America's Newsroom : FOXNEWSW : June 19, 2024 7:00am-8:00am PDT : Free Borrow & Streaming : Internet Archive (2024)

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local flooding close to the beaches as well as beach erosion. then we talk about the amount of rain coming down. with the rain totals we're easily talking 3 to eight inches of fresh rain. potentially maybe up to closer to a foot in some spots across portions of south texas extending to san antonio and beyond that over to west texas. when you think about that, that's a lot of rain that will cause flooding. it will help out, though, with the rainfall deficits. they're behind in some cases four to five inches of rain, believe it or not. this will help out. we need to get through the flooding for the next 24 hours or so. not a named storm. worry about the flooding and worry about the impacts and that's what we're focusing on today. >> martha: thank you very much. >> a new hour begins now in the dangerous chaos of illegal immigration rearing its ugly

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head. the kidnapping and rape of a 13-year-old girl in new york city stunning the nation. we could see the suspect arrested by the help of good samaritans in court this hour. we're waiting news on that as we say hello. a brand-new hour begins now. i'm bill hemmer with my friend and colleague today. >> martha: great to be with you. i'm martha maccallum. we're learning more about this suspect who was accused of assaulting a teenager in a terrifying attack in a park in queens, new york in broad daylight. the 25-year-old migrant from ecuador entered the united states illegally in 2021, crossing at eagle pass, texas, how many live shots and reports have we seen from there? he was one of the individuals who came across there in 2021. it's nearly 2000 miles from this quiet park in queens, new york. but we know that all of these folks are being sent all over

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the country. every state is now essentially a border state dealing with this problem. there is also the illegal immigrant arrested this week in the murder of rachel morin, the mother of five was raped and murdered while she was hiking near her family's home in maryland. that suspect captured more than 1200 miles away in tulsa, oklahoma thanks to dna that was recovered in los angeles where he was accused of attacking a 9-year-old girl. >> bill: for the white house, president biden walking a political tight rope on immigration now opening a new path a legal status for another half million immigrants in this country illegally. that is an issue that will likely be a contentious matter during next week's debate and decide votes this november. here is how both the candidates went after the subject and how they went after each other just yesterday. >> president biden: two weeks

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ago i too action to secure our border. >> joe biden is granting mass -- he is going to formally grant a mass amnesty to millions of illegal aliens that came into our country. >> president biden: we have to acknowledge the patience and goodwill of the american people are the fears on the border. they don't understand a lot of it. my predecessor is trying to play on that. >> biden amnesty is an attack on american democracy and another example is how biden and communists are demolishing our constitutional system. >> martha: very interesting. that could be a preview of what we see next week. fox team coverage. alicia acuna from denver, a sanctuary city and how officials are shipping thousands of them across state lines to salt lake city. first lucas tomlinson live at the white house. >> two weeks after president

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biden signed the new executive order he continues to blame republicans for what he says forced him to do it. >> president biden: we were about to move forward when republicans walked away from the deal and the most pathetic and petty reasons. so much for them caring about the border. >> his new border policy announced yesterday gives half a million immigrants married to american citizens but lack legal status in the united states a new pathway to citizenship for them and their children . trump's former chief chad wolf calls it the largest am necessary tee granted in 30 years. he said i restricted unlawful crossings and enabled quicker decisions on asylum. our border encounters have dropped 25%. house speaker mike johnson asking what took so long adding just two weeks ago the president pretended to crack down on the

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open border catastrophe by engaging in a border charade and now granting amnesty to hundreds of thousands of illegal aliens. speaking of the president's mental acuity. a fox news poll, 41% said yes, 57% said no. yesterday president biden appeared to forget his dhs chief's name at the event at the white house. >> president biden: my name is joe biden, i'm jill biden's husband. [laughter] thanks to all the members of congress and homeland security secretary -- i'm not -- all kidding aside. >> president biden is in rehoboth beach and then goes to camp david for a week of debate prep with the debate coming up with donald trump in a week. >> dana: important night and they are all getting ready for it. >> bill: a migrant influx

