• 3 months ago
Transcript
00:00Good evening. Welcome to Washington. I'm Shannon Brehman for Bret Baier.
00:03Vice President Harris gets back on the campaign trail after having a tough time answering
00:07questions at an event with Oprah Winfrey. What changes in the electoral process in Georgia
00:13could mean for the presidential election and how Congress is trying to shape the future
00:17of sports gambling. But first breaking tonight, the acting head of the Secret Service
00:26says his agency failed in its mission to protect former President Trump. He blames in part
00:32complacency, poor communication and a lack of clarity in dealing with local law enforcement,
00:37particularly regarding coverage of that roof from which an assailant shot and nearly killed
00:43the Republican nominee. The assessment of the first assassination effort comes just five days
00:48after the second attempt on the former president's life. Correspondent David Spun starts us off
00:53tonight from the Justice Department. Good evening, David. Hello, Shannon. Good evening. Acting
00:57Secret Service Director Ronald Rowe says it was poor communication that led to the assassination
01:02attempt of former President Donald Trump on July 13th. Today, he announced some new changes
01:07and he said he's going to rewrite the playbook of the storied agency.
01:11The Secret Service did not give clear guidance or direction to our local law enforcement
01:17partners. Acting Secret Service Director Ronald Rowe out with a blunt assessment of his agency.
01:22While some members of the advanced team were very diligent, there was complacency on the part
01:29of others that led to a breach of security protocols. A complete internal report days,
01:35even weeks away. But the summary released today follows a similar theme. Quote, some local police
01:41entities supporting the Butler venue had no knowledge that there were two separate communication
01:46centers on site of particular concern. Coordination around the building where shooter Thomas Crooks
01:52fired as many as eight rounds from an AR-15 style automatic rifle. Quote, there was a lack
01:57of detailed knowledge by Secret Service personnel regarding the state or local law enforcement
02:02presence that would be present in and around the AGR complex. Rowe said the agency is in
02:08the accountability phase and people will likely face consequences. This agency has among the most
02:13robust table of penalties in the entirety of the federal government. House Speaker Mike Johnson
02:18is optimistic. We certainly hope that is true. We're going to do everything we can to make sure
02:23it is. The yays are four hundred and five. The nays are zeroed. Today, members in the House
02:27unanimously passed a measure requiring presidential candidates to receive the same protection as
02:33sitting presidents. Rowe insisted the levels are the same now, but there are skeptics. If this is
02:39the highest level of security based on the threats against President Trump, we need to create several
02:44higher levels of security because it just seems to be inadequate. Acting Director Rowe was also
02:51pressed on what happened last weekend in West Palm Beach. Well, that's a separate investigation
02:55and separate situation, according to the Secret Service. He does admit there is a common theme
03:00that they need to rewrite the book at the Secret Service. And he says changes are coming along the
03:05way. Shannon. All right, David, thank you very much. Thank you. So there are big changes coming
03:10for the electoral process in Georgia. This comes as early in-person voting is now underway in some
03:16states. We'll take a closer look at that in just a few minutes. But first, congressional correspondent
03:20Aisha Hasni has the latest on the Trump campaign. Hello, Aisha. Hi, Shannon. Good to see you tonight.
03:26The Trump campaign urging supporters to register to vote early in Virginia, where early voting began
03:31today while getting news. Another very important state is making changes to how it counts its
03:36ballots. Tonight, allies of former President Trump in Georgia celebrating a victory in the
03:42critical swing state. The state's election board now requiring ballots to be hand counted,
03:48despite critics on both sides of the aisle and the secretary of state warning that will slow
03:54down results. Trump now heads to North Carolina Saturday, another key state on his path to victory,
04:00but where scandal now surrounds his endorsed candidate for governor, Lieutenant Governor Mark
04:05Robinson. Fox confirms Robinson will not attend this weekend's Trump rally as Democrats remind
04:11voters Trump said this. This is Martin Luther King on steroids. About the man CNN reports wrote
04:19disturbing comments like I'm a black Nazi on a porn site a decade ago. Trump's running mate,
04:25J.D. Vance, sidestepping the topic on X, attempting to move the conversation back to
04:31Vice President Harris. On Thursday, the former president addressed Iran's hacking of his campaign
04:36for the first time as he appealed to Jewish voters. What's that all about? That alone should
04:41get me elected. But then raised eyebrows for saying Jewish Americans would be partly to blame
04:47if he lost in November. And honestly, you ought to have your heads examined.
