it. leland: thank you, sir. martha? martha: wow. the state department is stumped who ordered this video edit to on the video on iran deal. they received the end of the road there. keep walking. plus there is this. [shouting] leland: emotions running high in a courtroom and you might say, it was understandable. we ll tell you why this man lunged after the guy in the orange jumpsuit. 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homelleh the name of his estranged wife on it. when officers checked on her they found her dead. we believe at this point she was deceased prior to the ucla shooting. because we re so early in the investigation, the timing we don t know exactly at this point. no other calls come in this week on her well-being, any noises? that s correct. no other calls this week to that home. leland: investigators say the kill list had the name of another professor on it who just happened to be off campus at the time of the shooting. carried out the necessary investigation was a dead end in terms of finding out more information. martha: there you go, right? the state department ended its investigation into who ordered the deletion of part of a 2013 press briefing video which they just generally keep all of that stuff but, gone was several minutes of questioning from our own james rosen to then state department spokeswoman jen psaki about whether parts of the iran nuclear talks were kept secret. the state department telling james this morning that saki did not request that video edit. they say she is the not the one who asked for that to be cut. kt mcfarland, former deputy assistant secretary of defense under president reagan and fox news national security analyst. welcome, good to have you with us this morning. so the state department say, it s missing, that section of the tape and we talked to people and the person who cut it says they just don t remember who told them to cut it. i ll tell you this is pattern of criminality, frankly and cover-up. they re rewriting history. look what the pattern is. remember the irs was investigating and persecuting conservative groups and tea party groups and when congress said show us the records, oh, we don t have those anymore. we destroyed those. or hillary clinton and benghazi. where are those emails? oh, well i deleted those emails because i determined they weren t important. now you have got the state department spokesman where they have changed the public record, they dethe looed the public record. we don t know who did it. first they said it was just a glitch. now they were caught red-handed but we don t know who did it, move along, move along, nothing here to look at. when i worked in the nixon administration as young aide in white house basement, there was 16-minute gap on oval office tapes. martha: rosemary wood. he had to resign because in threat of itch peoplement because there was 18-minute fan. they seem to get away with it for a while. martha: what is on there is of substance. what he was questioning was so, hey, based on this new report we see in the new york times, it looks like the administration was talking to the hard-line mullahs about a deal. that all of this discussion started with hard-line mullahs, not with moderate folks who they say came in later some it is significant that they re denial that they were talking to people earlier in the game is suddenly missing. a lie upon a lie upon a lie. james rosen said in effect i think you misspoke or maybe you even lied to us when you represented iran, how you dealt with the iran negotiations. they kind of said, well, maybe we can t talk about that now they have gone back to delete that because, it didn t make them look good. now when they have been caught in that, caught red-handed they re pretending it doesn t really matter. again it is a pattern of deceiving the american people, frankly deceiving the media and then getting away with it. i don t think they get away with it forever and here s why. when political appointees tell career civil servants we want you to do, in effect something that is illegal and certainly unethical, the career civil servants always want to get it in writing in case some day they re held accountable for it. my guess somebody bottom this in writing. you will eventually find out what happened. martha: two quick things here, mad mid-lynn albright was discussing hillary: s email andt whole debacle on cnn. let s put the quote on the screen from madeleine albright. she said she made a mistake and nobody is going to die as a result of anything that happened on emails. wrong on two accounts. four people did die in benghazi, and we don t know why or under what circumstances or why they weren t given adequate protection at the embassy. the second thing, if hillary clinton compromised secure information, some of that secure information was things like, this is the name of the spy we have operating at the highest levels of al qaeda. that s the kind of thing that is compartmentalized in top secret, secure information. if that was compromised or hacked into, if some bad guy, some other country got their hands on it, that probably did cost lives. martha: thank you, kt i want to mention you wrote a great piece on foxnews.com about the foreign policy, so-called foreign policy speech yesterday that hillary made. so i would encourage everybody to check that out. thank you. great to see you as always. leland? leland: fox news alert. there is tragedy in texas, four missing soldiers swept away in raging floodwaters. five dead. the latest on the search and the state of emergency in that state. martha: everybody watching california. hillary clinton and bernie sanders are in a very tight race there and nobody is backing down as we count down the days to tuesday s big primary. let california, one of the most progressive states in this country, show the world that california s going forward with the political revolution. thank you all very much! how fast is it? plenty fast. it s not how fast you mow, it s how well you mow fast. it s not how fast you mow, it s how well you mow fast. even if it doesn t catch on, doesn t mean it s not true. the john deere ztrak z535m. it s how well you mow fast. . . you pay your car insurance premium like clockwork. month after month. year after year. then one night, you hydroplane into a ditch. yeah. surprise. your insurance company tells you to pay up 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alicia live from our denver bureau with more on this. what more can you tell us about the colorado incident? the pilot, major alex turner was so skilled he was able to take his f-16 fighter jet as low to the ground as possible and then he slid it on his belly in an open field before stopping. he also took it far enough away from anyone else on the ground. it happened after the graduation ceremony ended and the thunderbirds were heading to the airport in colorado springs to land. minutes earlier, they allowed the 20 3000 people including thepresident at the falcons stadium with their traditional flyover at the end of the graduation ceremony but something went wrong with major turner s plane, forcing him to reject . the deputy to report that major turner is in good health and that no civilian structures or individuals were hurt. he made aconscious effort to direct his aircraft away from some of the local neighborhoods here in the area . reporter: because of his skills, the plane itself is still largely intact and martha, after the incident he was bank in person by the president. martha: let s go back to the other story which is so sad. this deadly crash that happened