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tv   America Reports  FOX News  March 29, 2024 10:00am-11:00am PDT

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getting back to society, readjusting, being called all kinds of horrible names rather than being celebrated for a difficult job, whether you agreed with what they were doing there or not. they were on mission. it wasn't their decision. >> emily: that's why the gratitude is so important to show we are grateful. >> kayleigh: many of them on the streets still struggle, a lot of homeless veterans, and we can't forget them, either. >> emily: shannon, tell us what you have a news for store firstfox news sunday. >> there's a widening gap between the two different in administrations, congressman ro khanna. >> emily: that's fox news sunday was shannon bream. do not miss it. now here is "america reports." >> he took 216 criminal migrants who posed a significant danger to our community is from 28 different nationalities of our streets. >> with the migrants and the
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crime waves, if you will, robberies and purse snatchings, pickpockets and the train, in times square. we've seen domestic violence and most recently we have seen mob like activity. we can't continue to give cover for individuals who play try some of these in order to commit crimes against the innocent. >> sandra: calls for change as century policies hurt efforts to deport migrant criminals. this is a new caravan of at least 2,000 migrants makes its way to our u.s. southern border. that's happening as we speak. hello and welcome from everyone. m sandra smith, and this is to be 27. aishah, welcome to you. >> aishah: i'm aishah hasnie aishah hasnie info john roberts today. an elite i.c.e. team in boston, officers pick up five illegal migrants just yesterday. and all of the suspects, sandra, were previously arrested on felonies but released by the state's century policies. >> sandra: fox team coverage
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kicks off now. leo terrell will join us in a moment on the migrant crime crisis. casey stegall is live on the border with the dangerous smuggling efforts. alexis mcadams is on the ground in chicago where migrants are being moved right now to new temperate shelters. we begin with bill melugin live in boston with more on this i.c.e. operation. who did i.c.e. arrest while you were actually with them? >> sandra, it was wild. we watched i.c.e. take down for alleged child rapists and a violent ms-13 gang member all in a single morning out here. i.c.e. says all these guys are on the streets because local jurisdictions ignored their detainer request to hold them, because of sanctuary policies here in massachusetts. >> any questions, you can talk to your team leaders. >> it's the predawn hours in boston. >> kid has a real violent history. >> this elite team of i.c.e. deportation officers is briefing
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on their target list for the day. illegal aliens charged with egregious crimes. >> all targets today, every single one of them, these are really the that are the worst of the worst here in massachusetts. >> i.c.e. quickly takes down its first target, an illegal alien from guatemala charged with aggravated child rape. minutes later, i.c.e. arrest a colombian national charged with the rape of a child above age 14. >> i don't have enough officers or resources to tackle every one of these safety threats. are we going after the child rapist today or that two times departed sen fentanyl dealer? we can get both. >> charged with a slew of violent crimes. >> [bleep], [bleep].
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>> officers then arrested this brazilian man charged with five counts of aggravated rape of a child. >> how are you guys not notified about a child rapist being released? >> unfortunate in massachusetts that's how it is of most of the sanctuary just actions. >> a short time later, i.c.e. took on its final target, a brazilian gang member also charged with child rape. just this morning, today, two child rapist pearl is in one ms-13 gang member. that's who you're going. >> that every day in boston. they are public safety threats we want to get up the street. five threats in the community and can't go and victimize anyone else. >> and i.c.e. said century policies are putting both their officers and the public at risk. they say these policies only help protect dangerous criminal aliens. and they say these targets are all going to stay in federal custody until their local charges are resolved, then they will seek to deport every single one of them.
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we will send it back to you. >>andra: that is really crazy stuff. great reporting as usual, bill. thank you very much. aishah? >> aishah: meantime, growing concerns of the dangers migrant smuggling happening at the southern border right now. we are talking about the lives of children as young as two years old. imagine that. their lives at risk, just to get here illegally. but more and more violent gang members are getting caught right at the border. our casey stegall is live in el paso. several smuggling attempts have been sapped recently where you are. tell us about it. >> aishah, they have been, and this is where it all originates, write out here at the southern border. the chief of u.s. border patrol says one incident this week involved a criminal who had already been in this country and deported. he was located during the raid of a stash house over in las cruces, new mexico, which is part of the el paso sector. a total of ten migrants were taken into custody.