04:52And Justin, Georgia's Republican attorney general, says that new ballot counting rule
04:57is, quote, illegal and will likely head to court.
05:00Shannon, and we will cover it. We will be watching very closely. I should get so much.
05:05So Vice President Harris was in Georgia earlier this afternoon. Her focus was on what she thinks
05:09is a winning issue there. Senior White House correspondent Jackie Heinrich is with the
05:14Harris campaign ahead of another rally tonight in Madison, Wisconsin. Good evening, Jackie.
05:19Good evening, Shannon. Vice President Harris will try to cut into new Quinnipiac polling,
05:24showing that Trump leads her on the economy here outside the margin of error. To that end,
05:29she'll be introduced by the local Teamsters union president after the national organization
05:33declined to endorse a candidate despite historically backing Democrats with more
05:36than half their membership supporting Trump. But news out of Georgia this week
05:40bumped Wisconsin to second on her schedule. He brags about overturning Roe v. Wade.
05:47He is proud, proud that women are dying,
05:53proud that doctors and nurses could be thrown in prison for administering care. How dare he?
06:01Vice President Harris adding a campaign stop in Georgia after a report linking two deaths to the
06:05state's abortion restrictions. Harris highlighting 28 year old Amber Nicole Thurman, who died of
06:10complications from abortion pills she got out of state. Thurman's mother says a simple procedure
06:15would have saved her life, but doctors delayed treatment because of the state's laws.
06:19I want y'all to know Amber was not a statistic. You're looking at a mother that is broken.
06:28The worst pain ever. Georgia's governor calling the narrative misinformation,
06:32pointing to a pro-life advocate who says Georgia's laws, quote, explicitly allows
06:36physicians to intervene in cases of medical emergencies or if the fetus has no detectable
06:40heartbeat, both of which applied to Thurman's case. And any assertion that she experienced a
06:44delay in care as a secondary effect of the law is mere speculation. One thing is clear. Thurman
06:49died from a legal chemical abortion, which abortion advocates have long argued is safer
06:53than Tylenol. But Harris believes the issue is a winning one in Georgia. After Trump dodged this
06:58question at the debate, would you veto a national abortion ban? Well, I won't have to. Harris is
07:03messaging on other issues still muddled. We really would love to know what your plan is to help
07:08lower the cost of living. A story I hear around the country is a travel. And in terms of both
07:18rightly having the right to have aspirations and dreams and ambitions for your family.
07:28Harris is on track for the fewest interviews in decades, according to an Axios report. In the 59
07:34days since she joined the ticket, Trump and Vance have done 70 interviews with print and TV
07:38reporters. Harris and Walz have done seven. Her campaign said today that people shouldn't read
07:43too much into that, but confirmed that her focus will stay largely outside traditional.
07:50Well, the door remains open here at Fox News across all of our
07:53black farms and Jackie, you too, if you get one there on the road.
07:56Thank you so much. Good to see you. All right. President Biden's making one last big push to
08:01promote his agenda and shape his legacy. Today, he held his first full cabinet meeting in a very
08:07long time, and he had some direct marching orders. Senior White House correspondent Peter
08:11Doocy has details. Good evening, Peter. Good evening, Shannon. President Biden is basically
08:15trying to Trump proof his legacy and make it as hard as possible for Republicans to undo key
08:23achievements if they win back the White House. That was the focus of the first cabinet meeting
08:28in almost a year. Four months left in the administration,
08:34and we're going to keep running through the tape. And that's why the president got the whole cabinet
08:38together to tell them, according to a White House official, to get as much work done as possible,
08:43whether that is moving funding out the door, announcing new programs or policies or delivering
08:48on programs and policies we have already announced. A headache lies ten days ahead
08:53when the government will shut down if Congress can't pass a continuing resolution to fund
08:58the government. But the president appears to be taking a hands-off approach to these negotiations.
09:03When we pass forward, it's by working across the aisle. We've got to have faith in our leaders
09:08and pull this together. This weekend, President Biden is hosting leaders of Australia, Japan,
09:13and India at home in Wilmington, Delaware. Showing them a place and a community that
09:19shaped so much of the public servant and the leader that he became.