during an exercise in tennessee. reporter: this wasn t long after we receive details of the thunderbirds crash that news crossed that the u.s. navy blue angels had experienced a crash as well. marine captain jeff koons was with the team, his f-18 fighter jets practicing for a show in tennessee when his plane crashed during takeoff. to live nearby and had watched the fighter jet performance team practicing say captain koons saved so many by not rejecting, staying in the cockpit until the moment of impact which kept his jet from harming others. that man is a hero, an absolute hero. he apparently went completely down with that plane when he could have, he could have ejected. he could have taken out neighborhoods. reporter: before the blue angels and served in afghanistan, he leaves behind a wife and two young children and both crashes are now under investigation. martha: such a sad story, alicia, thank you very much. leland: with the devastation and heartbreak in texas, search efforts underway now for four missing soldiers, five others were killed, three hurt when their truck got swept away during a training exercise at fort hood. yesterday we suffered a tragic accident where we lost five of our soldiers. our priority has been since the first report of this incident and continues to be to search for our four missing teammates. leland: greg added, governor of texas joins us now. you are busy, i appreciate you taking the time this friday. certainly leyland. this is just the latest tragedy that we have suffered in part because of the incredible torrential rain inside of texas that we have been hit by and obviously we never want to see a man or woman in uniform injured or harmed in any way so this is an absolute tragedy for fort hood once again. but also, leland if i could point out, this demonstrates to everybody the same message i am trying to convey up and down the state as we continue to experience rising waters. even soldiers can get swept away by rising waters so for the average civilian citizen in texas, especially the reason i will be going to later today, please understand, do not drive into rising waters because even our finest candy swept away. you need to protect your life and safety first. leland: absolutely and you were watching video rightnow, cars being lifted up and swept away , if it can lift up with a army truck it can do that to a car. i m looking to some of the numbers out of texas. 450 water rescues this week, 31 counties under a state of emergency. it seems like what you re dealing with there is a statewide crisis, some even call it a biblical flood if you will. it is statewide. i was in the northern region of texas yesterday at the top of the brazos river where flooding was taking place. as soon as i finish this i m heading to the southern region of where the brazos river goes into the gulf of mexico where flooding is most dramatic and that may be where you are showing scenes right now but there have been so many homes, so many cars, so many other pieces of property that have been lost because this but my primary message today is person for most that texas needs to focus on and that is protecting their safety. the rising water is coming up so fast, people don t realize that one moment they may be on dry land, just a few hours later they may be inundated. leland: so people need to be vigilant, they need to listen to local evacuation information and never, ever drive into floodwater. if you can give you one other story, we heard yesterday when i was in hood county, i hear it every single day and that is some people actually go around barriers within the roadways thinking they can make itthrough and they get swept away. there are barriers in the road, do not drive down the road . leland: not only can they get swept away but it puts endangered the lives of so many first responders, brave men and women who come out to see them. governor, safe travels down to houston and we are praying or some dry weather and clear skies. thank you leland. martha: game one of the nba finals goes to the golden state warriors as the defending champs hold on to be the cleveland cavaliers. golden state bench coming up big in this one, point guard sean livingston leading the way with 20 points. as a personal post season best for him, a small run by that cavaliers in the third quarter had steve feeling the frustration. had coach smashing a clipboard. the team went on to win 104 to 89. we have a couple people from cleveland reallypulling for the cavaliers ,sorry guys . leland: it happens. all right. harsh words from senate majority leader mitch mcconnell. what he has to say about donald trump s relationship with hispanics. has the damage been done? plus, there s this. . [shouting] martha: very emotional father goes after the defendant inside a courtroom. we tell you the background story here. p?p?h . leland: welcome back. friday morning at america s newsroom. of emotions reaching the boiling point in a cleveland courtroom when the father of a woman killed by a convicted sex offender lunges at him. . [shouting] no, no. leland: the father had just finished giving a statement to the courtroom when he turned around and lunged at the defendant who you can see was grinning at the father from behind that desk. the father had to be dragged outof the courtroom . the defendant had just been sentenced to death for the murders of three women. martha: the gop at risk of ruining its relationship with millions of hispanic voters, that according to senate majority leader mitch mcconnell who says latinos could turn their backs on trump the same way millions of african-american voters did with barry goldwater way back in 1964 and he blamed it in part on his constant attacks on prominent hispanic politicians. here s some of that. i think that the attacks that he s routinely engaged in, for example going after susanna martinez, a republican governor of new mexico, the chairman of the republican governors association was a big mistake . martha: joining me now, tony vega republican strategist and brad woodhouse, a communications director for the nc and president of correct the record. welcome, good to have you here. as donald trump often does, he s changed his tune a little bit on susanna martinez. here s what he says now, let s put it up on the screen. he says, i would like to have it, meaning her endorsement. i respect her. i have always liked her he says. tony, what do you think? i believe him. number this is part of the donald trump charm friendly but is not about to susanna martinez. the republican party has an enormous deficit with hispanics. donald trump notwithstanding. mitt romney, other than making one comment in the debates about hispanics supporting themselves only got 12 percent of the hispanic vote so we do have to repair that relationship. if you would trump, he is basically at around that 27 percent number in most polls. there is a variation, as low as 18, some as high as a third of the hispanic vote but the reality is if you look at results, when he s been on the ballot in these primaries, hispanics have had a choice. they voted for trump. in the primary, overwhelmingly. in texas he performed poorly and on the majority of the border counties along the mexican border which happens to be a majority hispanic population so, has the potential to over perform although i m not suggesting he necessarily is going to do as well as george w. bush in 2000. martha: brand, a lot of people in different sort of breakout groups i think this is true for women to, don t really love being lumped into these groups. they say we care about the