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among them, the feds say, a mexican national gang member who had previously been convicted of raping a child in kansas. he will be processed for felony reentry into the u.s. agents are also discovering four migrants over near the same spot. they were hidden away inside of the tractor-trailer, attempting to be smuggled in. all this as officials say we have now crossed a new immigration milestone under the biden administration. >> we just hit 2 million known got-aways, 2 million people we know crossed the border, didn't get arrested, and we don't know who they are or where they came from. this is the biggest national security vulnerability i have seen in this nation since i was born. >> texas dps meantime has had a busy week. in camden county, during a traffic stop, trooper found a mexican migrant and her 2-year-old child inside a vehicle. the driver and passenger were arrested for smuggling, and in
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eagle pass just yesterday dps came across 11 unaccompanied minors who are traveling alone from honduras. they had just illegally cross the rio grande river. they were between the ages of 15 and 16 years old. aishah? >> aishah: that the most heartbreaking part of the entire story, casey stegall, live in el paso for us. thanks, casey. sandra? >> sandra: just incredible. leo terrell is joining us now. first, your reaction to everything you just heard they are? >> you know, sandra, let's be very clear: jill biden has given the illegal aliens a green light to come into this country. for three years he's done nothing, and basically what you have is his hands were tied, because if he does something, then he has to admit that trump was right about the illegal crossing. the sanctuary city situation is just terrific. bill talked about five individuals being arrested. there's hundreds and thousands of criminals, and they are protected, sandra, and democratic cities.
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chicago, los angeles, boston, new york. they are sanctuary cities sanctuary cities. if biden wanted to do something, cut off the funding to the cities. i guarantee you, have the cooperation with local police and i.c.e., but they're not going to do it, because that is their potential new voters, sandra. that's a silly part about this. they're not going to do anything to stop this illegal immigration. >> sandra: as bill melugin was standing there. reporting live from boston and that story about i.c.e., this is the massachusetts governor, maura healey. when she's asked about migrant being arrested for a raping a 15-year-old disabled girl earlier this month. watch this. >> it's speaks somewhat to the issue now that the mass numbers coming across the borders. unfortunately we have security and systems in place, we have vetting in place. it's unfortunate that, from time to time, things will happen. >> sandra: "we have security and systems in place," she says, "and unfortunate that this happens from time to time."
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what? >> tell that to the parents. tell that to the family. tell that to the young girl. that's a political democrat talking point. they encourage illegal aliens to come into the state of massachusetts. it's a sanctuary state. is the other situation, sandra. look at texas. if you want to fight illegal immigration, why is the biden administration fighting the state of texas? because they are encouraging illegal immigration into this country. that is a known fact, and the arrest that bill melugin pointed out, that is nothing compared to the thousands of illegal aliens committing crimes daily in these democrat cities. >> sandra: how about just removing those that are arrested for this criminal activity? these are the i.c.e. stats from los angeles, leo, in 2023. versus the number of actual removals. by the way, 249 suspected gang members and that bunch.
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just 2,429 out of the nearly 3200 were removed with pending or convicted criminal charges. on the polling, i'll ask you about the political indications of this, just months from the election, the presidential election. this is fox polling when asked, how much do you blame the following for the situation at the southern border? a great deal on congress' lack of action, the number is 55%. it is higher than those who said -- which is almost half -- that they blame a great deal of this on biden's lack of enforcement. so my question to you is, is this a winning issue for democrats to pin this on republicans for not getting something done? >> i think the democrats are going to spin it that way, sandra. i think they're going to say they had a bill, congress did make a move on this bill, the house of representatives will try and blame the congress and try to blame the house republicans. but here's an undisputed fact they will submit to you.