09:22The focus on Asia and Australia comes as recent Middle East diplomatic efforts crumble,
09:28according to a Wall Street Journal report about an Israel-Hamas ceasefire.
09:32There's no chance now of it happening, a Middle Eastern official added shortly
09:37after the operation against Hezbollah. Everyone is in a wait-and-see mode until after the election.
09:43The outcome will determine what can happen in the next administration.
09:47Nearing retirement, President Biden remains optimistic.
09:50A lot of things don't look realistic until we get them done.
09:54As part of this weekend's Quad Summit, President Biden right now is hosting a personal meeting with
09:59the Prime Minister of Australia at his house in Wilmington, Delaware. But for reasons that remain
10:05unknown, there are no coverage opportunities of tonight's meetings or any of the meetings over
10:12the weekend with leaders at the house, even though that is typically the kind of thing
10:15that White House leaders would want lots of photos and videos of out there. Shannon?
10:20All right, Peter Doocy at the White House. Thank you, Peter.
10:24Stocks were mixed this Friday. The Dow gained 38 for a new record close. The S&P 500 dropped 11.
10:30Nasdaq fell 66. For the week, the Dow was up one and two-thirds percentage points.
10:36The S&P 500 gained one and a third. Nasdaq rose one and a half.
10:41The federal government is suing some big pharmacy benefit managers over a system of drug rebates
10:47that regulators say has made the price of insulin soar. Three companies process about
10:5280 percent of prescriptions here in the U.S. The Federal Trade Commission alleges Caremark,
10:57Express Scripts and OptumRx have engaged in anti-competitive practices that spur price
11:03increases. All three companies deny wrongdoing. Up next, Israel continues its offensive against
11:09Hezbollah terrorists in Lebanon, taking out a major target. We're going to give you a live
11:13report on that. But first, here's what some of our Fox affiliates around the country are covering
11:18tonight. Fox 56 in Lexington, Kentucky, as a sheriff is accused of killing a judge in the
11:24Letcher County courthouse. Sheriff Sean Steins allegedly shot District Judge Kevin Mullins
11:30after an argument Thursday afternoon inside the courthouse. Steins is accused in a federal lawsuit
11:36of ignoring abuse by one of his deputies, who later pleaded guilty to forcing a woman to have sex
11:42in Judge Mullins chambers. Fox 5 in New York, as authorities placed Sean Diddy Combs on suicide
11:49watch inside a special housing unit at a Brooklyn jail. There are suspicions the entertainment
11:54mogul has become a target. Combs was denied bail after being charged with racketeering,
11:59conspiracy and sex trafficking. And this is a live look at Lancaster, Pennsylvania, from Fox 43.
12:05One of the big stories there tonight, an effort to restart a unit of the infamous nuclear power
12:11plant Three Mile Island. A separate unit of the plant suffered a partial meltdown in 1979,
12:18in one of the biggest industrial accidents in the country's history. The restart requires federal,
12:23state and local approvals. That is tonight's live look outside the Belway from Special Report.
12:28We'll be right back. Families and supporters of hostages held by the terror group Hamas
12:33since the October 7th massacre in Israel rallied outside the United Nations today.
12:38They want the organization to address the crisis and secure a deal for their release.
12:43The Israeli military says about 101 hostages remain in captivity. It's believed about 35
12:49of those have been killed. The theme of next week's U.N. General Assembly is leaving no one
12:54behind. Israel continues to pound terrorist targets in Lebanon tonight. An airstrike took
13:00out at least 14 people today, including one of the most wanted terrorists in the world.
13:05Correspondent Nate Foy is in Tel Aviv tonight.
13:09I can now confirm that Ibrahim Akil was eliminated together with other senior
13:16terrorists in Hezbollah's Radwan forces. An Israeli airstrike killed the top Hezbollah
13:21commander in Beirut. Ibrahim Akil headed the group's special operations unit under Hezbollah
13:27leader Hassan Nasrallah. Prior to the strike, the U.S. offered $7 million for information on Akil.
13:33He's connected to the 1983 bombings at the U.S. embassy and marine barracks
13:38that killed more than 300 people in Beirut. According to the U.S. State Department, quote,
13:43in the 1980s, Akil directed the taking of American and German hostages in Lebanon.