issues like everybody else does so hispanics are concerned about jobs, they are concerned about values, they have many concerns and may not want tobe grouped into sort of well, i guess it s going to be an anti-hispanic vote time for donald trump . i think that might be right martha but remember, it was donald trump that lumped them altogether. all the mexicans coming across the border are rapists. all the mexicans coming across the border are murderers and the judge overseeing the trump university case is bad because he s a mexican descent. martha: he didn t say he was bad, he was just saying he s against me cause i want to build a wall.he didn t say he was a bad person or a bad judge. he was suggesting that he s biased. he s biased because i want to build the wall because he s in of mexican descent which is a ridiculous statement. first of all, this judge was born in indiana. he is a latino but he s an american citizen, has been his entire life so look. i think it s rich, by the way and i agree with tony. publicans have a real deficit. the last decent thing republicans did or said about latinos was in the autopsy report the rnc issued after the last shellacking of the president where they saidthey needed to do more to reach out . martha: i sense a lot of handwringing and a lot of time trying to figure out what happened with mitt romney and one of the conclusions was the rnc had a lot of work to do with hispanic voters in this country and if trump loses with that group in a way, there s going to be a lot more handwringing. no doubt, martha. no doubt. and in the aggregate, the growth and opportunity report which is the postmortem is right. the republican party has to expand. i worked for jack kemp, on acolyte of the big republican party. but the reality is donald trump has reached the electorate in a way that puts a lot of other nontraditional republican voters, blue-collar voters, independent voters in play and these are voters in critical states. pennsylvania, michigan, wisconsin, ohio. when you look at hispanic voters as important as they are, and this is to your point, the most important state with a large hispanic population is florida. you have cuban-americans there who overwhelmingly vote republican. this kind of idea that trump is going to lose hispanics on that, i don t think is really substantiated you really drill down and break down where it matters. martha: does it make you nervous when you look at the ideas that have been turned on their head in this election cycle so far in the primaries and you try to apply the things that happened in the past to this race between most likely hillary clinton and donald trump? is that to me, martha? martha: does it make you nervous when you try to apply old ways of looking at things to this race? first of all, i don t think this is an old way of looking at things. remember, as tony said, it was mitt romney that talked about self deportation. he classified all these people in one spot that they should self the port, trump has said he will round them up and send them home. it s not us making an issue, lumping all hispanics together. the polls are doing that. i don t know what tony is looking at and suggesting trump will not lose hispanics en masse. a latino decision pull at his disapproval rating among hispanics at 89 percent. i just want to point this out real quick. a clinton pollster said looking at hispanic polls, the sample sizes are too small. there s a plus or minus of 10 percent in these polls . [overlapping conversation] the latest poll shows trump with a third. [overlapping conversation] if you are talking about small sample sizes, this whole issue you raised about him winning latinos in republican primaries, you re talking about small sample sizes. martha: we got to go. you re going to be talking about small sample sizes all week long but thank you very much you guys, it s good to see you both. leland: you re going to be talking about this at home too. move over amazon. walmart getting into the drone gain. how that could help you get your passages signed, sealed, delivered and maybe a little cheaper. digital records. x-rays, mris. all on account.of penelope. but with the help of at&t, and a network that scales up and down on-demand, this hospital can be ready. giving them the agility to be flexible & reliable. because no one knows & like at&t. no, you re not yogonna watch it! tch it! we can t let you download on the goooooo! you ll just have to miss it! yeah, you ll just have to miss it! we can t let you download. uh, no thanks. i have x1 from xfinity so. don t fall for directv. xfinity lets you download your shows from anywhere. i used to like that song. leland: walmart getting ready to enter the drone zone. one of the biggest retailers in the world, the largest as a matter of fact, working with the faa and nasa to develop drones or its distribution centers. the drums would be able to take pictures, scan barcodes. they re hoping it can speed up the process of inventory check month to a single day. eric schipper joins us now, thanks for being here. absolutely. leland: is this actually going to work? it actually will. it s fascinating. these drones will be able to take inventory, really do what a worker could do in a month, they can do in a day so the the fascinating thing as well is amazon has been talking about drones and it s a big competitor of walmart. walmart wants to give its consumers the best possible experience, it s under heavy attack from amazon so they re going to likely begin to use drones now for home delivery which is fascinating as well so you can imagine, you order and have a drone show up on your doorstep with your package. leland: in so many ways, this changes everything you might say. not only in terms of how we do business but who does the business. if you have a drone delivering packages, you don t need as many ups drivers. you don t need as many in people in distribution centers. what happens to all those jobs? well, they are saying they will find other areas for the different workers but the reality is that it likely will impact jobs over time. but the experience to consumers will be a good one and so there s this balance. there s no question, technology is going to continue to impact jobs, robots are coming for people s jobs and businesses either get on the bandwagonor potentially they go out of business and walmart, walmart wants to be competitive. they want to continue to be the dominant force they re going to have to go the way of the drones . leland: they ve certainly been the ones innovating from the very beginning. thank you. martha: it is chaos in california, protesters got rowdy, i don t know if rowdy is the right word. some of them were rowdy, some of them were downright violent as this rally donald trump was out last night. the latest from the campaign trail after this. we will be right back. s leland: so great to be here. bill hammer on an exciting assignment, we will see what he s working on martha: he s working on a documentary we will see soon. everybody have a great weekend. leland: enjoy the weather, hopefully no rain in texas . happening now starts now. jon: it s getting hot out there. hillary clinton and donald trump trading attacks on the campaign trail in a preview of what could be a rough and tumble admiral election battle. welcome to happening now on this friday, i m jon scott p7 i m heather childers in for jenna lee. rough and tumble to say the least. mrs. clinton unloading on donald trump in a foreign policy speech, questioning his credentials, his temperament and leadership ability. meantime, trumphitting right back on twitter and at a rally in california, watch . donald trump ideas aren t just different, they are