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wdid we have a secure border whn president trump left office? within 24 hours, biden basically reversed every trump policy and this is what we've had for the last three years. so i think the american voters going to single out the biden administration and say, you are responsible for creating this chaos, and the immigration issue, sandra, is the number one issue in this country. i think that's the reason why trump will win the presidency in november. >> sandra: one thing is for sure, when you look at the polling, those who responded to believe that congress and the president share blame for this growing crisis. leo terrell, great to see you. thank you. >> thank you very much. good friday to you. >> aishah: sandra, the city of chicago is now caving to community pressure. this weekend nearly 800 migrants will begin moving out of park facilities that are now being used as makeshift shelters. it's going to be massive. alexis mcadams is live in chicago to detail what we are expecting. hi, alexis.
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>> hi, aishah. here's the thing, leno discussing big money in the city of chicago his ongoing migrant crisis. but, hey, when you ask mayor brandon johnson here in the windy city how much you're spending each week, he won't say, so taxpayers are livid and they want those answers. we did ask and try to find out more information. just the other day he was asked again if they could be more transparent in the city about this crisis. here's his answer, or lack thereof. watch. >> thanks for asking the question. we are meeting you right where you are. thank you. >> meeting everyone right where they are with more unanswered questions. chicago is dishing out big money, aishah and sandra. the public cost dashboard, which you can check out online, shows it spent nearly $300 million since august of 2022 on the crisis, but the mayor of chicago, brandon johnson, won't say exactly where those funds are going. a new report shows the city's spending a million dollars, you guys, on hotels for migrants every single week. city council members say taxpayers deserve to know where this money is going.
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>> people are frustrated, i think less about the funding and more about the lack of understanding of what's actually happening. so when they want transparency, that's fair. when they want to understand what the plan is, that's fair. when they don't get that information, they get upset at everything. >> so this weekend the city will start moving hundreds of migrants out of five park district field houses so kids can use in the summer. the plan is to then transition people into shelters across the city, and that's not all. chicago is also enforcing a 60-day shelter limit, so by the end of april they expect to have more than 2,000 migrants evicted from those shelters. so there is concern people are going be sleeping on the streets. >> as the evictions continue across chicago, are you expecting to see migrants can bring out all over the city? >> that's a concern. we know folks are asking for change, kids are selling water bottles and candy. if you grow that exponentially there's a couple more thousand people on the streets. that makes a larger problem. >> you don't have to look far, either, to see the migrant crisis.
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i talked to this migrant mom just outside of city hall yesterday. she told me she's from ecuador and she was sitting there in the cold with her young child on the ground trying to sell candy for money. she's been in chicago for four months and says she doesn't have a plan in place. back here, along with moving migrants to other shelters, that comes just days after the mayor here said nobody welcomed more migrants or better welcomed migrants in chicago. so things have changed in the windy city, aishah. >> aishah: incredible. they have no idea what to do with all these migrants. alexis mcadams, thank you so much. sandra, now they've got these problems on th their hands where they have aldermen asking for the number of evictions that would happen, because this could be a homeless crisis, a huge explosion of homeless people, unsanitary conditions. this will get a whole lot worse. >> sandra: absolutely. and the measles situation seems to be getting worse. there's a confirmed case in the cook county suburbs, and his local headline. measles outbreak worsens, prompting officials to tighten the vaccination policy.