13:49The U.S. maintains it knew nothing about the strike beforehand. Lebanon's health ministry
13:53says it killed at least 14 people and injured 66 others. Hamas responded, saying, quote,
14:00We consider this a new crime in the ongoing series of Zionist crimes,
14:04a violation of Lebanese sovereignty and an escalation of Zionist aggression.
14:11Lebanon's health minister accused Israel of war crimes for exploding Hezbollah's
14:16communication devices. That is why detonating these devices in civilian
14:23areas and among civilians is clearly a war crime.
14:29Hezbollah fired more than 200 rockets into northern Israel today.
14:33The Iron Dome remains strong. Tonight, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu shared a statement,
14:38quote, Our goals are clear and our actions speak for themselves.
14:45Tonight, Hezbollah is officially acknowledging the killing of Ibrahim Akil in a new statement
14:51that was just released. There's no specific reference to planned retaliation, but Prime
14:56Minister Netanyahu did call for an emergency security meeting tonight to plan for whatever
15:01comes next. Shannon. Nate Foy and Tel Aviv, thank you.
15:05Up next, as this election cycle's first in-person votes are cast today,
15:10Rep. Beyer reports on all the different ways to vote ahead of Election Day across the U.S.
15:16Has voter turnout increased with the early voting options?
15:20It really is the same types of voters who are voting in different ways.
15:25But first, beyond our borders tonight, Dutch police arrest a 22-year-old man
15:29after a fatal stabbing in Rotterdam. They say the suspect may have been ideologically driven.
15:34He reportedly shouted repeatedly Allahu Akbar a number of times during the attack.
15:40Two Russians set a record for the longest continuous stay on the International Space
15:45Station. Russia's space agency says Oleg Kononenko and Nikolai Chub broke the old record
15:52of 370 days, 21 hours and 22 minutes. That mark was set in September of last year by two Russians
15:59and an American. And this is a live look at Katsura, Japan. One of the big stories there tonight,
16:04Japan and China agreed to resolve their disputes over the discharge of treated radioactive
16:09wastewater from the tsunami hit Fukushima nuclear power plant into the Pacific Ocean.
16:16China subsequently banned Japanese seafood. Japan says China will start working toward
16:20easing the import ban and will join the expanded monitoring of wastewater discharges from that
16:26plant. Just some of the other stories beyond our borders tonight. We'll be right back.
16:31For tonight's featured race, we turn to the U.S. Supreme Court
16:34and a decision that may have a bearing on who wins in battleground Nevada.
16:39Presidential hopeful Jill Stein and other Green Party candidates were dealt a loss when the court
16:43rejected an emergency appeal to allow them on the ballot. The ruling could help the Democrats'
16:49Senate nominee. But let's take a closer look at what's happening in the presidential race there.
16:53Good luck finding any daylight between Kamala Harris and Donald Trump. They are in a virtual
16:58draw with Harris up just two tenths of a point. Both campaigns are banking on Nevada's six
17:03electoral votes as a must win in the race to 270 come November. Back in 2020, incumbent Trump fell
17:10to Joe Biden by roughly 33,000 votes. And while he won the White House in 2016, Mr. Trump still fell
17:16short in the silver state, losing to Hillary Clinton by more than 27,000 votes. This go round,
17:22both campaigns are appealing to Nevada's hospitality sector. Trump first calling
17:26for no taxes on tips, an idea Kamala Harris later matched.
17:36The election process is officially underway in several states, but how those votes are being
17:40cast differs by location. Tonight, my colleague Brett Baer takes a look at the options for voting
17:45all across the country. Thanks, Shannon. The first in-person votes of the 2024 election were cast
17:52today in three states. Minnesota and South Dakota absentee voters are able to head to the polls.