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Transcripts For MSNBCW Way Too Early 20160608



in new jersey, new mexico and winner in south dakota. but bernie sanders is the projected winner in north dakota and montana. but the big one, california, at this hour, still too close to call this morning. just 61% of the vote in and as we have watched the returns overnight, bernie sanders has closed the gap. even so, the delegate math says it all. hillary clinton is leading by a commanding margin. she entered her brooklyn, new york, rally to the ebullient crowd, invoking her 2008 concession speech delivered eight years ago to the day. clinton reflected on the historic night and she extended an olive branch to bernie sanders and his supporters while contrasting her vision with that of donald trump. it may be hard to see tonight, but we are all standing under a glass ceiling right now. but don t worry. we re not smashing this one. thanks to you, we have reached a milestone. the first time the first time in our nation s history that a woman will be a major party s nominee for president of the united states. cooperation is better than conflict. unity is better than division. empowerment is better than resentment. and bridges are better than walls. when he says let s make america great again, that is code for let s take america backwards. when donald trump says a distinguished judge born in indiana can t do his job because of his mexican heritage [ audience boos ] or he mocks a reporter with disabilities or calls women pigs it goes against everything we stand for. we believe we should lift each other up, not tear each other down. according to the white house, president obama spoke with both hillary clinton and bernie sanders to congratulate them on a hard fought primary that energized the party. according to a statement he congratulated secretary clinton for securing the delegates to clinch the nomination. and it s shaping up to be a big thursday for bernie sanders. he ll meet with the president, confer with senate minority lead leader harry reid and hold a rally in the nation s capital. last night, senator sanders greeted a raucous crowd in santa monica. he began his speech framing the scope of his campaign from fringe candidate to winner of state after state. it sounded like it might go one way, but as he pressed on, it became clear he wasn t finished fighting yet. real change never occurs from the top on down. always from the bottom on up. that is the history of america whether it is the creation of the trade union movement, the civil rights movement, the women s movement, the gay movement. and that is what our movement is about. next tuesday, we continue the fight in the last primary in washington, d.c. and then we take our fight for social, economic, racial and environmental justice to philadelphia, pennsylvania. i am pretty good in arithmetic and i know that the fight in front of us is a very, very steep fight, but we will continue to fight for every vote and every delegate we can get. thank you all. the struggle continues. but it appears that bernie sanders will have to do more with less. the new york times reporting he s set to lay off half of his campaign staff today as they scale down ahead of the convention. after a day of unprecedented criticism from the top ranks of his party, donald trump seemed to walk back his comments about whether judges of the mexican descent or muslim faith could treat him fairly. the presumptive republican nominee said it is unfortunate that my comments have been misconstrued as a categorical attack of people with mexican heritage. the american justice system relies on fair and impartial judges all judges should be held to that standard. i do not feel that one s heritage makes them incapable of being impartial, but based on the rulings i have received in the trump university civil case, i feel justified in questioning whether i am receiving a fair trial. trump said i do not intend to comment on this matter any further. and in scripted remarks read from the teleprompters last night, he looked to move on. you ve given me the honor to lead the republican party to victory this fall. and i understand the responsibility of carrying the mantle. i will never ever let you down. too much work, too many people. blood, sweat and tears. never going to let you down. to those who voted for someone else in either party, i ll work hard to earn your support and i will work very hard to earn that support. to all of those bernie sanders voters who have been left out in the cold by a rigged system of super delegates, we welcome you with open arms. believe me. the chairman of the republican national committee reince priebus responded to trump s remarks. quote, great victory speech by donald trump tonight. exactly the right approach and perfectly delivered. the republican party establishment was forced to denounce the statements of their front-runner yesterday while left in the awkward position of supporting him. the early edition of the new york daily news summed up house speaker paul ryan s comments on trump i m with racist. and with ryan tried to talk about the poverty agenda yesterday he was quickly dragged into the controversy surrounding trump. claiming a person can t do their job because of their race is like the textbook definition of a racist comment. i think that should be disavowed. it is absolutely unacceptable. but do i believe that hillary clinton is the answer, no, i do not. i believe that we have more common ground likelihood of get policies enacted with him than her. speaker ryan wasn t alone as leading republicans had stern messages for their party s standard-bearer. i think a good place to start would be to apologize for the various totally inappropriate things he said over the last couple of weeks. another thing i d like to see him do is get on script. i think it s time for him to look like a serious candidate for president. which means that you need to think before you speak. you need to apologize when you make a mistake. and get on script. he s running for the most important job in the country. some would argue in the world. i think there s a certain threshold of credibility that needs to be met. well, listen, i like many other voters i m watching and listening and assessing what he says around what he does. i think that s what millions of voters are doing. and that s the way the democratic process is meant to operate. how long will that assessment process last? i think voters are going to do that from now until election day. and i m giving it time and watching and assessing. and now other republicans are completely abandoning ship including senator mark kirk of illinois who faces one of the most daunting re-elections this year. and who told nbc s hallie jackson he s revoking his endorsement. i cannot support him because of what he said about the judge that was too racist and bigoted for me. that was the final straw for you? that was the final straw for me. do you hope other members of your party do what you re doing now? i do i think we should send a strong message that racism and bigotry will not be tolerated in the party of lincoln. some have said this is a political move, what do you say to them? i m doing what s best for the state of illinois. an egyptair jet has made an emergency landing in uzbekistan after a bomb threat. somebody called cairo airport security saying there was a bomb on flight ms-955. three hours after it took off for beijing. uzbek authorities