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overwhelming salt lake city. we're live in denver to bring us up to date. a lot of folks went from colorado to utah. salt lake is trying to do something there. what's happening? >> exactly, bill. utah governor says his state situation is completely unacceptable and denver mayor mike johnson's office is telling us they have been incredibly transparent about immigrants sent here by texas governor greg abbott. his office says it served 42,000 and most arrivals never intended to stay in denver. in a statement that's why part of our operations include purchasing tickets for newcomers to get to their desired location where they may have support networks or job opportunities. governor cox says utah doesn't have support networks or job opportunities for the 2,000 migrants denver sent to his state and he accused denver of sending them without proper notification posting on x every

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state received illegal immigrants and utah's resources are depleted. one homeless shelter in utah told us it is at capacity. >> not only are we dealing with other people and their issues but dealing with the local families that are having a really tough time right now. >> the mayors of new york, chicago and denver have criticized abbott for sending buses unannounced to their cities. in november johnston said a coordinated entry system would be best to allow cities to bring in the capacity they think they can handle. >> nonprofits could work together and say we have 100,000 people who arrived. what cities can help? denver, can you take 1,000. grand junk -- >> yesterday his office told us when there are larger groups coming to the same city and plane tickets purchased the city does its best to give

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notification to the arriving city. >> bill: all right. thanks. that story continues from denver and salt lake. thank you. martha. >> martha: joining us is dave rubin host of the rubin report. "politico" on the immigration debate that we're likely to hear more of at the big debate next week. biden lays down some immigration bait for trump. the president's new policy debuted on tuesday has a related political motive. advisors are betting the new policies unveiled at the white house will ignite a larger conversation about the controversial chapter of the trump era, separation of families on the southern border. how successful do you think that effort will be given where we are right now? >> well, i understand that will be the narrative that the biden administration will push. i hope that most people will not fall for it. the simple truth is that donald

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trump came into office largely closed our border, not perfectly, never fully built the wall but the influx was stemmed. then biden comes in and reverses something like 64 executive actions basically first week in office and now we have seven to 10 million people who have come into this country in about 3 1/2 years. that's simply untenable. you know andrew breitbart was famous for saying that politics is downstream from culture. i've been editing that and saying everything is downstream from immigration. if we don't know who is in the country, what their intentions are. what they're up to and everything else, no other political issue will matter. you cannot let seven to 10 million people into any country and expect that country to be functional. we're seeing the fruits of that in some of the stories you hit on. the crime and drugs that are being brought in and everything else. the denver mayor, by the way should be embarrassed. he made denver a sanctuary city.

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overrun with homelessness and illegal immigrants and saying okay, can i get some other cities that i can export these people to because we realize how much damage they've done here? it is rather extraordinary. >> bill: daily drumbeat of stories we've been watching and the rape of this 13-year-old girl. we could see the suspect this hour in court. trump could list all these incidents over the past month going back to the university in georgia, the jogger there. nbc, they had 0 coverage of the 13-year-old. abc a minute and 1r5 seconds, cbs they did 0 coverage. you wonder, dave, how many americans are out running their lives are paying attention? >> well, bill, you know, this administration, karine jean-pierre and the rest of them get up there every day and talk about misinformation and mal information and everything else. the most nefarious type of misinformation is when the media does not cover something.

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for two years basically nobody in the mainstream media except fox and online guys like me were covering these videos of hundreds and thousands of people pouring through our borders. so when they don't cover something, that's a type of misinformation. but i would say to you guys in new york city, you need only walk two blocks over to the roosevelt hotel and you can see dozens and dozens of illegal immigrants standing outside, congregating. don't know what they are doing. drugs, have they brought in tuberculosis, i thought we had a pandemic a couple years ago. we have no idea. this is what this administration did. biden is so unbelievably cynical and dishonest for him to say it has anything to do with the republican controlled congress. one of the few jobs as the chief executive is to protect the border. he did that and blue state governors and blue city mayors that have caused this sanctuary problem. i live in miami.

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we're not a sanctuary city and things are going well. that tells you everything you need to know. >> bill: made a good call. >> martha: thank you, dave rubin, great to see you. >> bill: the mental health crisis among america's youth prompting a major american school board to take dramatic action. what it will ban from the classroom. very intriguing story and talk to the good doctor. >> martha: i think it will snowball across the country. skyrocketing rent prices colliding with inflation and relief could be a long way off. plus this. >> going to have to switch. >> martha: videos going bananas at this hour. >> the new king. >> bill: if you own this company you are doing all right. tech giant nvidia has made a monster move surpassing microsoft and apple as the most valuable company in the world.