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aishah, as you know, in recent years there has been still a small number but a growing number of people opting out of such vaccinations, putting them at great risk. so the local health officials are urging anyone who is unvaccinated that they are at risk and to go get those vaccinations, because this does seem to be spreading from the shelters there. >> aishah: this impact everybody in that community. >> sandra: and now this. >> [protesters chanting] >> sandra: president biden's glitzy fund-raiser last night interrupted by those anti-israel protesters. could the israel-hamas war cost joe biden the election? plus, this -- >> all the things he's doing are so old, speaking of old. old and out of shape. anyway... >> the most important day in the history of our country will be november 5th. our country is going bad, and it's going to be changed
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november 5th. >> sa>> aishah: quite the contrt in the campaigns. while president biden is schmoozing with high-profile donors, president trump, you saw there yesterday, attended the funeral services for fallen police officer. our panel, patrick murphy,, jessicdia anderson, they are up next. we are going to dig into it. ende to see and things to do. that's why you choose glucerna to help manage blood sugar response. uniquely designed with carbsteady. glucerna. bring on the day.
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norman, bad news... i never graduated from med school. what?
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raking in over $25 million in new york last night at that star-studded fund-raiser backed by former president barack obama and bill clinton. a lot of celebs there. meanwhile, former president trump attending the wake of a fallen nypd officer killed by a career criminal. former pennsylvania curries and patrick murphy and president of the sentinel action fund, jessica anderson, joined me now to talk about this. two different narratives happening at the same time. patrick, i'll start with you. former president trump told our brian kilmeade yesterday that the president just cannot politically support police. which i find fascinating. this was a tragic case, not a controversial case. this was a career criminal, i think arrested 21 times or something like that before he shot and killed a police officer. was this a missed opportunity for the president? >> patrick: no, i think president biden absolutely supports the police. my background, i'm a former
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prosecutor, veteran. i'm the son of a cop. when you look at january 6th, 5 police officers, capitol hill police officers were killed that day. so i don't think it's a question at all. i think it's a question of the rule law and folks who believe in the rule of law and those who don't. i think that's why you saw three former democratic presidents with president biden, and then former republican president, george bush, or even trump's own vice president, mike pence, aren't endorsing donald trump. i think that's a real contrast here. >> aishah: let's dig into the numbers from last night a little bit. a lot of money raised, jessica. biden, obama, clinton, three presidents in a packed house raised over $25 million in one night. the trump camp also released some numbers for this fund-raising event they're going to have in florida coming up here. they say they have already locked in $33 million for that one. i want to look at the total fund-raising amount. the trump camp is behind biden
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in fund-raising totals. we've got seven months left of this campaign season. jessica, what do these numbers mean right now? not just what happened last night, but the total numbers. what picture are they painting here? >> jessica: i think there's a few things going on here, aishah, that are important to look at. first, we have a long way to go, and it's nothing that president trump can do more than continue to talk about the issues that are resonating with the american people. remember, his fund-raising dollars are largely driven by grassroots americans who support securing the border, strengthening the economy, returning safety and security to our neighborhoods. so you compare those grassroots small-dollar donations with the glitzy hollywood elites that come together and in one night rack up $25 million, and yes, you see a contrast. you begin to see a story about who is fueling the biden campaign reelection efforts. the second part is the polling.
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president biden cannot get over 40%, and that does not look good for an incumbent democrat. so he's going to need this money to pull them across the finish line, unlike trump, who already has the support of the majority of the american people. >> aishah: let's pull up the brand-new fox news polling showing president trump up by five points over biden 38%. this is brand-new. patrick, just as everything was happening, the fund-raising, all of that, outside radio city hall, this is what protesters were shouting. watch this. >> there was an insurrection. >> shame on you, joe biden! shame on you! shame on you! >> free palestine! >> three, three, free palestine! >> genocide joe, it's time to go! >> how many kids did you kill
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today? >> aishah: patrick, the seems to follow him everywhere he goes. i know former president barack obama tried to come to his defense, but i don't think even he can calm the anger of these arab americans across the country. this is a vulnerability. >> patrick: listen, it is a sad situation when you have 32,000 civilians, two-thirds of which are women, that have been killed, and they are killed because you have a terrorist organization, hamas, that obviously doesn't care about the people they are trying to represent. that is why they did what they did on october 6th, and it just breaks your heart. i will say i agree with that point, there's plenty of time here. but we have to listen to it barack obama said to those protesters last night. he said, listen, you can't be like the other side, you up to have intellectual humility. i think that's why they need to listen. i'm being honest with you, that's why god gave us two ears and only one mouth for a reason. they want a cease-fire, they
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wanted to stop, and i think the whole world wants that, but we have to do it the right way. >> aishah: we've got to go. patrick, jessica, thank you for digging into all that with me. appreciate it. >> we expect inflation to move down to 2%, but on a path that is sometimes bumpy. we are just going have to let the data tell us that. there isn't anybody who knows. >> on a path that is sometimes bumpy. that's brand-new from the fed chair. what does all of it mean for americans still paying way too much for just about everything? charlie gasparino was supposed to be on the set for this live tease. he's not here yet but he is going to join us on those brand-new numbers just in on the american economy. >> aishah: cannot wait for that. it's been exactly one year now since "wall street journal"'s evan gershkovich was wrongly detained in russia. is the u.s. any closer to getting our guy home?