tell nbc no actual bomb was found during their search. cairo s airport has received three phone calls warning of bombs on board planes in the past week. and one more story breaking this morning. two f-16 fighter jets assigned to the air national guard crashed overnight. it happened near a military operating area in jefferson county, georgia. in a statement military officials say, both pilots ejected safely after midair collisions while performing routine night flying operations. the air force will be conducting a safety investigation. this comes a week after an air force thunderbird crashed in colorado. the thunderbirds returned to flying yesterday. a michigan man is in police custody this morning after allegedly hitting a group of bicycli bicyclists. killing five of them, injuring four more. it happened yesterday just north of kalamazoo when a pickup truck plowed into the riders. the city started to get phone calls a half hour with reports about a truck driving erratically and then disaster struck. a loss, to describe how i feel. i m at a loss to describe the impact to the community from these incidents. police at this point are not releasing the identity of the 50-year-old driver who fled from the scene of the crash. kalamazoo, no stranger to tragedy on the road this year. yesterday, lawyers for jason dalton the uber driver accused of killing six people while on a shooting rampage earlier this year announced he plans to plead not guilty by reason of insanity. three-time oscar winner meryl streep channels donald trump in her latest performance. plus, tiger woods the former number one golfer in the world is set to miss another major championship. those stories and a check on weather when way too early comes right back. real is touching a ray. amazing is moving like one. real is making new friends. amazing is getting this close. real is an animal rescue. amazing is over twenty-seven thousand of them. there is only one place where real and amazing live. seaworld. real. amazing trust number one doctor recommended dulcolax constipated? use dulcolax tablets for gentle overnight relief suppositories for relief in minutes and stool softeners for comfortable relief of hard stools. dulcolax, designed for dependable relief with usaa is awesome. homeowners insurance life insurance automobile insurance i spent 20 years active duty they still refer to me as gunnery sergeant when i call being a usaa member because of my service in the military to pass that on to my ki something that makes me happy my name is roger zapata andi . usaa. we knowhat it means toerve. get an insurance quote and s s why 92% of our members plan to stay for life. the you who doesn t cover your moderate to severe plaque psoriasis. be the you who shows up in that dress. who hugs a friend. who is done with treatments that don t give you clearer skin. be the you who controls your psoriasis withtelara® just 4 doses a year after 2 starter doses. stelara® may lower your ability to fht infections and may increase your risk of infections and cancer. some serious infections requirhospitalization. before treatme, get before starting stelara® tell your doctor iyou think you have an infection or have symptoms such as: tfever, sweats, chills, thimusc aches or cough.tion have had cancer, if you develop haveany new skin growthsion, or if anyone in your house needs or has recently received a vaccine. alert your doctor of new or worsening problems, including headaches, seizures, confusion and vision problems these may be signs of a rare, potentially fatal brain conditio some serious allergic reactions can occur. do not take stelara® if you are allergic to stelara® or any of its ingredients. most people using stelara® saw 75% clearer skin and the majority were ted as cleared or minimal at 12 weeks. be the you who talks to your dermatologist about stelara®. welcome back to way too early. let s turn to business where trading is tepid in asia as investors wait for economic data. and oil is at a high for 2016 with crude settling above $50 a barrel for the first time in a year. cnbc s julia chatterley joins us live from london. julia, tell us more. good morning, jonathan. you re right. oil lighting a fire into energy stocks in the u.s. yesterday, but that really was the bright spot. we fizzled into the close. and it s a similar story here in europe. stocks lower. a couple of reasons as you mentioned weaker chinese export data raising concerns about global concern. we heard from the world bank overnight to slashing global growth forecasts and growth forecasts for the u.s. this year. investors are cautious in trading today. fizzle on u.s. stocks and fizzle as well for keurig green mountain. do you remember ten months ago when they launched cold to much fanfare, it would be bigger than coffee machines in the u.s., but they have pulled the plug. no reason given. and it was sold at $369.99 and i wonder if the consumers thought it s quicker, cheaper and easier to go to the fridge and get a can out. what will i know, but if you bought one, you can get a refund. jonathan, back to you. julia chatterley, thank you. time now for sports and new details in the death of mma star kimbo slice. the south florida sun-sentinel reports he had been diagnosed with heart failure and he needed a transplant. slice was hospitalized on friday where he was found to have a liver mass and congestive heart failure and he was placed on a ventilator in intensive care. that according to information, the hospital is said to have reported to the broward county medical examiner. slice was reportedly passed away monday night as doctors prepared his transfer to a different facility where he could be placed on the organ donor list. he was 42 years old. in golf, tiger woods has announced he will not play at next week s u.s. open or the quicken loans national later this month as the 14-time major champion continues to rehab a surgically repaired back. in a post on his website, woods writes, while i continue to work hard on getting healthy i am not physically ready to play in this year s u.s. open and the quicken loans national. i am making progress but i m not yet ready for tournament competition. woods last competed in august of last year. he finished in a tie for tenth. and in soccer the u.s. men s national team is celebrating its first victory at the copa america since 1995. rebounding from an opening loss to colombia on friday with a 4-0 win over costa rica last night. clint dempsey scored a score and assisted on two others as the united states readies to take on paraguay in philadelphia on saturday night. turning to major league baseball. in baltimore, royals outfielder lorenzo kane chasing down the deep fly ball to left center field makes a spectacular catch to rob the orioles pedro alvarez of a home run in the first inning but the game s highest drama came in the fifth when baltimore pitcher ventura pegs machado with a fastball. he charges the mound as you can see. and one swing at the head of ventura as both benches pour on to the field. once the dust settles both players are ejected from the game. baltimore however would go on to beat kansas city 9-1. finally, game two of the women s college world series championship up. auburn after battling back from being down 7-0 against oklahoma finds itself in a tie game in the bottom of the eighth inning. the bases are loaded for auburn. they only need one to win it. and they re going to get it. they re going to get all four of them. auburn wins it. we are going to game 3 tomorrow night. a walk-off grand slam knotted the series at one game apiece after the 11-7 