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>> bill: on this juneteenth the markets are closed today. we wanted to share with you, we were thinking maybe call them the three musketeers, these are the three american companies leading the world in terms of market cap and their size. if you have a 401k i'm sure you own it. apple, microsoft and nvidia, too. usually when you get in these conversations where people are saying do you own this company? get the little chatter in the salon or at a barber shop. sometimes that kind of tells you that things are a little frothy,

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all right? for this company, they actually make things. unlike what you had 20 years ago with the internet boom and bust, all right? specifically on nvidia you see the market cap at 3.3 trillion. bigger than microsoft and apple. what's happening with them? apple is a orange, micro soft in blue and nvidia march we've seen over the past six months. very, very impressive. this company makes chips called gpus, put them in phones and computers and their ceo a fascinating guy born in taiwan talks about being a data center. we'll tell you about that in a second here. they are at a record high and they are crushing it, all right? so you at home pay attention to these companies right here and i'll walk back over in a second here. "wall street journal" did a great story an nvidia two weeks ago. all the head winds that could

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stop it forward march and momentum. the ceo said you guys think we a a chip company, we're not. we build data centers. complex and we can do it and they are doing it now because of the big a.i. push. i hope folks at home are taking that in. >> martha: we didn't have the chip capability for so long. obviously this company is surrounding that whole space with regard to a.i. you always have to ask yourself when you see a run like that how much longer, right? is it too late to get in? all those questions. thanks for giving us a little update on that stock today. tenants across the country are struggling to keep up with rent hikes. the fastest growing rent. honolulu, providence, rhode island and milwaukee risings over 4%. we're live in chicago with the latest on this.

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hi, kelly. >> hi, martha. rent world is continuing fuel inflation concerns getting in the way of the federal reserve cutting interest rates. there is a term called shelter inflation which the government uses to describe both rent and utility payments for renters in general for an apartment or home. according to the bureau of labor statistics shelter inflation was 5.4% higher last month than the year ago. sun belt is driving figures in terms of rent prices to appear flat. these are cities like austin, nashville and phoenix where new lease prices are declining. as you mentioned, martha, there is only a few areas where we've seen this prices rise hugely. we've seen them rise 5% on more in louisville, kentucky x

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hartford, connecticut and hann louwerse. that is contributing to allowing landlords to increase prices. >> martha: thank you very much, kelly. >> bill: an associate broker for a real estate company. good morning, nile. what do people need to know with inflation trying to figure out the cost of housing? >> the cost of housing right now is astronomical. rates at 7%. on the rental side we're very, very much stuck. for example, i have a property that i represent here in new york city pre-covid that apartment went for $10,000 a month. during covid we went for $8 thousand a month. right now $12,000. if we put it on the market for 15,000 a month nearly double. rental prices are so high and nobody is moving. we're in a locked scenario.

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80% of americans have rates less than 5%. that's gold in handcuffs. why would you sell and move? you can't go anywhere. >> martha: that's for three bedrooms. what, $15,000 a month for a three bedroom? >> that's new york city. >> bill: the median rent. what has happened since covid. really that is where the sensation has come all the way up to 1400 in may of this year. >> a lot has to do with the federal reserve. jerome powell needs to cut rates. he is saying if we take inflation, lower it down we'll be able to cut rates. the european central bank reduced rates. we're prime for that. i think that jerome needs to step up and do that to stimulate the market and the housing market. >> martha: amazing the median home sale price in the united states is $393,000.

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that's a very tough entry point for a young couple. >> up 5% in a year. 400,000 is the median national average. the american dream is homeownership. you have to say how are people going to get into a home? right now unless you have all cash, the rates are too high and it is very tough. we're hoping that powell will cut the rates this year. >> bill: kansas city, st. louis, indianapolis, the cities we're talking about there. sir, thank you, nice to see you. and we'll see where this goes. >> thank you. >> martha: thanks. laundering cartel cash. one of the most infamous drug organizations in the world teaming up with an ally here in the united states. we'll connect the dots next. plus president biden unveiling a new policy rewarding some migrants who came to the united states illegally but what about those who played by the rules?

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we have reaction from someone who did exactly that next.