17:59In Virginia, any registered voter can now cast a ballot in the Commonwealth. In at least nine
18:06states, for those who requested them, absentee ballots are now heading to voters living overseas
18:12or serving in the U.S. military. Absentee ballots for other voters are also en route in four other
18:19states. The first mail-in ballots for any voter wishing to vote early by mail go out tomorrow
18:26in Maryland and New Jersey. So what is the difference between all five of these options
18:32and what is available in your state? Tonight, we take a look at the upcoming election calendar
18:37and how these methods came to be. Your vote is your voice. With more options than ever available
18:45to voters. Vote early, vote absentee, vote on election day, do whatever you want, but you have
18:50to vote. Presidential campaigns are treating every day like election day. Get your neighbors to the
18:55polls, get your family members to the polls, knock on doors, make phone calls. Every vote's gonna
19:01matter. Every precinct. In 2020, 69 percent of voters cast ballots before election day. Is that
19:08something we can expect, do you think, to continue on that trend? The 2020 was an extraordinary year
19:14where we saw this huge jump up, even saw very different opinions of Democrats and Republicans
19:19about whether you should vote by mail. Anytime you have mail-in ballots, you're going to have
19:22problems. In 2020, Mississippi was the only state to require an excuse to vote early. Forced in
19:29voting. Everywhere else allowed mail-in ballots without an excuse. Nine states and Washington,
19:34D.C. held all-mail elections in which all registered voters were sent a ballot without
19:41requesting one. They send out millions and millions of ballots. They go all over the place.
19:45If I ran with an honest vote counter in California, I would win California. Eight states and D.C. left
19:53the practice in place. New Jersey still permits all-mail elections for small jurisdictions. Some
19:59people are going to get out and go to the polls to be casting ballots for this election right now.
20:06Some states will start with early in-person voting a little bit at the clerk's office,
20:10but then in an intense way at major sites for several weeks before the election.
20:15There really is no one-size-fits-all. You say it's not one-size-fits-all, but
20:21it really is different dramatically in some states. Yes, we have states, again, like Oregon
20:28and Washington, are basically 100 percent voting by mail. There are almost no polling places. We
20:33have some states in the Northeast and some in the Deep South who really look much more traditional.
20:38Alabama and New Hampshire have adopted the same strict requirements as Mississippi.
20:43Only absentee voters can vote by mail with a valid excuse, such as illness, living out of state,
20:48or working a shift that conflicts with polling hours. Democrats question efforts to try to
20:54restrict access to voting. Across our nation, we are witnessing a full-on assault on other
21:01hard-fought, hard-won fundamental freedoms and rights, like the freedom to vote.
21:09Seven other states have eliminated mail ballots and now offer in-person early voting instead.
21:15Thirty-six continue to allow voters to cast ballots by mail.
21:19For the people who say there should just be paper ballots, maybe there should just be one week
21:25to try to avoid this influx of coming through the mail, there's all kinds of talk out there
21:31about how to make it better or safer. Is there one sense of what's better?
21:38I think there are differences. I do think people have a good instinct that they want there to be
21:44a ballot there, a tangible, physical ballot. But we also have very complicated ballots,
21:49with many people on the ballot, sometimes 10, 20 races that you're voting for in a particular
21:56election. And that really does mean we need to use technology to count them.
22:00While 12 states, including swing state Arizona, will begin processing and counting ballots before
22:06Election Day, laws prevent results from being reported until November 5th.
22:11Fourteen states, including competitive Minnesota, will not begin tallying mail ballots
22:16until after the polls close.
22:18I talk to businessmen around the country. They say we can track a package all around the world,
22:22know exactly where it's going to go. And yet we have this ballot process that we haven't
22:27fully made fast. We haven't made it quick. It's had some major problems over the last
22:33at least two or three election cycles.
22:36I think part of it is because states want to put in a lot of convenience parts of voting,
22:41and they don't necessarily think of how they all fit together.
22:44Toss-up state Nevada also allows mostly mail elections and will still count ballots that
22:49arrive up to four days following Election Day, so long as they are postmarked November 5th.
22:55The Fox News decision desk can now project that former Vice President Joe Biden
23:00will win Pennsylvania and Nevada.
23:02And in Pennsylvania, 2024 could look a lot similar to 2020 when it took
23:08four days after the election to call the race.
23:11Officials are reporting delays in sending out mail ballots.
23:15The holdup could cause issues on Election Day since Pennsylvania does not start
23:19processing mail ballots until 7 a.m. on November 5th.
23:24We saw in 2020 and how long that took,
23:27how long do you think it could take in 2024 to figure out who won the presidential election?
23:34Well, I guess I'm an optimist and I think we'll probably see
23:37things be somewhat quicker than in 2020.
23:39I think there's a good chance that we'll be able to know the outcome unless it's very close.
23:44It is very, very close. If you look at the polls, we have a number of weeks to go before Election
23:49Day. Have those individual states change their operations since 2020 to speed things up,
23:59to be more effective, to make sure there's checks and balances in place?