victory. she was on top of the world, jonathan. yeah. absolutely. great ending. well, bill, what s going on with the weather? we re going to have some fast moving storms in new england. still watching florida. there s some moisture heading up here. there s a flood watch in effect for central florida. does not include orlando, but port st. lucie. if we get any thunderstorms, we could get more than that. this is a minor concern, not anything too devastating. as far as the rainfall in new england, we had the fast moving showers yesterday and we have additional storms moving across central pennsylvania. this will be fast moving and it can intensify around new york city and hudson valley. maybe small hail with the storms. here s how it will time out. 8:00 a.m., the storms approach binghamton and scranton. by noon, the storms are in northern new jersey headed through trenton and philadelphia. keep that in mind. quick downpours, small hail. new york city the timing looks around 1:00 p.m. today. then out towards long island as we go throughout the afternoon. the drive home, the storms are in boston and providence. fast moving, but it will hit you quickly and it will be hard when it does. the heat is on. it was very hot in the west, now headed into the rockies and in the middle of the country over the next five days it will be warm. 93 in dallas. 84 in denver. jonathan, you enjoy that 73 in washington, d.c., because you know that summer heat and humidity is not far away. this is as nice as it gets for where you are. i ll try to enjoy it. thanks. while winning a fashion icon award, beyonce reminisces about a time when high end designers didn t want to dress her. we re back in a minute. hey kevin. hey, fancy seeing you here. uh, i live right over there actually. you ve been to my place. no, i wasn t.oh look, you dropped something. it s your resume with a 20 dollar bill taped to it. that s weird. you want to work for ge too. hahaha, what? well we re always looking for developers who are up for big world changing challenges like making planes, trains and hospitals run better. why don t you check yo new watch and hand tell me what time i should be there. oh, i don t hire people. i m a developer. i m gonna need monday off. again, not my call. now let s get a check on the morning s other headlines and for that we head to the control room and louis burgdorf. good morning, nice tie. new details on muhammad ali s funeral. we told you that former president bill clinton would deliver the eulogy for the heavyweight champion. actor will smith who played ali in the biopic will be a pallbearer along with lennox lewis. it is being reported that ali along with a team of family and khloe advisers began detailing his funeral preparation back in 2010. the plans are so detailed it became known as quote, the book. included was his wish that various religions have a voice at his funeral while still honoring the traditions of his muslim faith. the service on friday will be held in an arena in his hometown of louisville. fans are invited to attend. a tradition muslim service will be held in the same place where he won his first professional fight back in 1960. the awards honors the most influential names in the industry, presented beyonce with the fashion icon award. she spoke about the struggle she faced getting designers to dress her early in her career and thanked her family for their help in the beginning. she went on to praise designers for their contributions to culture and how their creations elevate the way people feel. when we were starting out in destiny s child, high end labels they didn t really want to dress the black curvy girls. we couldn t afford dressers in couture. soul has no color, no shape, no form. just like all of your work it goes far beyond what the eyes can see. you have the power to change perception to inspire and empower and to show people how to embrace their complications and see the flaws and the true beauty and strength inside all of us. thank you so much for this incredible award. i ll never forget this night. great speech there, jonathan. back to you. all right, louis, thanks. breaking news we want to report just in. nbc news has just called california for hillary clinton. now, that does it for me and way too early. coming up on morning joe, eight years to the day after she gave her concession speech, hillary clinton is now her party s presumptive nominee. but bernie sanders vows to fight on. and on and on. and later, republicans increasingly have to answer for donald trump s comments. now the first defections begin. that and much more coming up next on morning joe. using 60,000 points from my chase ink card i bought all the fruit. veggies. and herbs needed to create a pop-up pick-your-own juice bar in the middle of the city, so now everyone knows. we have some of the freshest juice in town. see what the power of points can do for your business. learn more at chase.com/ink see what the power of points can do for your business. that s life. you diet. you exercise. and if you still need help lowering your blood sugar. .this is jardiance. along with diet and exercise. jardiance works around the clock. this can help you lower adulblood sugar and a1c.tes. and although it s not for weight loss or lowering systolic blood presre, jardiance could help with both. jardiance can cause serious side effects includg dehydrion. this may cause you to feel y, faint, orightheaded, oreak upon staing. ketoacidosis is a serious side effect that can be li-threatening. symptoms include nausea, voti, stomach pain, tiredness, and trouble breathing. stop taking jardiae and callour doctor right away if you have symptoms of ketoacidosis or an allergic reaction. symptoms of an allergic reaction include rash, swelling, and difficulty breathing or swallowing. do not take jardiance if you are on dialysis or 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[ cheers and applause ] we will continue to fight for every vote and every delegate we can get. [ cheers and applause ] thank you all. the struggle continues. last night hillary clinton claimed victory in the democratic primary. bernie sanders vows to fight on in next week s final contest in washington, d.c., and then the convention in philadelphia. what an incredible night. incredible night for hillary, a great speech and moment in history. let s look at the races, big one. nbc news just projected hillary clinton the winner there. she s also the projected winner in new jersey, new mexico, and

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Transcripts For KGO ABC World News Tonight With David Muir 20180407