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>> bill: 10:30 now. we're awaiting a court appearance by a man who was picked up by locals in new york just the other day. he is accused of raping in broad daylight a 13-year-old girl. so we're waiting for more details on this. we have our folks at the courthouse and bring it to you when it happens. it is a story that has stunned new york city and story that stunned america and we'll bring you his appearance as soon as it happens. 10:30. >> martha: multi-million dollar drug trafficking operation bust evidence by the feds after a five year investigation. one of mexico's most notorious cartels partnered with chinese underground banking groups to flood the united states with illegal drugs and narcotics. >> today's indictment strikes at the very heart of the sinaloa

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cartel. it's very purpose. to make money off the death and destruction that they cause. it shows how the cartel relies on a network of chinese money launderers to profit from selling drugs across the united states. >> martha: wow. griff jenkins live in washington with this big story. it feels like this is the kind of thing we sensed was clearly happening and now they are cracking down on it and getting some details. >> good morning, martha, it is a big deal the multi-year investigation was dubbed operation fortune runner carried out in coordination between the dea and chinese and mexican law enforcement and delivered a serious flow and disrupted chinese money launderers working hand in hand with the drug traffickers, a partnership of mutual interests. lawn erred in excess of 50

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million. >> the cartels are desperate to get cash made in the united states from the sale of drugs back to mexico without having it seized by u.s. and mexican authorities. the chinese money laundering groups are in the business of helping wealthy chinese nationals obtain cash in this country. >> the ten count indictment involves 24 defendant, lead suspect and others used a variety of methods to hide money sources. the operation seizing 50 million in proceeds. 90 pounds of meth and 3,000 ecstasy pill as well as semi automatic weapons and handguns. what makes this criminal partnership for dangerous, it was good for the cartel's bottom line. >> the affiliates and members of the cartel are paying much less to get the money laundered than they were before.

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>> while the u.s. officials thank china for playing a critical role in this it is the source of the materials that the cartel uses to make the drug. >> martha: an evil operation. >> bill: president biden rolling out a new executive action this week shielding half a million migrants from deportation. that involves the spouses of u.s. citizens. >> president biden: there is already a system in place for people we're talking about today. it separates families. under the current process they must go back to their home country. they have to leave their families in america with no assurance that they will be allowed back into the united states. they stay in america but in the shadows living in constant fear of deportation without the ability to legally work. >> bill: another angle to this campaign issue. marie immigrated legally and now an immigration attorney.

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thank you for your time. how did you do it? >> good morning very much. >> fe >> bill: how did you do it, maria? >> good, thank you. >> bill: how did you get here legally? >> i immigrated and had a scholarship to study in my doctor in the united states so i came here in 2008 and then i became a citizen in 2014. >> bill: here is governor abbott of texas. he has been on the front lines of the story from the very beginning about the new executive order. he characterized it this way. >> he made things worse today by granting this amnesty. what that shows to the entire world is come to the border as quickly as you can because it's possible that you, too, may be able to get amnesty. this is nothing more than a magnet that will increase illegal immigration. >> bill: you have studied this issue. is he right about that? >> i think president biden is

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completely wrong about what he is telling people. it is like we have a waiver that allows families to stay in the u.s. and be able to adjust status and get green cards as long as you show hardship to our u.s. citizen or lpr spouse or parents. what he is saying it is not true. it makes no sense. this is not the time to make more concessions especially we have cartels running the border and ready to attack the u.s. again. >> bill: there are several stories popped up in different parts of the country where illegals are connected to crime, sometimes violent. you said migrants from venezuela are a particular threat. how come? >> absolutely because they are coming here, they belong to tren de aragua and organized crime. we know what will happen and what is going on in venezuela

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and we have seen how not only they kept together to commit fraud against the u.s. but they are also helping other migrants to commit fraud in the u.s. and why i recommended the next president of the united states to establish and send a notice to combat immigration fraud. this is fraud is rampant and we're seeing it every day more than ever. >> bill: the "wall street journal" says this. biden sees obama's daca and raises him. the losers will be the illegal migrants and anyone who wants to reform to allow more legal immigration. no president in a century has done more to damage the cause of legal immigration than joe biden. you are one of those legal immigrants and you think this is the worst time to do it. why would that be? >> because there is not going to be a consensus. you see the latest survey. over 53% of hispanic americans are now in favor of deporting

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all migrants, why? they are scared and they face competition and they see this is not the country they aspired to live in. we're seeing censorship and feeling communism and marxism. now they don't want that. biden is just like allowing hundreds of thousands of migrants coming without being vetted and that is unfortunate. not only that when you come here, you go through a credible fear interview. it is like there is not enough controls to make sure who is coming has a legitimate path to become an asylum beneficiary and green card holder. over 80% of cases get denied in u.s. courts. so it is for sure something that this administration is not concerned about. this is bad for migrants and sure congress is not going to pass an immigration reform which i don't agree the system is broken. they are breaking the system every day. >> bill: out of miami you see this a lot. thank you for coming on.