24:03I think there has been some improvement. The voting by mail is not going to be as
24:07high or as unexpected. And so I think many states will be ready for that and be able to count more
24:12quickly.
24:13Over the weekend, all states will send out absentee ballots to military and
24:18overseas voters as required by federal law. North Carolina sent those to voters today.
24:24All other absentee ballots from the state are expected to go out next week.
24:29Got a lot to cover. We'll send it back to you.
24:32All right. We sure do. Brett, thank you.
24:34Up next, we're going to take you to Springfield, Ohio, the center of the most recent illegal
24:38immigration controversy to hear from overwhelmed residents and later the future of sports betting,
24:45what some Democratic lawmakers want to do.
24:48Two illegal immigrants from El Salvador are facing charges tonight in separate child rape
24:56cases on Nantucket Island. The Immigration and Customs Enforcement Office in Boston says the
25:01two gotaways were arrested last week. Springfield, Ohio, has become ground zero in the fight over
25:07illegal immigration in recent days. Last night, former Republican presidential candidate Vivek
25:12Ramaswamy heard from dozens of locals upset about the influx of at least 15,000 Haitian migrants.
25:18Correspondent Bill Malugin is in Springfield tonight.
25:22This country cares more about Ukraine's borders, Israel's borders, everybody else's borders.
25:28Frustration boiling over in Springfield, Ohio, a small city gripped by national headlines and
25:33overwhelmed by the arrival of 15,000 Haitian migrants in recent years.
25:38I blame the federal policies that are responsible for what's going on in this city.
25:44Former GOP presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy held a town hall with hundreds
25:49of Springfield residents last night, allowing them to vent about the issues they say
25:54the mass influx of Haitians has brought.
25:56We could have handled three, four thousand people. No, we're not unwelcoming to that effect.
26:03Make the Haitians feel welcome, but they also have to learn our culture.
26:07Springfield residents say they've been smeared as bigots and called unwelcoming for speaking out.
26:13We asked them to respond.
26:14There are people outside of Springfield who call you guys racist for being
26:18worried and upset about this. How do you respond to that?
26:21Well, you know what? You don't live here, so mind your own business.
26:24How about coming up and I change your population by 50 percent to see how you like it?
26:29It is a racism. If they were 20,000 people from Sweden, it would be the same thing.
26:36Former President Trump has said he plans to visit Springfield in the coming weeks,
26:40but the city's Republican mayor said a Trump visit is not what's best for his city right now.
26:46Should he choose to change his plans,
26:49it would convey a significant message of peace to the city of Springfield.
26:54Meanwhile, in Washington today, House Democrats in the Haiti caucus criticized
26:58Republicans for their focus on Haitians here in Springfield, calling it, quote,
27:02dangerous and disgraceful. Those Democrats also said
27:06they plan to make their own visit here to Springfield in the future.
27:09Shannon?
27:10All right, Bill Malugin, thank you very much.
27:13Well, we're about to begin another big college and pro football weekend,
27:16and that means gambling, both legal and illegal.
27:19Well, now two Democratic lawmakers are trying to shape the future of sports betting in the U.S.
27:24Here's senior congressional correspondent Chad Pergram.
27:29There are parlays. Gamble on your phone without anybody knowing what you're doing.
27:33The prop bets. Betting online made it seem very easy to turn $100 into $200,
27:39or even more desperate people trying to beat the odds.
27:43Thankfully, our story did not end in tragedy.
27:46Gordon Douglas's son, Andrew, fell into the grips of gambling once he moved to
27:50a state with legal online sports gaming. Now lawmakers want to cut the action.
27:56We're not banning gambling. We're banning practices that exploit and abuse
28:03people who legitimately want to gamble.
28:06Blumenthal wants to
30:36gamble.
31:06$20 is $1.
31:16$30 is $3.
31:36$10 is $10.
32:06$15 is $15.
32:08$15 is $15.
32:10$15 is $15.
32:12$15 is $15.
32:14$15 is $15.
32:16$15 is $15.
32:18$15 is $15.
32:20$15 is $15.
32:22$15 is $15.
32:24$15 is $15.
32:26$15 is $15.
32:28$15 is $15.
32:30$15 is $15.
32:32$15 is $15.

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