california store. video showing shoppers scrambling for safety. tonight, the clues that led to the alleged bomber. and good evening. thanks for joining us on this saturday. i m tom llamas. and we begin tonight with the breaking news as we come on the air. a fire has broken out in trump tower here in new york city. you can see the flames shooting out from the president s skyscraper. at least one person reported in serious condition. abc s zachary kiesch is there. what have you learned? reporter: tom, firefighters have just knocked down a fire here at trump tower just behind me here. you can still see a lot of activity out here, obviously. this is the home to president s famous penthouse. flames and black smoke could be seen coming out of the tower and according to the fdny, they got a call at 5:30 of a fire on the 50th floor. now, the president was in washington at the time. one person is in serious condition, but there were no official evacuations. the building since the president was elects has been under 24-hour surveillance. the fdny is on the scene, conducti ining secondary search. the president tweeting, saying, they did a great job. tom? zachary, thank you. we do move on now to the extreme weather. we ve been tracking six tornadoes sweeping across the south. plus drivers dealing with heavy snow in south dakota. and take a look at this. a massive landslide in east pittsburgh. the area taking a beaten this winter with an unusual amount of wet weather. did the soaking rains contribute to this snesz abc s kenneth moton reports. reporter: there s no escaping mother nature tonight as she torments millions from coast-to-coast. six reported tornadoes touched down from texas to mississippi. this gas station outside shreveport, louisiana, demolished in the dead of night. powerful winds toppled trees, blew out windows and tore the roof off this house. lightning sparked across the mississippi sky. and emergency sirens could be heard across rockwell, texas. torrential rain washed out roadways and dumped large hail. it s the size of a tennis ball. reporter: spring snow blanketed the midwest. whiteout conditions blinded these drivers in south dakota. icy conditions are being blamed for this nine-car pileup in colorado. parts of northern california are also dealing with heavy rain which closed roads in san francisco. flood concerns shut down yosemite. the wear and tear of this unrelenting weather on full display in east pittsburgh. part of route 30, a major road plunged nearly four stories after a landslide this morning. this building wiped out. no one hurt but dozens of residents forced to evacuate. tom, officials are still trying to figure out what caused this hillside to come down, taking out the road above an the apartment building above. you can see the destruction right be behind me. yes, it s spring, but officials say it s possible the unusually wet winter could have been a factor. people here got three times as much rain in february than they typically get. tom? such a rough winter for so many across the country. all right, kenneth, thank you. sam champion joining us now, and sam, we re tracking that storm as it moves off the east coast? reporter: yeah, all that bald weather in the south will be off the east coast in about two hours, tom. behind it drops down another pocket, believe it or not, or unseasonably cold air a brutal chill waiting for tomorrow morning. chick at 19, raleigh at 29. even as far south as atlanta. looking at the west, a brand new low, a big storm moving into the oregon coastline with heavy wind and rain. there s still some high wind warnings for the portland to medford area that will go all the way until about 10:00 a.m. tom? lshgts sam, thank you so much. next, to the changes coming at the border with mexico. the first national guardsmen arriving this weekend to support president trump s new border security mission. texas with 250 troops joined by another 150 from arizona, beginning next week. with the president s plan to build the wall stalling, is this his new solution? abc s stephanie ramos on the new developments. reporter: tonight, national guard is taking flight, rushing to the mexican border. president trump tweeting, we are sealing up our southern border. the people of our great country want safety and security. the dems have been a disaster on this very important issue! defense secretary mattis authorizing 4,000 troops to be deployed. the first 150 guardsmen will be in position by sunday night. mostly in planning positions. some strategy sessions starting today to guard against this. new images of a group helping a man jump a fence in just minutes to illegal little enter the u.s. border crossing attempts from mexico did go up last month after dropping to an all-time low last year. we have no idea who they are, what they do, where they came from. we have no idea what their records are. we don t know if they re murders if they re killers. reporter: with the president s plan to build a wall stalling, sending in soldiers may be the only option as he continues to blast catch and release laws. now, they re on the land, we release them. they go someplace into our country. they re supposed to come back within two or three years for a court case. but nobody ever comes back. reporter: arizona is supporting the president s move. the state has plans to send 150 of its guard guardsmen next wee. texas sending in more, as well. t the texas national guard is preparing to immediately deploy, with supporting aircraft, vehicles and equipment to the texas-mexico border. reporter: new mexico s governor supports the new security mission. but still hasn t formally announced guard troop members. california hasn t, either. tom? stephanie ramos, thank you. turning now to the epa chief under increasing pressure tonight. new details coming to light about the growing tab for taxpayers when it comes to scott pruitt s travel and security. here s abc s tara palmeri. reporter: tonight, new alarming numbers about how much embattled epa chief scott pruitt is costing taxpayers. documents show he spent $832,000 in the first quarter of his term on security costs. that s nearly double the amount spent by his two predecessors during the obama administration. at that pace, it would add up to nearly $3 million in just over a year. scott has done a fantastic job. i think he s a fantastic person. reporter: the white house has not responded to these latest figures. but the president is standing by pruitt tweeting he is under siege. trump world loves scott pruitt. so, you also have the huge base of the party that actually knows who the epa director is, which isn t normally the case. reporter: but there are growing calls on both sides of the aisle for him to resign. one democrat demanding answers on why pruitt requested security 24/7, including, allegedly, on personal trips to disneyland and the rose bowl. pruitt s team say they ve received an unprecedented number of threats, although there have been no arrests or charges. any time that you do transformational things yeah. there are critics and there are people are against you in that regard. reporter: this isn t the only allegation against pruitt regarding how taxpayer money is spent. he s been accused of wasteful spending on first class and private flights, installing a soundproof phone booth for $43,000 and approving steep pay raises for top aides. one adding nearly $57,000 to the staffer s salary. i found out about that yesterday and i changed it. so who did it? it may be there would be some accountability. a career person or a political person? i don t know. i don t know. i don t know the answer. you don t know who did this, you run the agency? i found out yesterday and corrected the action. reporter: but epa officials tell abc news that pruitt did know about the raises and supported them. tara downs us now from the white house. and tara, you re learning the president and his chief of staff, john kelly, also had a problem in the last few weeks? reporter: that s right, tom. i just spoke to a senior white house official who told me during an argument in late march, kelly offered to resign, but only if that was the president s wish. now, this isn t the first time he s made that offer. abc news has learned that the president and kelly disagree on how to deal with scott pruitt. the president thinks pruitt should stay and kelly thinks he should be fired. tom? tara palmeri tonight, thank you. and this quick programming note. martha raddatz goes one-on-one with homeland security adviser tom boss seert tomorrow on thi week. new details emerging from a deadly