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originally from spain and now in america, an immigration attorney. >> martha: look at this video from this morning. vandalism at one of the world's most historic sites. climate activist spraying orange paint on stonehenge. calling for the united kingdom to drop fossil fuels by 2032. they were arrested for defacing this ancient monument in southern england. >> bill: you see one woman out there trying to grab the guy's arm to try to lead him away. she tried her best. it was only margin -- >> bill: we're seeing a lot of changes in american schools as they still feel the consequences

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>> martha: huge story. the los angeles school board district votes to ban cell phones in the classroom saying that this is what is best for learning and students. >> the idea to get the kids off the screen. get kids off their social media apps. their academics and physical health and emotional health will improve and let kids be kids.

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>> martha: hallelujah. dr. marc siegel is here. marc, this comes right on the heels of the surgeon general saying that this is dangerous for kids and that we have to put new rules in place. are we about to see this snowball across the country, what is happening in l.a.? >> i think so. the current situation in l.a. you are allowed to use your cell phone for educational purposes. i kept thinking what does that entail? teachers just said 70% of teachers just said by pew research they're worried about kids bringing cell phones into the classroom in schools. high school kids. this isn't working. it is not working that the other alibi is well you need it to call your parent in an emergency. wait a minute. teachers have cell phones. i went to school before there were any cell phones and you knew how to get ahold of a parent. you knew how to get -- as a doctor i tell you you knew how to get ahold of a parent. oklahoma, kansas, vermont, ohio,

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louisiana, pennsylvania and florida all working on laws that do this exact same thing. keep the cell phone out of the classroom. i thought murthy was excellent on the show yesterday poignant and he has young kids. his young daughter in pre-school said how do i put a picture up on social media at the age of 4. kids from 8-12, 40% use social media. it is connected. with social media, iphone use, anxiety, depression. one more point the surgeon general brought out to me is that it is replacement activity. not just being exposed to violent sexuality, sleep loss, bullying. if you are on your iphone you aren't learning math, not learning reading. >> bill: a great story. if l.a. does it a lot of big cities will follow. >> they will. martha had an interview last hour with dr. steven quay about

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what he believes in the early days of covid. place this clip here. >> a new virus from nature isn't good at infecting humans. my concern is scientists in the u.s. who knew about this research, dr. fauci and dr. collins knew this and yet failed to tell the front line doctors you have to watch out for human-to-human transmission. he has a record of 15 years of supporting gain-of-function research. my own analysis is that kind of research has led to no useful civilian uses in medicine. >> bill: you are aware of that doctor and familiar with him? >> powerful words to martha. >> bill: he said in late december taiwan was shutting things down and they were contact tracing everyone who came back from china. we didn't do that, okay? we had americans who came off of a cruise ship in japan and they went out to nebraska and were

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isolated. you went there to see them. that doctor is saying that we knew this was all wrong but south korea and taiwan knew the same information and took very dramatic action different from what we did. >> all well said. let me put this together. a different kind of virus because it spreads easily without symptoms. not what we're used to. if you are coughing and sneezing watch out. these were spreading without symptoms. the structure of this virus that had never been seen before. it looks suspicious because it is not usually human viruses. how did it get there is the question and why he is tying it together with gain-of-function research? it has been going on in the wuhan institute of virology and here in north carolina they are collaborating. scientists around the world. china we don't have any control of what they are doing and fauci

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knew that. the who was helping to camouflage all this. likely it did have a lab origin. here is the point you made about nebraska that i want to tie this together. i was in nebraska, the scientists told me if february of 2020 it is spreading through the communities here in nebraska. it is all over the place. i said does cdc know about it and the government know about it? yeah, we're telling them about it. the diamond princess patients weren't isolated the way we were told. it was spreading through omaha and nebraska and through our country and not reacting properly. we weren't used to this kind of virus, likely lab origin. >> bill: he is saying we knew it was manmade because it spread so quickly. >> martha: redfield said that

