kayleigh: several child hostages have been freed in the temporary ceasefire between israel and hamas. more expected to be released today. the youngest hostage taken by hamas has just been put in greater danger in a tragic turn of events. the terrorists handed over a 10-month-old boy kafir not to the israelis, but to a separate palestinian terror group. i can t imagine getting that kind of news. the family s relatives left reeling and calling it psychological torture. hamas s child hostages are being held as a trophy. this is outnumbered, i m kayleigh mcenany, here with my co-host harris faulkner and emily compagno, sideline n.f.l. reporter, michele tafoya and david webb. kafir s aunt thinks he is being held underground, no sunlight. the ceasefire has been extended nothing tomorrow. kafir s aunt, listen to this, the terrorists slaughtered nearly half his hometown. kafir and his brother ariel were huddled with their parents hiding in a safe room, armed only with a pistol.
so this all actually happened late last week when the financial giant revealed it had made this risky credit bet in the european market. so now, we re hearing three executives are expected to resign and bloomberg is now reporting morgan s entire chief investment office of london could be cleaned out. the trades are raising some very, very serious questions this morning about whether the country s biggest bank learned anything from that financial crisis. let me remind you, that was merely four years ago and what happened to the laws that were supposed to stop all of this? that s one of the big questions we re asking this morning. many of the rules created by the dodd-frank bill still aren t in place, two years later. ceo jamie dimon acknowledging this new mess could give regulators and members of congress more reason to tighten any loopholes. have you given regulators new ammunition against the banks? absolutely. this is a very fortunate and inopportune time to have this k