incident in germany, a van plowing into a popular bar in a popular university town. abc s jennifer eccleston on what we re learning about that deadly attack. reporter: tonight, a bizarre and terrifying scene in muenster, germany. the driver mowing down dozens of people outside of a packed bar on a sunny saturday afternoon. the rampage leaving two dead and injuring at least 20. this witness say, you heard a bang, screams and the police arrived and everyone was sent out. the driver, a german national, committing suicide, according to police, shooting himself minutes after the attack. the driver s identity not released. the motive under investigation, but police saying there is no indication yet of ties to islamic extremists. tonight, the picturesque university town in lockdown, police beefing up security asking all residents and visitors to avoid the scene. tonight, police are searching the suspect s home as they try to piece together the reason behind this deadly attack. tom? jennifer eccleston for us tonight. jennifer, thank you. now, to central canada and the devastating bus crash involving a junior hockey team. the death toll staggering. at least 15 people killed. many of them teenagers. and at least 14 people injured. that bus said to have been t-boned by a tractor trailer. here s abc s ron claiborne. reporter: the horrific scene, a bus ripped open, wreckage spilled onto a rural highway. and tonight, a nation in mourning. this, after the bus with the canadian junior hockey league s humboldt broncos team on board t-boned by a tractor trailer truck in saskatchewaaskatchewan. 15 people on the bus killed. among the dead, the broncos coach darcy hogan. and jackson joseph, the son of a former nhl player. the worst nightmare has happened. reporter: 14 others on the bus were injured. the father of one tweeting this heart-wrenching photo of injured players holding hands. we will never forget the members of our broncos family who were taken from us and who are injured. reporter: the broncos, whose players range in age from the teens to 20, were on their way to a semifinal junior hockey game. in a statement, canada s prime minister justin trudeau saying, an entire country is in shock and mourning. this is every parent s worst nightmare. canadian police say the driver of that tractor trailer truck was not injured in that accident. he was initially detained for questioning, but has since been released and is said to be undergoing psychological counseling. tom? a truly sad story. ron, thank you. next, to the latest aviation casualties involving u.s. military here at home. now totaling seven this week. the u.s. army confirming today two soldiers were killed when their apache helicopter crashed in a training area in ft. campbe campbell, kentucky. an air force thunderbird pilot killed wednesday when his f-16 crashed. and four crew members lost when their marine helicopter went down in a routine training mission earlier this week in california. next, to the scare in the aisles of a sam s club, when two explosives went off inside the store. abc s marci gonzalez with what happened next. reporter: tonight, police in southern california say they re trying to figure out why this man allegedly set off two homemade bombs inside this sam s club. the explosions thursday lighting up the aisles, sending shoppers running and smoke billowing through the store. it wasn t like shaking, earth shaking big explosion, but it was a low sound, like boom. reporter: officers chasing and later arresting 49-year-old hugo gonzalez. police saying they found more bomb-making materials inside his car and here at his apartment. all of a sudden, the police came over and knocked on all of doors and we got evacuated. reporter: police say gonzalez has a minor criminal record but no known ties to terrorism. this is unusual. there doesn t appear to be anything in this subject s past to indicate he d do this kind of activity. why now? why at this location? why did he do this? reporter: and gonzalez is expected in court monday to face multiple charges, including ignition of a destructive device and arson. he s being held on a million dollars bail. tom. marci, thank you. and there s still much more ahead on world news tonight this saturday. a house blown to pieces. what triggered this massive explosion in a texas suburb? plus, the secret to early retirement. how early? how about retiring in your 40s. even sooner. meet the people with the plan that promises to get you there decades sooner. and the fast and furious highway chase. cops go to extremes to nab this alleged gang of thieves. stay with us. touch is how we communicate with those we love, but does psoriasis ever get in the way? embrace the chance of 100% clear skin with taltz. for people with moderate to severe psoriasis, up to 90% had a significant improvement of their psoriasis plaques. with taltz, 4 out of 10 even achieved completely clear skin. don t use if you re allergic to taltz. before starting, you should be checked for tuberculosis. taltz may increase risk of infections and lower your ability to fight them. tell your doctor if you have an infection, symptoms, or received a vaccine or plan to. inflammatory bowel disease can happen with taltz, including worsening of symptoms. serious allergic reactions can occur. ready for a chance at 100% clear skin? 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reporter: but is f.i.r.e. a fit for everyone? you re really analyzing your budget, down to the penny and making sure you can put away sometimes 50%, 60% of your income and you re living very lean. so, it s not fun. reporter: jeremy and his wife haven t had jobs in more than six years. they are living off the money saved during those frugal times and the only money they make now is from their blog. sounds like a good retirement. all right, erielle, thank you so much. up next when we come back, an amazing rescue caught on camera. first responders have no room for error to save this child trapped between two walls. plus, ufc star connor mcgregor s meltdown. tonight, the new video which shows what happened inside the bus he trashed. a wealth of information. a wealth of perspective. a wealth of opportunities. that s the clarity you get from fidelity wealth management. straightforward advice, tailored recommendations, tax-efficient investing strategies, and a dedicated advisor to help you grow and protect your wealth. fidelity wealth management. to help you grow and protect your wealth. get your groove on with one a day 50+. get ready for the wild life complete multivitamins with key nutrients that address 6 concerns of aging, including heart health, supported by b-vitamins. your one a day is showing. he s playno, with us. he s trying to tell us something. let s see what forensics thinks. sorry i m late. what did i miss? 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he goes, oh, yeah. that soldier was me. i got chills, and my jaw must have hit the floor, when he told me that i sent that to him back in 2003. reporter: so yes, a powerful coincidence. it s crazy to think about that this letter touched sheriff johnson and he was able to share that with me and keep it for all these years. it makes you realize how small the world is. reporter: and a circle closed by a letter from a kid delivered on time, and across time. john donvan, abc news. and we thank john for that story. and we thank you for watching. i m tom llamas in new york. gma and this week in the morning and i ll see you right back here tomorrow night. have a great evening. good night.

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