scalia. thank you for spending your saturday with us. we are going to go to, we begin this hour with a fox news alert. big changes affecting president trumps seven nation travel ban. there has been action in the courts and at u.s. customs and border patrol across the nation. we have team coverage to sort through the confusion. we ll begin with molly in d. c. this is, it s not the end of the story for the vetting from visa holders from seven countries. countries that the trumpet ministration says it is concerned about regarding the terror ties. the judge s order is expected to be challenge, up to the ninth circuit court of appeals and possibly to the supreme court. for now now the federal judges
requires the rule of law, without exception. we are, after all, a nation of laws. judge gorsuch firmly understands this. he said on many occasions that judges must apply the law as written without regard to their own politics or personal feelings. he put it well on tuesday and movingly, saying, quote, in our legal order, it s for congress and not the courts to write new laws. he added, it is the role of judges to apply not alter the work of the people s representatives. and my favorite line, sitting as i was on the front row was this one, he said, quote, a judge who likes every outcome he reaches is likely a bad judge, stretching for results he prefers rather than those the law demands. i don t know about you, but that s my kind of supreme court justice. [applaus
this will have to be appealed to the most likely with a 14 mac four split on the supreme court we are in uncharted territory as to how it will end up. this is a constitutional issue when you have different courts disagreeing. at some level and you have been in charge of having to try to implement policy rather than talk about the politics of it, there s practicalities here. there are hundreds of thousands of people coming in every week through america s airports. there hundreds of thousands of custom border protection folks saying you are in or out. how do they follow the bouncing ball? it s difficult. when we had to implement the 311 rule which is still standing to this day, that was the result of a terrorist plot in the u.k. the ridiculousness of whether you could take liquids on or not. we that you have to train thousands aboard a patrol agents and custom officers. at the end of the day simple things like is a mascara liquid or solid? it s very important things that we are
well, it was certainly what happened out there in weerttownatertown from the time of the bombing and the capture in watertown, there s been unprecedented cooperation. there s been some bumps in the road. there s been a lot written about that such as what? there was some disagreement between the agencies about when to release the pictures of the bombers. they were released on that thursday and they were captured that night. there s folks who felt they might have been released earlier. and sean collier that incident may not have had to have happened. that s something we ll never know. this prosecution really was pretty flawless. it was incredible to watch. i was in the trial many of those days. anyone covering massachusetts courts was surprised that the
so you have a 14-year-old now that faces a mandatory sentence if he is convicted that the u.s. supreme court found unconstitutional. it s going to be an interesting question. hopefully the massachusetts courts will fix that before he gets sentenced. let s talk about the documents that came out today. what stands out to you? well, the type of crime, the facts of the crime. the evidence that they obviously already have. they have surveillance footage which shows him go into the bathroom rate after the teacher goes in and shows him coming out, getting a recycling bin on wheels, bringing it into the bathroom and coming out with that and that was found near the body. it shows him having the ability to go in and actually almost everything except the actual act is on the video already. in terms of evidence, what kind of a case do there s a