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>> his detainment is the first time a u.s. journalist has been arrested in russia since the cold war. >> a moscow court rejected the latest appeal. >> the u.s. government has declared him wrongfully detained. >> i stand with evan. >> i stand with evan. >> i stand with evan with evan. >> i stand with evan. >> i stand with evan. >> let's bring evan home.
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sorry, told everybody in the tease that you relate. i want to know what people should know about this. i feel like the conversation everywhere, every day, is, oh, my gosh, did you see how much the hamburger was on that menu or the drink at the bar, or the eggs at the grocery store? >> they are legitimate conversations. i went to my favorite diner in lower manhattan, and my buddy is the owner, and i paid like $6 for oatmeal. it was something crazy. by the way, i'm not blaming him. he is facing inflation. he has to make a profit margins we can live his life with his family. he's not making that much of a profit margin. there are two stories. one is about inflation, and it is intractable. it's been coming down. i think the fact you are citing -- this is the fed --
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>> sandra: don't get all crazy on us here. >> it's gone up, but it is still below three. i think what jerome powell is going to say by june, if things stay in this sort of area, he can lower interest rates on the short end a little bit. and take a wait-and-see attitude. >> sandra: is that a prediction? you think they're going to cut rates this year? >> i think they'll cut them in june. i only know that because larry fink, the best fed watcher i know, thinks that. things might change, you might see other numbers, but there's two stories. wall street is going to let that cut and that's why you see stocks keep going up. main street americans who don't have a lot of money and are not in the markets every day, they are getting screwed here. these prices, the inflation rate might be coming down a bit,
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might. >> sandra: but prices are not. that's why jerry baker for "the wall street journal" was sitting in that chair a couple weeks ago and he made the prediction, not only does he think rates will have to stay the same this year, he thinks they might have to raise rates at the end of the year. >> if you know jerome powell, and if you're playing in the markets, different audience. the betting is that he lowers them in june because he always telegraphs this. he is always saying we are on course. but after that, all bets are off. >> sandra: however, he was speaking today -- and i'm told this is incredible and compelling. he was speaking today and he did talk about, it could be too soon. listen. >> if we reduce rates too soon, there's a chance inflation would pop back and we would have to come back in and it would be very disruptive. that would not be a good thing for the economy. we will not make decisions particularly about political calendars or anything like that. it is tremendously important that people understand that. if we are working to serve all
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americans, not any particular set of americans are political parties or leaders. >> sandra: this is an assurance that they are independent, they're not going to try to lower rates right before the election to prop up the economy, and the stock market, so weigh in on that. >> i'll never get my 20 seconds of my life back after listening to that. [laughter] >> sandra: he's a federal reserve chair. come on. >> he's not chris rock. i get it. >> sandra: this is a group of very compelling people. guess on this program having a very serious discussion that now i want to add you to the list about whether or not this 2% target the federal reserve keeps targeting is realistic or not. listen. >> i don't think the fed will cut the interest rate target this year. >> they've already been close to the 2%. they should be trying to control interest rates. if they did three cuts this year, most people would think that was a political gesture trying to get biden reelected. >> the fed has to get off their 2%, 2.5% policy target. >> and the think we should
