will: fox news poll shows rising crime as one of the voters biggest concerns. who thinks we have a crime epidemic. died of an attempted homicide who took the life of my boyfriend tyler jackson. sends one deep to left. it is back and it is gone! bregman puts the stros on the board in the third inning anything can happen will: sun coming up over raleigh, north carolina on this friday morning of fox & friends. brian kilmeade, ainsley earhardt. i m sitting in for steve doocy. brian: i feel bad you missed your son s football game. will: last night. punter. ainsley: nice so playing soccer and football. will: that s right. ainsley: which one does he like better? will: played soccer his whole life main sport. there is something about gearing up putting the helmet on and camaraderie. he loves the camaraderie of football in the fall. ainsley: especially texas. south carolina is paying am p a.m. i any that s your your. i m going there this weekend to
they opened the trunk. underneath the stroller in a compartment they pull out a man. the mom told troopers she was trying to smuggle them to the san antonio area. she was arrested for human smuggling. a couple of major fentanyl busts to shoi. look at this photo at the cbp port of entry in arizona. cbp officers seized 242,000 fentanyl pills smuggled in the spare tire of a vehicle and others strapped to the body of a pedestrian. take a look at this. cbp agents in arizona finding 2100 fentanyl pills hidden in tamales with an ice chest. the democrat-led city of el paso just announced they are no longer going to bus migrants to new york city or chicago. the final numbers, though, wild. they sent more than 290 buses to the cities with more than 14,000 migrants. they say they are stopping because the new dhs policy has reduced the number of illegal crossings there. send it back to you. bill: no more busing to new york city, is that the word? that s correct, as of yesterday the f
your gas? who feels it s unsafe? not just the women. representative brown, we were having a great conversation with the representative here. and seems like your party gets a lot of the blame when it comes to some of the crime issues because of the criminal justice reform. my first job was in a juvenile court. i have been a criminal justice reform advocate my entire life. but did the party take it too far? yeah. so i think [inaudible] we face on my side of the aisle is that we get stuck in this space of it s either this or that. right. and we should so we should be able to broken system that we all believe need to be reformed and hold people accountable for their actions. not reform or hold people accountable. we can do both at the same time. so that s where i think we dropped the ball out.
lawrence: where did the position of finds expiration date to release everyone out of jail become a thing in the reality of it is some people are just a danger to society. they will never take the choice to reform their lives. they are just bad people or come from bad circumstances and don t want the help that s been given to them do you agree with some people in your party that say look, we have got to release all these people by this date some day 10 years, some say 20 years? absolutely not. i m known for, you know, standing up for the victims holding repeat violent offenders accountable for serious violent offenses. and that s what that s one thing that we all should be able to agree on. there should be no disagreement on keeping people safe keeping communities safe and rebuilding your city. lawrence: later on we will hear from the representative and
feeling you get when you park your car, and your head is on a swivel, and even in daytime now, it can be a problem. because we see it all day long on television on social media at any given moment anybody can be a victim. it isn t about party. it isn t about race. it isn t about gender. anyone at any given moment can be a victim and we are living in fear. and this is not how life should be. lawrence: martina, we know the people that we know the people that are committing the crime. they want citizens to come forward. but when they arrested people, they let them right back on the street. is this sustainable? it s absolutely not sustainable. i mean, i hear from law enforcement officers who i m very grateful for their service and everything that they do for our community. they should all know we do have their back. but i hear from law enforcement and by the time we get the paperwork written up after they arrested somebody. the person is already back out on the street. totally unaccept