it s a family show, and a family hour. abby phillip, thank you so much. nice to see you. you too. have a good, show laura coates. welcome, everyone. two cnn tonight i am laura coates. a community is on high alert that escaped murderer in pennsylvania. danelo cavalcante, who was sentenced to life without parole for stabbing his girlfriend to death in front of her two young children. he has been now caught on security cameras at longwood garden, a popular tourist spot with many hiking trails through the woods including, by the way, when that loops around the very prison he broke out of thursday morning. the dea da law enforcement is now warning residents again tonight, keep your doors locked, keep your cars locked. at least one nearby school district will be closed for the second day in a row tomorrow, as police are urgently hunting for the extremely dangerous fugitive who, well he s got absolutely nothing to lose. also, a chilling near miss. what happened whe
appropriations for homeland for many years. they don t have the resources to, quote, deport millions and millions of people. they don t have them. second of all with the resources they have, a lot of those agents were taken down to the border to handle the surge. so, first, they don t have the overall resources, and number two, a lot of that personnel got taken to the southern border. so when the president said he was going to deport millions and millions of people, that was not correct at all. you know, he set a deadline for july 6th. can you get a deal done by then, congressman? well, again, if he s focuses on the border supplemental, yes, we can. i hope we can do it this week. if he s talking about something else then all he s trying to do is use jiujitsu on us by saying, oh, i was going to deport millions of people. i put the burden on the democrats. the democrats were not able to come up with a deal. and he s trying to put the blame on us. i mean, we ve seen this process
recipient. let s talk about the numbers for a second. you can. no, you can t. not if you ve committed a crime. you lose your status. okay. no, there are several, certain high-level crimes cause you to lose your status. lower-level crimes do not allow you to lose your status and if you have been arrested, but not convicted, you can get daca. last week you said have you been arrested but not convicted. you are innocent until proven guilty. let me talk about the numbers. 1,500 people have lost their daca status. which according to the u.s. government they went to trial and were found innocent. they were never prosecuted because counties don t have the resources to is that anecdotal? testimony from i.c.e. agents in federal district court about assault by daca gang members and they were still given the benefits of the program because they weren t prosecuted. let me stop you for one second, secretary. this is an important conversation to have and when we look at the facts
there. they are in collaboration with gangs. the other countries, el salvadors has some of that as well. guatemala, less. there are governments here that aren t protecting the children for political will reasons and because they don t have the resources to. also because some of the officials are in cahoots with criminal networks. let me go back to stephanie on the ground. what s the the future look like down there? i think the united states will probably find a way, even in a bipartisan way eventually after everybody has settled their scores on this thing. you can see john mccain coming up with at least something of a compromise. they will deal with the existing number of people here. happens if the flow continues? is it going to keep continuing? 90,000, 100,000 a year? once word gets out we are treating the first 50,000 okay, in fact, well. the traffickers spread the word, hey, it s looking good. it will keep growing. what s going to happen. well, look.
governments. they don t have the ability or resources. what are the worst? name them. what are the worst countries. honduras, definitely. it s got the highest murder rate in the world. frankly the police are corrupt there. they are in collaboration with gangs. the other countries, el salvadors has some of that as well. guatemala, less. there are governments here that aren t protecting the children for political will reasons and because they don t have the resources to. also because some of the officials are in cahoots with criminal networks. let me go back to stephanie on the ground. what s the the future look like down there? i think the united states will probably find a way, even in a bipartisan way eventually after everybody has settled their scores on this thing. you can see john mccain coming up with at least something of a compromise. they will deal with the existing number of people here. happens if the flow continues? is it going to keep continuing? 90,000, 100,000 a yea