Courage and bravery today. Heather the war on cops escalated to alarming new numbers. Shock turning to gratefulness. The unexpected surprise on the bathroom sink of joanna gainess 8yearold daughter. Fox and friends first starts right now. Good morning to you. You are watching fox and friends first on this busy tuesday morning. Thank you for starting your day with us. Starting with the fox news alert, the Trump Administration barred from refusing asylum to immigrants who cross the border illegally. Doug luzader joins us from washington with more on this breaking story as we learn hundreds of criminals may be traveling with the Migrant Caravan. Reporter a setback for the white house in court, a federal judge in San Francisco has ruled they cannot apply these new rules that require immigrants only pass through designated border checkpoints to a claim asylum. That is why we limit the us response, the part of Homeland Security says there is a criminal component to these caravans. The carava
Nancy pelosis effort to become speaker. Everett, wow. Touch down rams. Im back back in the new york groove im back back in the new york grove groove. Brian i guess so we are back in the new york groove. Ainsley thanksgiving is an the corner. When you think of thanksgiving you think of the parade you grew up watching and floats and wind can be scary for those balloons. Brian underdog. Ainsley snoopy. Who is underdog . Is that one the balloons . Steve it is. They may have retired underdog. Not sure. The cool thing now the parade you grew up watching goes in front of building that you work at. Ainsley i know. Its so cool. A lot of people from work that go out on the balkans anball conwall cannies ball can anies with their kid. Brian remember when the president rolled out an executive order that said hey, if you come here illegal and we catch you, you will never ever get citizenship. You will be banned from ever getting it a judge looked at that and they have a problem. Ainsley he said no
Wandering cops move from department to department
One of the biggest roadblocks to police accountability is so-called “wandering cops” who lose their jobs in one place only to be rehired in another By WILLIAM H. FREIVOGEL and PAUL WAGMAN/ Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting
Published: April 28, 2021, 4:30pm
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5 Photos FILE - In this Tuesday, Nov. 3, 2020 file photo, police hold their clubs as they form a line in front of supporters of President Donald Trump on Election Day in Beverly Hills, Calif. Red states such as Florida and Georgia lead the way in decertifying officers with past problems, while there is no decertification in two of the bluest and biggest in the country - California and New Jersey. (AP Photo/Ringo H.W. Chiu, File)
WILLIAM H. FREIVOGEL and PAUL WAGMAN
Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting
ST. LOUIS Timothy Loehmann wanted to be a police officer like his father. He got a job in Independence, Ohio, but it didn t go well. His supervisors allowed him to quit after he suffered a dangerous lack of composure during firearms training. The department concluded he would not be able to cope or make good decisions under stress. The deputy chief wrote Loehmann could not follow simple directions, could not communicate clear thoughts nor recollections, and his handgun performance was dismal.
Cleveland Police did not check on Loehmann s history in Independence before hiring him. Also, Ohio law required a felony before an officer would lose his badge. So it was Loehmann who responded in the fall of 2014 to the Cleveland park where 12-year-old Tamir Rice was playing with what turned out to be a toy gun. Loehmann shot him dead.
Wandering cops shuffle departments, abusing citizens
WILLIAM H. FREIVOGEL and PAUL WAGMAN/Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting, Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting
April 28, 2021
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1of8FILE - In this Tuesday, Nov. 3, 2020 file photo, police hold their clubs as they form a line in front of supporters of President Donald Trump on Election Day in Beverly Hills, Calif. Red states such as Florida and Georgia lead the way in decertifying officers with past problems, while there is no decertification in two of the bluest and biggest in the country – California and New Jersey.Ringo H.W. Chiu/APShow MoreShow Less
2of8FILE - This Wednesday, April 21, 2021 booking photo provided by the Minnesota Department of Corrections shows Derek Chauvin, who was convicted the previous day of murder and manslaughter in the 2020 death of George Floyd. Chauvin’s prosecution illustrates that officers who come to public attention in abuse cases often had a string of pri