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surrender on the 2% target, which we are not anywhere close to. we went and charlie gasparino says? >> by the way, just you know, some of them are not speaking about the 2% target, they were talking about whether they would cut rates. >> sandra: that's true. so what do you think? >> which one do you want me to answer? >> sandra: should 2% be the target? >> i think it should be the target. listen, here's the thing -- the stock market may hate it, your buddies at the cme may despise the fact that we are raising rates, that average people get screwed on inflation. it's the most pernicious tax on the working class. and i'm only kidding about your buddies, by the way. they are my buddies, too. >> sandra: i don't think it is supposed to be an insult. >> it the wall street crowd likes to lower rates. obviously you have records on the dow and s&p, and then my old man, a construction worker, who doesn't make a lot of money, and he gets screwed when he goes to the gas pump. we can't have -- by the way,
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society is destabilized when there is inflation, at every turn. >> sandra: half the people lame corporate price gouging, the people i just setting these prices high, and have think it is too much gover. which most economists are in consensus about. >> let's be clear, its federal government spending, fiscal policy, and loose monetary policy that jerome powell created. >> sandra: great to have year, charlie. i hope you have a great weekend. good to see you. now this. >> these charges are bogus. my message to the biden administration, push hard to get a deal done >> sandra: we want to get them home. it's been one year now since russia unjustly detained "wall street journal" reporter evan gershkovich on false accusations of espionage. the journal marking this anniversary with its front page today. look at that, a big blank space for where evans reporting,
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history, should be today. what makes matters worse, this week russia extended his detention by another three months. "wall street journal" assistant editor paul beckett is going to join us in the next hour, but let's go live to benjamin hall with the very latest. hi, then. >> hi, aishah. that front cover of "the wall street journal" says it all. evan gershkovich was arrested because he's a journalist and because he's an american, for those two reasons. those are things the russian regime wants to stamp out. he was accused by the russians of trying to obtain military secrets, but those claims are entirely unsupported by any evidence. they are not brought anything to the table and there's no date set for trial. they just extended his detention for another three months. he released a message saying, "as i have told evan's parents, i will never give up hope either. we will continue working every day to secure his release. we will continue to denounce and impose cost for russia's appalling attempts to use
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americans as bargaining chips." there have been hopes of the prisoner swap in the last few months, with vladimir putin's suggesting that perhaps a former fsp commander held for killing somebody in germany could be exchanged for evan. other swaps have happened in the past with trevor reid and brittney griner. the state department has said that, at the moment to, no deal happening. instead, we see them being held in prison. he's allowed to leave his self it is one hour a day. despite this, and you see it in pictures when he's in court, his friends and family says he hasn't been broken. but they say it's becoming harder and harder by the day. we also have to mention another being held for five years, some asking whether enough is done to hit back at russia when they pick up innocent americans. and maybe hostage negotiations are not the way forward, either. aishah? >> aishah: and we keep him and his family in our thoughts every single day. we wait for them to come home.
