challenges and their short-term thinking that acting i.c.e. director matt they will be lured into this, elm praising socialism, of course, it albens with his reaction. makes the first problem i know you spoke yesterday but did the president make his point significantly worse. to get the cooperation between the city of chicago and i.c.e.? steve: phil, you know the argument bernie sanders ands good morning, brian. or saying we will make the he certainly made his point and fat cats corporations pay i hope the leaders of chicago more and you will be fine. yeah. as i note in my book there and the other sanctuary cities are paying attention. is not even enough money to just tax the rich to pay for unfortunately this is become a even the entitlements we issue which politics are continually being placed over have now: what s amaze public safety and safety of our citizens. something elizabeth warren and bernie sanders will brian: so right now if i.c.e. always talk about well, other countrie
heal bring in every high profile lawyer in the world. i don t know about tens of millions but it s not going to be cheap. bill: this is going on two years appeal and this and ruling and that and hearings it will be over $10 million. no. it won t. bill: you don t think so? by the time the government and all of the resources. not tens of millions of dollars it s going to be millions but, no. it s expensive to litigate cases that s true in every case. that can t be the governing concern when you decide whether somebody has committed a crime or not. either they did it. either you as a prosecutor they did it. in this case the government believes they have him. bill: edwards lawyer say you have got to throw this out. politically motivated. bill: going to trial. how strong is the government s case in your opinion. tough to say because they haven t really shown their hand entirely but from what they have so far basically alleging that he was using campaign cash to cover up t
the situation was and kansas destroyed the records. what happened was planned parenthood needs to keep records if it performs abortions. bill: right. in particular if you have young girls going in there under the age of 14. bill: because of statutory rape. that s right. when they perform an abortion like that they have to keep a record and let the state know. and the prosecutor at the time, the attorney general phill cline who the viewers may know by this point, says that he had proof that there was up to 166 abortions performed and they only had a record of one from planned parenthood. bill: the reason the client allege cline as planned parenthood didn t turn that over to him when they asked for it because they were statutory rape cases which are mandated to be reported to the authorities in kansas. right. so he is saying where are the other records? so he at the time says he got records from the state because planned parenthood has to report all the abortions in the s
heal bring in every high profile lawyer in the world. i don t know about tens of millions but it s not going to be cheap. bill: this is going on two years appeal and this and ruling and that and hearings it will be over $10 million. no. it won t. bill: you don t think so? by the time the government and all of the resources. not tens of millions of dollars it s going to be millions but, no. it s expensive to litigate cases that s true in every case. that can t be the governing concern when you decide whether somebody has committed a crime or not. either they did it. either you as a prosecutor they did it. in this case the government believes they have him. bill: edwards lawyer say you have got to throw this out. politically motivated. bill: going to trial. how strong is the government s case in your opinion. tough to say because they haven t really shown their hand entirely but from what they have so far basically alleging that he was using campaign cash to cover up t
the situation was and kansas destroyed the records. what happened was planned parenthood needs to keep records if it performs abortions. bill: right. in particular if you have young girls going in there under the age of 14. bill: because of statutory rape. that s right. when they perform an abortion like that they have to keep a record and let the state know. and the prosecutor at the time, the attorney general phill cline who the viewers may know by this point, says that he had proof that there was up to 166 abortions performed and they only had a record of one from planned parenthood. bill: the reason the client allege cline as planned parenthood didn t turn that over to him when they asked for it because they were statutory rape cases which are mandated to be reported to the authorities in kansas. right. so he is saying where are the other records? so he at the time says he got records from the state because planned parenthood has to report all the abortions in the s