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from the beginning. he will be on my show this afternoon. it is lab built because that is how it accelerated so quickly. animal to human doesn't happen at this kind of speed. >> we wrote an op-ed about this issue. it is spread asymptomatically. suspicious it was made as a bio defense program at the wuhan institute is what dr. redfield thinks. >> bill: more talk about this. we're looking at it in the rearview mirror and seeing amazing things. >> martha: good to see you as always. a slow-speed chase through a neighborhood. police chasing down pickles the piglet. a picture perfect ending. the two officers join us next. hi, i'm william devane. did you know it took our founders 116 days to debate and draft the u.s. constitution? turns out they didn't trust the printing of paper money,

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sleep number smart beds starting at $999. learn more at sleepnumber.com sara federico: at st. jude, we don't care who cures cancer. we just need to advance the cure. it's a bold initiative to try and bump cure rates all around the world, but we should. it is our commitment. we need to do this. >> harris: an illegal border crosser is in queens awaiting

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ayinde arraignment before a judge happening soon. it has been a tough last few days. police picked him up accused of raping a 13-year-old child. the spotlight on violence committed by illegals is getting brighter. eight days until the big debate between trump and biden. a new national poll shows trump and biden in a dead heat. yet another cringey moment keeping questions of president biden's acuity front and center. plus critics absolutely going after a hit piece on conservative women. senator james langford, gianno caldwell and others top of the other. >> dana: >> martha: we may find out whether former president trump will go to trial on election interference. david spunt with the latest on the georgia case in washington. >> the longer the supreme court takes to make a decision the

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further it pushes back a potential trial on the calendar. he is charged in d.c. trying to overturn the 2020 election results supposed to go to trial beginning in early march. the deadline came and went. the case itself has been on ice since late december when an appeal was announced. the judge in washington, d.c. overseeing the case has stopped all activity at least publicly on the docket. the first appeal was to the d.c. circuit court and ruled donald trump does not have absolute immunity to avoid charges. the supreme court weighed in even though the d.c. circuit court ruled unanimously. the case was argued before the high court at the end of april. we could find out tomorrow what the supreme court says, even this judge doesn't know and presiding over the biggest case of her life in a few months if the case goes forward before the election. it may not. depends on what the court says. >> martha: thank you very much. david spunt.

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>> bill: one of the more unique chases we have seen in a while, maybe ever. escaped piglet sparking chaos north of san francisco. >> there it is. >> bill: that's the pig. it has a name now. the pig's name is pickles. our guests helped get pickles home. these california police officers are here, good morning to both of you. san sa san ---you say what about how we'll catch this thing? >> i had no idea how to catch it. officers whitehall arrived first so he was trying to come up with a plan. all i could think about was how cute the piglet was over there. there was pickles owners and a couple other people there who tried to help us capture him.

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>> martha: how did he get out? is this a domesticated piglet that lives in a home with a family? >> from what we understand it was a domesticated pig the owner picked up in the area and on her way back to her home in gilroy. the pig made a mess in the car on the way home and got out to try to clean it and he made his escape. >> bill: officer whitehall, piglet was fast and strong. i don't think our viewers realize but this thing went on for a long time and covered multiple city blocks. >> it did, yeah. we definitely got our steps in for the day. it was quite a chase. we were probably chasing that pig over the course of a quarter mile i would say. >> martha: how did you finally catch it? i don't think we've seen that on the video. >> bystander named michael helped us out able to grab ahold

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of one of the pig's legs in the side yard of a house and everybody piled on top of him to keep him from squirming away. >> bill: you have a story that will go on for some time, right? and i don't know if viewers can hear or not. one of the cops on camera can be heard saying come on, man. >> martha: come on, man. >> bill: because piglet was elusive. paige, thank you for your time. forest white hal and paige thomas, you gave us a reason to smile today and for that we're most appreciative. >> martha: a good day when you are not looking at robbers or people breaking into houses and you have to deal with a piglet for these officers that's a good problem, right? >> bill: he picked a great part of the country to run for a day. >> martha: see you at 3:00

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Bill Hemmer and Dana Perino cover current events happening around the nation and the world; guests pertinent to the news topics are interviewed and viewer emails are also answered by the anchors and guests.

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