[inaudible] why do you ask such dumb question? jesse: it s actually great question. it s a question every single reporter should be asking. because, before we even knew joe biden was the big guy, before we even had the laptop a ukrainian businessman told an fbi informant that he bribed the big guy 5 million bucks. he used the phrase the big guy when joe was v.p., years before the nickname went public. and tonight we are learning the big guy was throwing his weight around. this alleged $5 million bribe wasn t so much of a bribe. it was more of a shakedown by the big guy, joe biden. he was shaking down the ukrainian. the federalist is reporting that biden coerced the ukrainian to pay the bribe. the big guy was strong arming a ukrainian energy company to wire him cash. the ukrainian told the fbi informant he hid the payments, never directly paid joe, just hid it in a maize of shell companies and said it would take at least 10 years to follow the money back to biden. well, it
hey everybody, good afternoon. i m yasmin vossoughian. donald trump is in for the fight of his life. the former president faces a tuesday arraignment on 37 criminal counts, involving his refusal to turn over classified documents that never should have been in his possession. this hour, he s gonna be taking his defense public within appearance in georgia. as his gop political rivals tiptoe around the story. in addition to the politics of, this we are going to dive deeply into the substance of the allegations in the indictment. it is a treasure trove of damning material from photos that showed documents being hoarded and bedrooms, bathrooms, and even the mar-a-lago ballroom. conversations where trump himself waves around top secret material as well as evidence, in which he apparently tries to get his own lawyers to lie to the feds. looking for the documents. we will get into all of this coming up. we begin with the new information that we re learning with the unsealing of the h
interview goes on. as you might imagine, governor newsome and i strongly disagree on everything. but to the governor s credit, he sat down for an entire hour. he answered most of our questions. by the way, that was something that the president of the united st states, job is not remotely capable of doing. here s part one of my interview with california democratic governor, gavin newsome. all right. so i write you. pick out a lot of pickup. i m sure you saw it. i m like, okay, i want to do an interview. i don t want to do an interview. i want to make sure the audience understands up front, this is not i want you to answer and give your views. i d say you represent probably about half the country, your views and the other half represents mine. you agree? we re kind of divided. plus or minus. we re polarized, traumatized. we re in these eco chambers. let s be candidate. your folks are watching you and getting certain perspective and my folks are watching other networks y
justice department throws 37 charges at former president donald trump saying he mishandled classified documents. the indictments say the papers laid out everything from america s military weaknesses to foreign nations nuclear capacities. what does it mean for u.s. security? should he have been indicted? i m an innocent man. i did nothing wrong. then artificial intelligence may be the most important development of our time, but is it the most dangerous as well? we know it will replace jobs and blur the lines of reality, but could it be a larger, existential threat? i ll talk to geoffrey hinton known as the godfather of ai who says yes. the worry is can we keep them working for us when they re much more intelligent than us? also, how do you end extreme poverty globally? it s a very tall order, but r.j. banga wants to do just that. he s the brand new head of the world bank. he s tasked with taking global action in a world where the west and russia are at odds
this breaking story. good evening,. bret, good evening. two sources tell fox news a manhattan grand jury has voted to indict 24-year-old daniel penny in the chokehold death of 30-year-old homeless man jordan neely which means this case will go to trial. penny was indicted ton a second degree manslaughter charge for placing neely in a chokehold killing him on board a new york city subway train on may 1st. the grand jury was not considering his guilt or innocence but, rather, whether there was sufficient evidence and reasonable cause to believe that a crime had been committed here. it took 11 days for manhattan district attorney alvin bragg s office to charge penny. and the charge came only after protests in new york city from activists outraged penny was not immediately arrested and charged. prosecutors said they had enough evidence, witness interviews, photos, and videos to prove that penny recklessly caused the death of neely by cleaning him in a chokehold even after neely