this was designed to kick donald trump s in the next four years and look at possible ways, a big part of their strategy is filing lawsuits against the trump administration. i think jay and i both agree, i m sure you probably agree, this is a classic case of judge choptank which is why it started in seattle knowing it would go to the ninth circuit. looking at the bigger picture should the administration entered dissipating a lot more, and how should a best handle it? of course this is how the left operates, they ve been infesting law schools and academia and brewing these activist judges and lawyers and hatcheries for decades now. the idea that turning around that titanic, that is good to be a decades if not half-century or century long process. i think this is a wake-up call and a call to arms for all young patriots out there trying to
whether or not soaring is taking place are inspectors that are hired by the shows where the owners are abusing the horse with the soaring practice. reporter: many horse owners don t see a reason to force horses to step higher. walking horses have a beautiful natural gait that does not need to be enhanced by chemical or mechanical means. chains are not a good sign. reporter: lauren kovak inspects show horses for signs of abuse. you look. make sure there is no scarring. it s not always obvious. people dough their best to hide it, in fact. reporter: a bill that would increase penalties make items used in soaring illegal and make inspectors independent is stalled in congress because some members believe it would cost jobs and hurt the industry. abc news, capitol hill. well, you ve heard of people being evacuated because of severe weather. what about fish? california officials have trucked more than a million trout out of two hatcheries and taken them up north. the water comin
hatcheries isn t cold enough because of the severe drought. there is no guarantee the mass evacuations will save the fish. but experts say, it s better than nothing. the problem in minnesota is too much rain. more than 4 inches fell yesterday on the minneapolis-st. paul region. it s the wettest june on record and the result is flooding in much of the state. the governor declared emergencies in 35 counties. and here s a look at your friday weather. there s more heavy rain in the forecast for minnesota, unfortunately, and most of the midwest and eastern states. pleasant across the west, although a little hot in the southwest. hot and humid in the south. a fine friday here in the northeast. moderate temperatures in the northwest. but not much anywhere else. most of the midwest will hit the upper 80s and 90s. detroit and boston will only manage the mid-70s. starbucks has now confirmed it will not be donating any money for employees to complete their college education. instead, the
salmon in a normal year would have been released at their hatcheries, mike greated down the sacramento river to the pacific and eventually return to spawn. it is in the ideal an we re having to take extraordinary measures. reporter: this gives the fish their best shot? right now this year we believe so. reporter: the climate controlled trucks carry the young salmon 275 miles down river to san pablo bay where they get a chance to acclimate. over past 2 1/2 months barges with nets will transport the young fish out to the pacific ocean where the chances of surviving and growing into adults will be significantly higher then left to fend for themselves. if these fish were released in river, their survival would be less than 5%. this is really giving them a leg up on survival. reporter: this massive fish rescue is costing taxpayers hundreds of thousands of dollars but officials argue the state s $1.4 billion salmon industry and tens of thousands of jobs are at stake. what that
drought could kill millions of baby salmon as they come from the california hatcheries to the pacific ocean. the fish are bypassing trouble spots and hitching a ride down river. these tiny fish are getting sucked into tanker trucks for the trip of a lifetime, first of 30 million california salmon in a normal-year would be released at hatcheries, migrated down the sacramento river to the pacific and return to spawn. this is not ideal an we re having to take extraordinary measures. reporter: this gives the fish the best shot? right now we believe so. reporter: climate controlled trucks carry the salmon to san pablo bay where they get a chance to acclimate. over next 2 1/2 months special barges with nets will transport them out in the pacific ocean where chances survivorring growing intoed at adults will be specific higher than if left for themselves.