sandra: a great piece he wrote there, really important questions, and we have some important questions for him as well. i m sandra smith in new york. great to begin another week with you, john. jonathan turley says if the white house truly wants transparency, now is the time to open up about the files. here is he will join us this hour. plus, we are following the twists and turns in the alec murdaugh double murder case and today defense attorneys got one witness to admit on the stand there could have been a second shooter. john: nancy grace is in the courtroom in south carolina following the case in-person. we will get her reaction to that bombshell all new at 2:00. but we begin with a fox news alert. if the bell did not tell the tale, it is a fox news alert. border agents are busy cracking down on illegal crossers at our southern border, authorities are now seeing a spike up north. migrants now braving the freezing cold temperatures along the 49th parallel and risking
former president donald trump and did it just open the flood gates for more candidates to dive in. welcome, everybody. i m neil cavuto. first to jacqui heinrich at the white house on the back and forth of infrastructure amid a backdrop of controversies. jacqui? hi, neil. with this new divided control of congress, passing new legislation is going to be much more difficult for the president than it was when democrats controlled both chambers. ahead of any 2024 announcement, which could come sometime after the state of the union, the president hasn t been laying out an agenda other than promoting bills that he signed in to law like he did in baltimore, touting the trillion dollar infrastructure law. he talked about a tunnel that would be replaced and completed about a decade from now. it will have up to four tracks total allowing trains there to move at more than 100 miles an hour. this is 150-year-old tunnel. you wonder how in the hell it s still standing. we re going to in
space. we ll take a look at what security officials are saying about the puzzling phenomenon. plus, the latest from turkey. as rescue crews are pulling fewer and fewer earthquake survivors from the rubble. we ll get a live report in just a few minutes. and we re learning new detils about a classified documents folder that former president trump s legal team just recently turned over to the justice department. good morning. welcome to way too early on this monday, february 13th. thanks for starting your day and week with us. big news, the big game. the kansas city chiefs have won the super bowl, defeating the philadelphia eagles in comeback fashion last night. two-time nfl mvp quarterback, patrick mahomes, led the chiefs to a 38-35 victory and earned his second super bowl mvp and is already illustrious career. we ll have all of the highlights from last night s game. a fun one, not quite a classic. we ll break it all down in way too early. let s begin with the growing
trillion could soon approach the size of the defense budget. let that sink in, neil. president biden is calling for more taxes on the rich. he speak recently in virginia beach. i want to make it clear, i m going to raise some taxes. any of you who are billionaires out there, you re going to stop paying 3%. not a joke. biden met with kevin mccarthy just once since he became speaker and with a debt of over $31 trillion, many republicans are concerned about potential cuts in national against, a time when the biden administration is arming ukrainian forces with billions in american weapons and with the threat from china increasing. the 2022 and 2023 defense budgets are 3% when the kennedy administration was spending 9% of u.s. gdp on defense, building up the arsenal which the pentagon says is aging and is needed upgrades to the tunes of billions ever dollars. and jfk cut taxes and shortly after his death. that was then. lucas thank you very much. i raised this issue with jo
the documents including sensitive information about ukraine, and we will talk to ukraine s former president, next we begin this hour with the latest out of louisville, kentucky in 30 minutes we expect an update from authorities, and we will bring that to you when it happens. overnight a fifth victim died from her injuries. she was 57-year-old. she was an executive administrative officer at that bank the other four victims were identified as james tutt, who was 64 years old he was a commercial real estate market executive and a county executive described tutt as a high quality individual. the 40-year-old joshua barrick just started working there and thomas elliott was a good friend who helped launched a law career, and he s being remembered as somebody that lifted people up and then the 45-year-old giuliana farmer just posted on facebook that she was expecting a new grandchild in september. eight people were also injured in the attack, including three police officers. among