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benjamin hall, thank you. >> thanks. >> sandra: aishah, we are awaiting an update from maryland govegovernor wes moore about the cleanup of the bridge collapse that killed at least six construction workers earlier this week. we are watching for that and we will bring it to our viewers live. >> aishah: plus this, sandra. a looming shortage of chocolate. say it ain't so. it's leaving a sour taste that candy shops all over the place just days before the easter holiday. my moderate to severe plaque psoriasis held me back... now with skyrizi, i'm all in with clearer skin. ♪ things are getting clearer...♪ ( ♪ ) ♪ i feel free... ♪ ♪ to bear my skin, yeah that's all me. ♪ ♪ nothing is everything ♪
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hi mom. at vanguard you're more than just an investor, you're an owner. helping you prepare for today's longer retirement. that's the value of ownership. frustrated by skin tags? dr. scholl's has the breakthrough you've been waiting for. the first fda-cleared at-home skin tag remover clinically proven to remove skin tags safely in as little as one treatment. >> sandra: fox news alert here. just moments from now, maryland governor wes moore is expected to give a live update on the massive cleanup effort in baltimore after the key bridge collapsed earlier this week. national correspondent griff jenkins is keeping an eye on the scene ahead of the news
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conference, on a boat. griff, you are looking into the troubling history of this cargo ship. what are you learning? >> the chesapeake 1000, her nickname is chessie, and we are right up next to it, sandra. let me show you here, this is the largest on the east coast, a thousand ton capacity. believe it or not, it was actually christened and built in the 1970s for a secret cold war cia operation. it was the son 800 at the time, 810 capacity, and they use it to raise a soviet sub off the pacific floor near hawaii. that was the earliest days of it. now it is out here and it's going to be trying to take apart pieces of the key bridge that has collapsed. there's three steps, according to the rear admiral. first thing to clear channel, then they have to move the dolly, and third they have to clear the debris in the waterway around the channel.
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admiral gilreath talked about the challenge of what this crane is going to have to do. listen here. >> but before we can actually engage in lifting, we've got to complete the assessment process of the bridge and the pieces of the bridge in the water, so we can figure out how to cut the bridge into the right sized pieces so we can actually lift them with the crane. >> and we are learning a little more about the dolly, that ship. back in 2016, she had another accident in the port of antwerp, belgium, hitting a berth on the way out. because of the accident, unknown. but the ntsb is looking into it. sandra, i will give you one last look at this crane is going to be so important to it. we are about to get a longer piece that you can go and read
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about this fascinating crane. one thing is for sure, it's going to be the main crane out there once these waves died down. we have got about a 24-mile-an-hour wind right now. there's a gale force wind, and in that situation, in a nautical cents they would have to shut down all operations. but hopefully we'll get her out there working soon on this monumental task. they say it will be weeks if not months before they can clear that channel and open up the port. the folks really hoping that is soon are those 8,000 or so workers that depend on this port for their livelihoods. sandra? >> sandra: griff, thank you very much. we are awaiting that update 13 minutes from now, and incredible balance, sea legs on that boat, griff. thank you. >> aishah: hard not to get seasick just watching him, sandra. listen to this, a big surprise here in new york city, struggling to get a grip on violent crime. the little gun detecting technology in the subways make a difference when the latest attacks haven't been with guns,
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but with fists? plus, iran getting military aid to some of our biggest adversaries. so how does the u.s. stop it? lieutenant general keith kellogg is with us next. i suffer with psoriatic arthritis and psoriasis. i was on a journey for a really long time to find some relief. cosentyx works for me. cosentyx helps real people get real relief from the symptoms of psoriatic arthritis or psoriasis. serious allergic reactions, severe skin reactions that look like eczema, and an increased risk of infections, some fatal, have occurred.
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here's why you should switch fo to duckduckgo on all your devie duckduckgo comes with a built-n engine like google, but it's pi and doesn't spy on your searchs
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and duckduckgo lets you browse like chrome, but it blocks cooi and creepy ads that follow youa from google and other companie. and there's no catch. it's fre. we make money from ads, but they don't follow you aroud join the millions of people taking back their privacy by downloading duckduckgo on all your devices today. >> aishah: okay, listen to
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this. iran is now supplying russia with more than 100 of its sophisticated attack drones every single week. that is according to u.s. central command, giving the kremlin a major lift in the war on ukraine. joining us now to talk about his general keith kellogg. welcome to the program. these are pretty big drones, 11 feet long, they are kamikaze drones, they can travel i think 1,000 miles. they can do a lot of damage. but it's not the drone, it is the amount of drones that the kremlin is now producing thanks to iran. >> this is a significant issue. here in america you probably don't think much about it, but the fact is that these drones are pretty powerful. they carry a significant warhead, but the accuracy on that distance, when you look at the circular -- it is gps-guided. you can launch one of those drones from baltimore, maryland, and put it right through the window here. you look at that and how the ukrainians have taught the russians how to fight, they call
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it swarm technology. you don't see just a single drone come in. multiple drones. 20, 30, 40, 50. in every age has its own way of warfare. in world war i he had the advent of the machine gun in the tank. in world war ii you had your support with the use of, and air support and armored support. now you have the drone technology. you have picked up on some thing pretty large. it is asymmetrical. we are not picking up well on it. we have got a counter drone technology called the coyote system, a missile system. it's ten times as expensive as a singular drown. so what they are doing in an asymmetric fashion is basically overwhelming the defenses of the ukrainians. we have to think our way through that, and we haven't. we keep thinking of the old way of fighting. armor, artillery. they are thinking of the new way of fighting. >> aishah: is not just ukraine, though. the houthis a's in them, as
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well. i think four of these targeted a u.s. navy ship just last night in the red sea. so what can we be doing more of? it seems like we are just allowing iran to kind of feel like they can play a game in the marketplace. what can we be doing more of to confront them? >> two things. one, you counter the technology they have right now and go away from missile technology to a gun technology. but you're going to have to confront iran sooner or later. they haven't done it. it's almost like whistling past the graveyard. there's ways to do it. you don't have to go to downtown tehran to do it. you can do things to basically tell the iranians to knock the stuff off. if you want to go to the extreme, they've got a spaceship in the red sea. send it to the bottom. or do something that is maybe out of the range of tehran that makes a clear point to the iranians, you've got to knock this off. >> aishah: i think you hit the nail on the head when he said do something. general kellogg, things are
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joining us. we appreciate it always. sandra? >> sandra: thank you, aishah. hundreds gathered to honor a new york city police officer killed by a career criminal. dave rubin joins us on how to stop the surge of violent crime in the big apple. we got up and running in no time. earn unlimited 1.5% cash back on every purchase with the chase ink business unlimited card. make more of what's yours. okay everyone, our mission is to provide complete, balanced nutrition for strength and energy. yay - woo hoo! ensure, with 27 vitamins and minerals, nutrients for immune health. and ensure complete with 30 grams of protein. (♪)
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hey. you seein' this? wait... where's the dish? there ain't one. you're tellin' me you can get directv — the good stuff — and you don't need a satellite dish? oh, i used to love doin' my business on those things! you're one sick pigeon. them dishes kept the rain off our beaks! we just have different priorities is all.
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satellite-free directv... never thought i'd see the day. well, our lifespans are quite short... stream directv without a satellite dish. i'm going to do this thing with my neck, just for a bit. >> sandra: french lawmakers meddling in hairstyles, weighing a build of it at la heritage commission. greg palkot is in london with the details on this for us. greg, how is the public receiving this hair bill? >> sandra, it isn't law yet but there certainly a lot of discussion about it in france. the village has been approved in the front lower house of parliament would bar discrimination over the texture, length, color or style of one's hair. bill supporters claimant protects against any hair prejudice like people who are bald or have red hair. the primary motivation is reese-based restrictions. critics of the bill say is unnecessary and these actions are already outlawed in the
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country and that france is just importing an american idea. in fact, in the u.s., and 24 states there some form of legislation protecting people from hair discrimination in schools and the workplace. an initial bill passed the house in 2022 but got stuck in the senate. the french hair bill is now headed to that country's upper house of parliament. its prospects are still up in the air. back to you. >> sandra: greg palkot on that for us. thank you. >> yet another unprovoked violent attack in new york city, the same in brooklyn. >> police sources say the push was unprovoked and the victim was shoved onto the tracks as the train was entering the station. >> the suspect, a man with a history of violent assault and mental illness. >> more people fearing for their lives every time they rode the subway. >> we begin with the murder of an nypd officer on the job. >> this is gut-wrenching. another new york city police officer has lost his life, a young cop just 31 years old. >> sandra: a chilling week

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